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

Grades by area

Children's welfare and wellbeing

Strong standard
Leaders and practitioners demonstrate a comprehensive knowledge and understanding of the setting's children and are highly responsive to their individual needs and changing circumstances. They tailor care practices effectively to support disadvantaged children, ensuring equitable access to learning and development. Practitioners build secure, trusting relationships with children, fostering strong attachments between key persons and children, which supports emotional security and engagement. Children receive guidance to develop their physical skills, personal safety, health and wellbeing, while routines such as sleeping are adapted sensitively to each child's requirements. Practitioners support children to recognise, express and manage their emotions, helping them develop a secure sense of emotional wellbeing. Through responsive care and consistent nurturing interactions, children feel safe, valued and confident to explore and learn, enabling them to thrive both socially and developmentally.

Achievement

Expected standard
Children make clear progress through the curriculum and develop age- and stage-appropriate knowledge and skills across all 7 areas of learning. They build their understanding securely over time. Practitioners model vocabulary and support children, including those who need additional help, to develop into confident learners. Many disadvantaged children have shown noticeable improvement when adults provide responsive support. Disadvantaged children, children with special educational needs and/or disabilities, those known or previously known to social care, and those facing barriers to learning achieve well from their starting points. Practitioners adapt teaching effectively so every child can access the full curriculum and make meaningful progress across all areas. As a result, children are well prepared for the next stage of their learning. They develop the communication, independence and confidence needed to move successfully through the early years foundation stage.

Behaviour, attitudes and establishing routines

Expected standard
Leaders have established a positive environment where behaviour expectations are clear, consistently reinforced and commonly understood by both staff and children. Staff build strong, trusting relationships with children, supporting their personal, social and emotional development, and actively consider children's age, stage of development, individual needs and circumstances when guiding behaviour. Children demonstrate the ability to collaborate, play harmoniously and get along well with their peers, developing key social skills through shared activities and structured games. Staff reinforce positive behaviour through explicit praise and encouragement, helping children internalise expectations. Leaders place a clear emphasis on promoting good attendance and punctuality. They monitor children's attendance closely and follow up promptly with families if there are concerns. Leaders have established effective procedures and communicate these clearly with parents, ensuring that families understand the importance of regular attendance.

Curriculum and teaching

Expected standard
Leaders maintain a clear and accurate understanding of the quality of the curriculum and teaching, and they use this knowledge to drive continuous improvement. They design the curriculum so it meets the early years foundation stage learning and development requirements. Staff understand the knowledge, skills and experiences children need, and they sequence learning so children build securely on what they already know. They use assessments to check what children can do and tailor teaching to each child's starting points and stage of development. This helps children to make steady progress across all areas and move confidently to the next stage of their education. Leaders use their knowledge of children's needs to inform practice. Planned activities, such as sensory play, support exploration and language-rich interactions. For example, during sand play, children leaned forward with interest as they poured and emptied containers. Staff within the room shared that this activity was carefully chosen to support the children's identified next steps. However, not all practitioners model rich language, extend vocabulary or sustain back-and-forth interactions consistently. Strengthening this practice would support children's communication skills more securely, including their early mathematical language. Leaders continue to guide practitioners to adapt teaching for disadvantaged children, those with special educational needs and/or disabilities, and children known to social care so every child receives the language support they need.

Inclusion

Expected standard
Leaders set high expectations for children and put support in place to remove barriers to learning. They recognise each child's starting point and ensure that targeted support enables vulnerable children, including those with additional needs, to make sustained progress. Leaders apply a precise, graduated approach to special educational needs and/or disabilities, enabling staff to identify emerging needs quickly and adapt provision so children receive timely and appropriate support. Many staff prioritise the development of communication and language. They focus on the impact of their interactions, model language and extend children's vocabulary. Staff actively engage with vulnerable children, helping them feel included, valued and able to participate fully in learning. This purposeful practice strengthens children's confidence and supports their communication development. The setting works closely with families and values them as partners in children's learning and development. Staff communicate regularly with parents through daily conversations, meetings and written updates, ensuring that families are well informed about their child's progress and wellbeing. Leaders also establish effective partnerships with external agencies to support children's individual needs. Staff share information appropriately and work collaboratively with other professionals to ensure that children receive timely support. Leaders have some awareness of additional funding available to support children who are currently or previously known to social care. However, funding such as early years pupil premium and looked-after children funding is not yet used consistently to target support. As leaders continue to develop their understanding, this will enable them to use funding more effectively to support vulnerable children's ongoing progress.

Leadership and governance

Expected standard
Leaders have a strong understanding of the setting's strengths and take effective action to maintain quality and improve areas identified for development. They make decisions in the best interests of all children, including disadvantaged children, those with special educational needs and/or disabilities, children known or previously known to social care, and those who face other barriers to learning and wellbeing. Leaders actively manage staff wellbeing and workload, using regular supervisions to provide support and guidance. Leaders ensure professional development is purposeful and impactful, helping practitioners enhance their skills to deliver high-quality care and education. Staff feel genuinely valued and supported in their roles. They shared that when they need help with planning or observations, room leaders take the time to meet with them individually, listen to their needs and provide tailored guidance. This approach helps staff feel confident, respected and motivated in their day-to-day practice. Leaders respond effectively to significant changes in the context of the setting, including leadership changes, ensuring minimal disruption to children's routines, learning and wellbeing. Leaders should strengthen their understanding of the statutory responsibilities of the nominated individual and ensure they promptly notify Ofsted of any changes in circumstances. Taking these actions will enhance governance and maintain compliance.

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

Children are encouraged to achieve the best they can in every room. Staff consider each child's next steps and areas of learning when planning and interacting. There is a strong emphasis on children having a sense of belonging. Secure attachments are evident. Children show confidence and ease with staff, demonstrating strong emotional bonds and trust. They know the staff well and respond positively to them across the day. From the moment they begin their settling-in sessions, children and parents are supported sensitively. Families feel welcomed, and children are nurtured from day one, helping them feel safe, secure and confident. Leaders aim to ensure that all children, regardless of need, are supported to make progress. Procedures and support systems are in place, including special educational needs and/or disabilities practice, communication with parents and enrichment opportunities, such as forest school. Children appear very well settled. Staff know them well and demonstrate an overall understanding of their interests and developmental needs. This supports the planning of activities and purposeful play within each of the rooms.

Next steps

Leaders should ensure that highly effective teaching and interactions with children are fully embedded, with a particular focus on communication and language. Practitioners need to recognise that every interaction is an opportunity to support speaking, listening and vocabulary development. Leaders should deepen their understanding of all available funding for children currently or previously known to social care, including early years pupil premium and looked-after children funding, so that they use it consistently and precisely to target support and improve vulnerable children's progress and outcomes further.

About this inspection

The inspector spoke with the manager, the special educational needs coordinator, other leaders and practitioners 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.

About this setting

URN
EY282455
Address
26 Browns Lane Knowle Solihull B93 9BE
Type
Childcare on Non-Domestic Premises, Full day care
Registration date
04/10/2004
Registered person
Howes, Isabelle
Register(s)
EYR
Operating hours
Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday : 08:00 - 18:00
Local authority
Solihull

Facts and figures

Age range at inspection
0 to 3
Total places
38

Data from 25 November 2025

Raw extracted PDF text
Hampton Nursery
Unique reference number (URN): EY282455
Address: 26 Browns Lane, Knowle, Solihull, B93 9BE
Type: Childcare on non-domestic premises
Registered with Ofsted: 04/10/2004
Registers: EYR
Registered person: Howes, Isabelle
Inspection report: 25 November 2025
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
Expected standard
Children's welfare and wellbeing Strong standard
Leaders and practitioners demonstrate a comprehensive knowledge and understanding of
the setting's children and are highly responsive to their individual needs and changing
circumstances. They tailor care practices effectively to support disadvantaged children,
ensuring equitable access to learning and development.
Practitioners build secure, trusting relationships with children, fostering strong attachments
between key persons and children, which supports emotional security and engagement.
Children receive guidance to develop their physical skills, personal safety, health and
wellbeing, while routines such as sleeping are adapted sensitively to each child's
requirements.
Practitioners support children to recognise, express and manage their emotions, helping
them develop a secure sense of emotional wellbeing. Through responsive care and
consistent nurturing interactions, children feel safe, valued and confident to explore and
learn, enabling them to thrive both socially and developmentally.
Achievement Expected standard
Children make clear progress through the curriculum and develop age- and stage-
appropriate knowledge and skills across all 7 areas of learning. They build their
understanding securely over time. Practitioners model vocabulary and support children,
including those who need additional help, to develop into confident learners. Many
disadvantaged children have shown noticeable improvement when adults provide
responsive support.
Disadvantaged children, children with special educational needs and/or disabilities, those
known or previously known to social care, and those facing barriers to learning achieve well
from their starting points. Practitioners adapt teaching effectively so every child can access
the full curriculum and make meaningful progress across all areas. As a result, children are
well prepared for the next stage of their learning. They develop the communication,
independence and confidence needed to move successfully through the early years
foundation stage.
Behaviour, attitudes and establishing routines Expected standard
Leaders have established a positive environment where behaviour expectations are clear,
consistently reinforced and commonly understood by both staff and children. Staff build
strong, trusting relationships with children, supporting their personal, social and emotional

development, and actively consider children's age, stage of development, individual needs
and circumstances when guiding behaviour.
Children demonstrate the ability to collaborate, play harmoniously and get along well with
their peers, developing key social skills through shared activities and structured games.
Staff reinforce positive behaviour through explicit praise and encouragement, helping
children internalise expectations.
Leaders place a clear emphasis on promoting good attendance and punctuality. They
monitor children's attendance closely and follow up promptly with families if there are
concerns. Leaders have established effective procedures and communicate these clearly
with parents, ensuring that families understand the importance of regular attendance.
Curriculum and teaching Expected standard
Leaders maintain a clear and accurate understanding of the quality of the curriculum and
teaching, and they use this knowledge to drive continuous improvement. They design the
curriculum so it meets the early years foundation stage learning and development
requirements. Staff understand the knowledge, skills and experiences children need, and
they sequence learning so children build securely on what they already know. They use
assessments to check what children can do and tailor teaching to each child's starting points
and stage of development. This helps children to make steady progress across all areas and
move confidently to the next stage of their education.
Leaders use their knowledge of children's needs to inform practice. Planned activities, such
as sensory play, support exploration and language-rich interactions. For example, during
sand play, children leaned forward with interest as they poured and emptied containers.
Staff within the room shared that this activity was carefully chosen to support the children's
identified next steps.
However, not all practitioners model rich language, extend vocabulary or sustain back-and-
forth interactions consistently. Strengthening this practice would support children's
communication skills more securely, including their early mathematical language. Leaders
continue to guide practitioners to adapt teaching for disadvantaged children, those with
special educational needs and/or disabilities, and children known to social care so every
child receives the language support they need.
Inclusion Expected standard
Leaders set high expectations for children and put support in place to remove barriers to
learning. They recognise each child's starting point and ensure that targeted support
enables vulnerable children, including those with additional needs, to make sustained
progress. Leaders apply a precise, graduated approach to special educational needs and/or
disabilities, enabling staff to identify emerging needs quickly and adapt provision so children
receive timely and appropriate support.
Many staff prioritise the development of communication and language. They focus on the
impact of their interactions, model language and extend children's vocabulary. Staff actively
engage with vulnerable children, helping them feel included, valued and able to participate

fully in learning. This purposeful practice strengthens children's confidence and supports
their communication development.
The setting works closely with families and values them as partners in children's learning
and development. Staff communicate regularly with parents through daily conversations,
meetings and written updates, ensuring that families are well informed about their child's
progress and wellbeing. Leaders also establish effective partnerships with external agencies
to support children's individual needs. Staff share information appropriately and work
collaboratively with other professionals to ensure that children receive timely support.
Leaders have some awareness of additional funding available to support children who are
currently or previously known to social care. However, funding such as early years pupil
premium and looked-after children funding is not yet used consistently to target support. As
leaders continue to develop their understanding, this will enable them to use funding more
effectively to support vulnerable children's ongoing progress.
Leadership and governance Expected standard
Leaders have a strong understanding of the setting's strengths and take effective action to
maintain quality and improve areas identified for development. They make decisions in the
best interests of all children, including disadvantaged children, those with special
educational needs and/or disabilities, children known or previously known to social care, and
those who face other barriers to learning and wellbeing.
Leaders actively manage staff wellbeing and workload, using regular supervisions to provide
support and guidance. Leaders ensure professional development is purposeful and
impactful, helping practitioners enhance their skills to deliver high-quality care and
education. Staff feel genuinely valued and supported in their roles. They shared that when
they need help with planning or observations, room leaders take the time to meet with them
individually, listen to their needs and provide tailored guidance. This approach helps staff
feel confident, respected and motivated in their day-to-day practice. Leaders respond
effectively to significant changes in the context of the setting, including leadership changes,
ensuring minimal disruption to children's routines, learning and wellbeing.
Leaders should strengthen their understanding of the statutory responsibilities of the
nominated individual and ensure they promptly notify Ofsted of any changes in
circumstances. Taking these actions will enhance governance and maintain compliance.

Inspector:
What it's like to be a child at this setting
Children are encouraged to achieve the best they can in every room. Staff consider each
child's next steps and areas of learning when planning and interacting. There is a strong
emphasis on children having a sense of belonging. Secure attachments are evident.
Children show confidence and ease with staff, demonstrating strong emotional bonds and
trust. They know the staff well and respond positively to them across the day. From the
moment they begin their settling-in sessions, children and parents are supported sensitively.
Families feel welcomed, and children are nurtured from day one, helping them feel safe,
secure and confident.
Leaders aim to ensure that all children, regardless of need, are supported to make progress.
Procedures and support systems are in place, including special educational needs and/or
disabilities practice, communication with parents and enrichment opportunities, such as
forest school.
Children appear very well settled. Staff know them well and demonstrate an overall
understanding of their interests and developmental needs. This supports the planning of
activities and purposeful play within each of the rooms.
Next steps
Leaders should ensure that highly effective teaching and interactions with children are
fully embedded, with a particular focus on communication and language. Practitioners
need to recognise that every interaction is an opportunity to support speaking, listening
and vocabulary development.
Leaders should deepen their understanding of all available funding for children currently
or previously known to social care, including early years pupil premium and looked-after
children funding, so that they use it consistently and precisely to target support and
improve vulnerable children's progress and outcomes further.
About this inspection
The inspector spoke with the manager, the special educational needs coordinator, other
leaders and practitioners 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.

Jas Gill
About this setting
Unique reference number (URN): EY282455
Address:
26 Browns Lane
Knowle
Solihull
B93 9BE
Type: Childcare on non-domestic premises
Registration date: 04/10/2004
Registered person: Howes, Isabelle
Register(s): EYR
Operating hours: Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday : 08:00 - 18:00
Local authority: Solihull
Facts and figures used on inspection
This data was available to the inspector at the time of the inspection.
This data is from 25 November 2025
Children numbers
Age range of children at the time of inspection
0 to 3
Total number of places
38

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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