Safeguarding met Childcare on Non-Domestic Premises, Full day care source PDF ↗ provider page on ofsted.gov.uk ↗

Grades by area

Achievement

Strong standard
Children make secure and sustained progress from their starting points. They develop confidence, independence and resilience through experiences that allow them to practise and apply their skills throughout the day. Children show they remember what they have learned by responding appropriately in unfamiliar situations. For example, during a fire evacuation, children stop what are doing, listen carefully and follow instructions calmly. Children's progress in communication and language is evident in their confidence to express ideas and engage in conversation. They initiate interactions with their peers and staff and use an increasingly wide range of vocabulary. Children's physical development is also a strength. For example, they show improving control and coordination as they roll, press and shape play dough confidently. Transitions are a significant strength and make a strong contribution to children's achievements. Children understand expectations well and apply skills independently as they move between activities and parts of the setting. When moving to lunchtime, children walk calmly, follow visual cues, such as blue footsteps on the playground, and organise themselves with confidence. This shows that children can regulate their behaviour and apply their learning securely in different contexts. Children with special educational needs and/or disabilities, those facing barriers to learning and those known, or previously known, to children's social care achieve alongside their peers. They take part confidently in daily activities and are very well prepared for their next stage of learning, including their move to school.

Behaviour, attitudes and establishing routines

Strong standard
Children behave well and show positive attitudes to their learning. They are settled, calm and engaged. Children approach activities with interest and curiosity. They sustain focus during play and show enjoyment in learning alongside others. Children demonstrate they can regulate their emotions very well for their age. They manage their emotions well and respond positively to staff's guidance. Children approach staff confidently for reassurance or support when needed. They approach unfamiliar adults with confidence, knowing that familiar staff are close by to provide reassurance if needed. Children show that they understand expectations because they listen carefully and follow instructions with minimal reminders. Routines are well established and support children's behaviour effectively. Children know what is expected of them and manage changes calmly. When it is time to change activities, children stop what they are doing, listen and prepare themselves without disruption. This shows that children can regulate their behaviour and respond appropriately as routines change. Children interact positively with their friends. They share resources, take turns and cooperate during play. Minor disagreements are resolved calmly with staff's support where needed. Children show respect for others. They are beginning to understand how their behaviour affects those around them. Leaders promote punctuality and attendance through clear expectations and positive relationships with families. Inclusive approaches ensure that staff consider children's age, stage of development and individual circumstances. As a result, children attend regularly, settle quickly and participate fully in daily routines.

Curriculum and teaching

Strong standard
Leaders understand the quality of the curriculum and teaching extremely well and use this insight to sustain an ambitious, broad and balanced curriculum across all areas of learning. They place strong emphasis on children's physical development and personal, social and emotional development as foundations for learning. Routines and experiences are carefully designed to help children develop confidence, self-control and resilience. For example, staff consistently encourage children to assess risks for themselves during play, such as deciding how to climb or balance safely, which builds independence and emotional security. Staff support children's communication and early mathematical understanding skilfully through play and routines. They plan opportunities where concepts are revisited and deepened over time. For example, children count and compare quantities during water play, explore shape and pattern through painting and develop understanding of measure through repeated sensory experiences. Staff model precise vocabulary, such as 'stretch', 'smooth' and 'heavy', and use it consistently, so children begin to apply this language independently. Outdoor learning is a significant strength. Staff plan purposeful physical experiences that progressively build children's strength, coordination and control. For instance, children use large equipment, including a seesaw, to practise balancing, negotiating turn-taking and managing frustration. Staff extend learning through thoughtful questioning and encouragement. Regular community walks, including visits to the library, further enrich the curriculum and support children's curiosity and confidence beyond the setting

Inclusion

Strong standard
Leaders have created an inclusive culture in which children's individual needs are identified early and barriers to learning and wellbeing are reduced effectively. Leaders use observations, ongoing discussions with parents and carers and advice from professionals to build a secure understanding of children's needs. They agree support promptly and ensure that it is embedded into everyday practice, so children can participate fully alongside their peers. Leaders work closely with families and external professionals to coordinate support and help families access additional services when needed. They use additional funding well to reduce practical barriers to attendance and participation. Children known, or previously known, to children's social care benefit from staff who understand their circumstances and provide consistent care and reassurance. As a result, these children feel secure, settle quickly and engage confidently in daily routines. The shared special educational needs coordinator model is effective. Coordinators remain with the same group of children from entry to transition to school, which provides continuity and strengthens relationships with families. This enables leaders and staff to track children's development over time and respond quickly when needs change. Leaders use a graduated approach to review support regularly and adjust provision in partnership with families and professionals. Consequently, support is timely, well coordinated and responsive, helping children to thrive and make progress alongside their peers.

Leadership and governance

Strong standard
Leaders demonstrate confident, reflective leadership and have a clear understanding of the setting's strengths and priorities for improvement. They regularly review practice through observation, supervision and ongoing discussion with staff. For example, through observation, leaders identified differences in staff's confidence when supporting children during group activities. Leaders acted promptly by putting targeted training and practical support in place and then checking its impact through follow-up observations and discussion. This ensures that practice is consistent across the team, so children experience reliable care and learning. Leaders recognise that maintaining consistency requires ongoing attention and have clear plans to continue developing staff's skills. Professional development is well planned and closely linked to children's needs. Staff feel valued and well supported and speak positively about leadership, which creates stability and benefits children through familiar routines and trusted relationships. Leaders manage staff's workload and wellbeing carefully. Regular supervision and protected time for additional responsibilities help staff balance their roles effectively. Governance provides effective support and challenge. Those responsible for governance know the setting well and work closely with leaders. They check that leaders' decisions support children's wellbeing, learning and care and that families' needs are considered.

Children's welfare and wellbeing

Expected standard
Staff support children's welfare and wellbeing effectively. Children feel settled and emotionally secure because familiar staff respond consistently to their needs and provide reassurance when required. This consistency helps children to feel safe, calm and confident as they move through the day. Staff use daily care routines to support children's physical wellbeing. Mealtimes are calm and well organised. Staff support children to eat safely in a relaxed environment. They supervise children closely and manage risks effectively, including during mealtimes. Staff encourage children to develop independence, such as cutting up food for themselves, within a well-supervised environment that promotes their confidence and self-care skills. Staff promote children's oral health through daily toothbrushing after lunch. They share information with parents and carers to help reinforce healthy habits at home. However, hygiene routines are not yet consistently embedded. For instance, staff support children with tissues when needed, but do not consistently encourage children to wash or sanitise their hands before returning to play. This means children do not receive consistent support to develop a secure understanding of hygiene as part of everyday self-care. As a result, while children's immediate welfare needs are met, this inconsistency limits how effectively the setting supports children to develop long-term healthy habits.

What it's like to be a child at this setting

Leaders and staff greet children warmly as they arrive to start their day. Familiar staff support children to settle quickly through well-established routines. Staff know children well and adapt their support where children need additional reassurance or time. As a result, children experience a calm, welcoming and inclusive environment. This gives them a sense of belonging and helps them to feel safe, confident and ready to learn. Children form secure and trusting relationships with staff, who respond consistently to their emotional needs and behaviour. Children approach staff readily for reassurance and guidance. They feel secure in unfamiliar situations, such as during a fire evacuation, and respond calmly to staff's instructions. These secure relationships underpin children's emotional wellbeing and their confidence to explore, play and learn. Children develop confidence and independence through everyday routines. They manage their belongings and take increasing responsibility for self-care, such as cutting up food at lunchtime. Children respond quickly to staff's cues and move calmly between activities. These consistent routines support children's growing independence and confidence as they prepare for their next stage of learning. Children enjoy a broad range of experiences that support their learning and physical development. Outdoor play is a key strength of the setting. Younger children explore large equipment, develop their coordination and engage in imaginative play using familiar resources. Older children investigate sand, water, gloop and paint. This helps them to develop curiosity, problem-solving skills and sustained concentration. Staff enrich these experiences through purposeful interactions and the introduction of new vocabulary. Staff provide access to a large playground and regular visits to the local library to broaden children's understanding of the world and build confidence beyond the setting. Inclusive practice is embedded in daily routines. Children with special educational needs and/or disabilities and those facing additional challenges participate fully alongside their peers. Staff adapt their communication sensitively, including the use of visual supports and sign language. As a result, children develop a natural understanding of similarities and differences through respectful interactions. As a result of leaders' clear expectations, consistent routines and excellent relationships, children feel safe, valued and included. They show high levels of emotional security, independence and positive attitudes to learning. Children are well prepared for their next stage of learning, including their eventual move to school.

Next steps

Leaders should consider ways to ensure that hygiene routines, particularly handwashing after children wipe their noses, are applied consistently, so children develop secure, long-term healthy lifestyle habits.

About this inspection

The inspector spoke with leaders, staff, the special educational needs and/or disabilities coordinator and children during the inspection. We carried out this inspection under sections 49 and 50 of the Childcare Act 2006 on the quality and standards of provision that is registered on the Early Years Register. The registered person must ensure that this provision complies with the statutory framework for children's learning, development and care, known as the early years foundation stage. We carried out this inspection as a result of a risk assessment, following information we received about the provider. The provider will be able to give parents further information about this.

About this setting

URN
EY368331
Address
Lamberhead Green CP School Kershaw Street, Orrell WIGAN Lancashire WN5 0AW
Type
Childcare on Non-Domestic Premises, Full day care
Registration date
01/04/2008
Registered person
Headstart Committee
Register(s)
EYR, CCR, VCR
Operating hours
Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday : 08:45 - 15:30
Local authority
Wigan

Facts and figures

Age range at inspection
2 to 4
Total places
32

Data from 16 January 2026

Raw extracted PDF text
Lamberhead Green Headstart
Unique reference number (URN): EY368331
Address: Lamberhead Green CP School, Kershaw Street, Orrell, WIGAN, Lancashire, WN5 0AW
Type: Childcare on non-domestic premises
Registered with Ofsted: 01/04/2008
Registers: EYR, CCR, VCR
Registered person: Headstart Committee
Inspection report: 16 January 2026
Exceptional
Strong standard
Expected standard
Needs attention
Urgent improvement
Safeguarding standards met
The safeguarding standards are met. This means that leaders and/or those responsible for
governance and oversight fulfil their specific responsibilities and have established an open
culture in which safeguarding is everyone's responsibility and concerns are actively
identified, acted upon and managed. As a result, children are made safer and feel safe.
How we evaluate safeguarding
When we inspect settings for safeguarding, they can have the following outcomes:
Met: The setting has an open and positive culture of safeguarding.
Not met: The setting has not created an open and positive culture of safeguarding. Not all
legal requirements are met.

Strong standard
Achievement Strong standard
Children make secure and sustained progress from their starting points. They develop
confidence, independence and resilience through experiences that allow them to practise
and apply their skills throughout the day. Children show they remember what they have
learned by responding appropriately in unfamiliar situations. For example, during a fire
evacuation, children stop what are doing, listen carefully and follow instructions calmly.
Children's progress in communication and language is evident in their confidence to express
ideas and engage in conversation. They initiate interactions with their peers and staff and
use an increasingly wide range of vocabulary. Children's physical development is also a
strength. For example, they show improving control and coordination as they roll, press and
shape play dough confidently.
Transitions are a significant strength and make a strong contribution to children's
achievements. Children understand expectations well and apply skills independently as they
move between activities and parts of the setting. When moving to lunchtime, children walk
calmly, follow visual cues, such as blue footsteps on the playground, and organise
themselves with confidence. This shows that children can regulate their behaviour and apply
their learning securely in different contexts.
Children with special educational needs and/or disabilities, those facing barriers to learning
and those known, or previously known, to children's social care achieve alongside their
peers. They take part confidently in daily activities and are very well prepared for their next
stage of learning, including their move to school.
Behaviour, attitudes and establishing routines Strong standard
Children behave well and show positive attitudes to their learning. They are settled, calm
and engaged. Children approach activities with interest and curiosity. They sustain focus
during play and show enjoyment in learning alongside others. Children demonstrate they
can regulate their emotions very well for their age. They manage their emotions well and
respond positively to staff's guidance. Children approach staff confidently for reassurance or
support when needed. They approach unfamiliar adults with confidence, knowing that
familiar staff are close by to provide reassurance if needed. Children show that they
understand expectations because they listen carefully and follow instructions with minimal
reminders.
Routines are well established and support children's behaviour effectively. Children know
what is expected of them and manage changes calmly. When it is time to change activities,
children stop what they are doing, listen and prepare themselves without disruption. This
shows that children can regulate their behaviour and respond appropriately as routines
change.
Children interact positively with their friends. They share resources, take turns and
cooperate during play. Minor disagreements are resolved calmly with staff's support where

needed. Children show respect for others. They are beginning to understand how their
behaviour affects those around them. Leaders promote punctuality and attendance through
clear expectations and positive relationships with families. Inclusive approaches ensure that
staff consider children's age, stage of development and individual circumstances. As a
result, children attend regularly, settle quickly and participate fully in daily routines.
Curriculum and teaching Strong standard
Leaders understand the quality of the curriculum and teaching extremely well and use this
insight to sustain an ambitious, broad and balanced curriculum across all areas of learning.
They place strong emphasis on children's physical development and personal, social and
emotional development as foundations for learning. Routines and experiences are carefully
designed to help children develop confidence, self-control and resilience. For example, staff
consistently encourage children to assess risks for themselves during play, such as deciding
how to climb or balance safely, which builds independence and emotional security.
Staff support children's communication and early mathematical understanding skilfully
through play and routines. They plan opportunities where concepts are revisited and
deepened over time. For example, children count and compare quantities during water play,
explore shape and pattern through painting and develop understanding of measure through
repeated sensory experiences. Staff model precise vocabulary, such as 'stretch', 'smooth'
and 'heavy', and use it consistently, so children begin to apply this language independently.
Outdoor learning is a significant strength. Staff plan purposeful physical experiences that
progressively build children's strength, coordination and control. For instance, children use
large equipment, including a seesaw, to practise balancing, negotiating turn-taking and
managing frustration. Staff extend learning through thoughtful questioning and
encouragement. Regular community walks, including visits to the library, further enrich the
curriculum and support children's curiosity and confidence beyond the setting
Inclusion Strong standard
Leaders have created an inclusive culture in which children's individual needs are identified
early and barriers to learning and wellbeing are reduced effectively. Leaders use
observations, ongoing discussions with parents and carers and advice from professionals to
build a secure understanding of children's needs. They agree support promptly and ensure
that it is embedded into everyday practice, so children can participate fully alongside their
peers.
Leaders work closely with families and external professionals to coordinate support and help
families access additional services when needed. They use additional funding well to reduce
practical barriers to attendance and participation. Children known, or previously known, to
children's social care benefit from staff who understand their circumstances and provide
consistent care and reassurance. As a result, these children feel secure, settle quickly and
engage confidently in daily routines.
The shared special educational needs coordinator model is effective. Coordinators remain
with the same group of children from entry to transition to school, which provides continuity
and strengthens relationships with families. This enables leaders and staff to track children's

Expected standard
development over time and respond quickly when needs change. Leaders use a graduated
approach to review support regularly and adjust provision in partnership with families and
professionals. Consequently, support is timely, well coordinated and responsive, helping
children to thrive and make progress alongside their peers.
Leadership and governance Strong standard
Leaders demonstrate confident, reflective leadership and have a clear understanding of the
setting's strengths and priorities for improvement. They regularly review practice through
observation, supervision and ongoing discussion with staff. For example, through
observation, leaders identified differences in staff's confidence when supporting children
during group activities. Leaders acted promptly by putting targeted training and practical
support in place and then checking its impact through follow-up observations and
discussion. This ensures that practice is consistent across the team, so children experience
reliable care and learning. Leaders recognise that maintaining consistency requires ongoing
attention and have clear plans to continue developing staff's skills. Professional
development is well planned and closely linked to children's needs. Staff feel valued and
well supported and speak positively about leadership, which creates stability and benefits
children through familiar routines and trusted relationships.
Leaders manage staff's workload and wellbeing carefully. Regular supervision and protected
time for additional responsibilities help staff balance their roles effectively. Governance
provides effective support and challenge. Those responsible for governance know the
setting well and work closely with leaders. They check that leaders' decisions support
children's wellbeing, learning and care and that families' needs are considered.
Children's welfare and wellbeing Expected standard
Staff support children's welfare and wellbeing effectively. Children feel settled and
emotionally secure because familiar staff respond consistently to their needs and provide
reassurance when required. This consistency helps children to feel safe, calm and confident
as they move through the day. Staff use daily care routines to support children's physical
wellbeing. Mealtimes are calm and well organised. Staff support children to eat safely in a
relaxed environment. They supervise children closely and manage risks effectively, including
during mealtimes. Staff encourage children to develop independence, such as cutting up
food for themselves, within a well-supervised environment that promotes their confidence
and self-care skills.
Staff promote children's oral health through daily toothbrushing after lunch. They share
information with parents and carers to help reinforce healthy habits at home. However,
hygiene routines are not yet consistently embedded. For instance, staff support children with
tissues when needed, but do not consistently encourage children to wash or sanitise their
hands before returning to play. This means children do not receive consistent support to
develop a secure understanding of hygiene as part of everyday self-care. As a result, while

children's immediate welfare needs are met, this inconsistency limits how effectively the
setting supports children to develop long-term healthy habits.
Compulsory Childcare Register requirements
This setting has met the requirements of the compulsory part of the Childcare Register.
How we check if a provider meets the requirements of the Compulsory Childcare
Register
When we check if settings meet the Compulsory Childcare Register requirements, they can
have the following outcomes:
Met
Not met
Voluntary Childcare Register requirements
This setting has met the requirements of the voluntary part of Childcare Register.
How we check if a provider meets the requirements of the Voluntary Childcare
Register
When we check if settings meet the Voluntary Childcare Register requirements, they can
have the following outcomes:
Met
Not met
What it's like to be a child at this setting
Leaders and staff greet children warmly as they arrive to start their day. Familiar staff
support children to settle quickly through well-established routines. Staff know children well
and adapt their support where children need additional reassurance or time. As a result,

children experience a calm, welcoming and inclusive environment. This gives them a sense
of belonging and helps them to feel safe, confident and ready to learn.
Children form secure and trusting relationships with staff, who respond consistently to their
emotional needs and behaviour. Children approach staff readily for reassurance and
guidance. They feel secure in unfamiliar situations, such as during a fire evacuation, and
respond calmly to staff's instructions. These secure relationships underpin children's
emotional wellbeing and their confidence to explore, play and learn.
Children develop confidence and independence through everyday routines. They manage
their belongings and take increasing responsibility for self-care, such as cutting up food at
lunchtime. Children respond quickly to staff's cues and move calmly between activities.
These consistent routines support children's growing independence and confidence as they
prepare for their next stage of learning.
Children enjoy a broad range of experiences that support their learning and physical
development. Outdoor play is a key strength of the setting. Younger children explore large
equipment, develop their coordination and engage in imaginative play using familiar
resources. Older children investigate sand, water, gloop and paint. This helps them to
develop curiosity, problem-solving skills and sustained concentration. Staff enrich these
experiences through purposeful interactions and the introduction of new vocabulary. Staff
provide access to a large playground and regular visits to the local library to broaden
children's understanding of the world and build confidence beyond the setting.
Inclusive practice is embedded in daily routines. Children with special educational needs
and/or disabilities and those facing additional challenges participate fully alongside their
peers. Staff adapt their communication sensitively, including the use of visual supports and
sign language. As a result, children develop a natural understanding of similarities and
differences through respectful interactions. As a result of leaders' clear expectations,
consistent routines and excellent relationships, children feel safe, valued and included. They
show high levels of emotional security, independence and positive attitudes to learning.
Children are well prepared for their next stage of learning, including their eventual move to
school.
Next steps
Leaders should consider ways to ensure that hygiene routines, particularly handwashing
after children wipe their noses, are applied consistently, so children develop secure, long-
term healthy lifestyle habits.
About this inspection
The inspector spoke with leaders, staff, the special educational needs and/or disabilities
coordinator and children during the inspection.

Inspector:
Kelly Little
About this setting
Unique reference number (URN): EY368331
Address:
Lamberhead Green CP School
Kershaw Street, Orrell
WIGAN
Lancashire
WN5 0AW
Type: Childcare on non-domestic premises
Registration date: 01/04/2008
Registered person: Headstart Committee
Register(s): EYR, CCR, VCR
Operating hours: Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday : 08:45 - 15:30
Local authority: Wigan
Facts and figures used on inspection
This data was available to the inspector at the time of the inspection.
This data is from 16 January 2026
Children numbers
We carried out this inspection under sections 49 and 50 of the Childcare Act 2006 on the
quality and standards of provision that is registered on the Early Years Register. The
registered person must ensure that this provision complies with the statutory framework for
children's learning, development and care, known as the early years foundation stage.
We carried out this inspection as a result of a risk assessment, following information we
received about the provider. The provider will be able to give parents further information
about this.

Age range of children at the time of inspection
2 to 4
Total number of places
32
Our grades explained
Exceptional
Practice is exceptional: of the highest standard nationally. Other settings can learn from it.
Strong standard
The setting reaches a strong standard. Leaders are working above the standard expected of
them.
Expected standard
The setting is fulfilling the expected standard of education and/or care. This means they are
following the standard set out in statutory and non ‑ statutory legislation and the professional
standards expected of them.
Needs attention
The expected standards are not met but leaders are likely able to make the necessary
improvements.
Urgent improvement
The setting needs to make urgent improvements to provide the expected standard of
education and/or care.
The Office for Standards in Education, Children's Services and Skills (Ofsted) inspects
services providing education and skills for children and learners of all ages, and inspects
and regulates services that care for children and young people.
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