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

Grades by area

Behaviour, attitudes and establishing routines

Expected standard
Children are cared for in a warm and calm environment, where effective key-person relationships help them to feel secure. Staff use gentle and reassuring interactions that support children when they are unsettled and help them to grow in confidence. Children form trusting bonds with staff and show they feel at ease. For example, they cuddle on their laps or giggle as staff follow their lead in play. Children generally behave well. Staff act as positive role models and show children how to use resources safely. During group times, staff and children sing a welcome song that greets each child by name. Most children join in with enthusiasm and enjoy being part of the group. Staff encourage turn-taking and cooperation, which helps children to develop early social skills. Children benefit from predictable daily routines, such as getting ready for snack or moving between activities. Staff know children well and help them to settle quickly during transitions. Leaders work with parents and carers to promote the importance of regular attendance. They explain how consistent routines help children to build positive habits that support their learning. At times, some children lose focus in structured activities, when these are not fully matched to their stage of development. Leaders recognise that clearer curriculum sequencing will help staff to plan activities that sustain children's interest more consistently.

Children's welfare and wellbeing

Expected standard
Children are generally happy and settled in the setting. Leaders offer settling-in sessions and agree on simple and bespoke approaches with parents and carers before children start. This helps children to adjust and supports their wellbeing. Care practices are gentle and nurturing. Staff sing songs to children during nappy changes, and children enjoy these interactions. Older children invite staff into their play, showing that they feel secure and valued. Children enjoy their time in the outdoor area, where they dig, explore and transport water between activities. These experiences give them space to move, investigate and follow their interests. When children become unsettled, staff make thoughtful adaptations to meet their needs and work closely with parents to understand what may help. There are consistent routines, such as offering healthy snacks and home-cooked meals. This supports children's wellbeing and helps them to feel comfortable and secure in the setting. Staff use simple language and reassurance to help children begin to understand their feelings, when they become unsettled. Staff place a focus on building warm and trusting relationships from the moment children start. Key persons stay close to children, who are new or who find separation difficult. They offer calm comfort and respond quickly to their needs. This sensitive approach helps children to form secure attachments and explore the environment with growing confidence.

Inclusion

Expected standard
Leaders have established an inclusive culture, where they identify and respond to children's individual needs with care. They work closely with parents and carers to understand what may help each child feel secure. This, in turn, supports children to settle and participate confidently. Although no children currently receive additional funding or have identified special educational needs and/or disabilities, leaders and staff take appropriate steps to recognise emerging needs and reduce potential barriers to children's learning and wellbeing. Where children experience difficulties, such as separating from their parents, leaders work closely with families and implement effective strategies. For example, staff encourage children to bring familiar items from home. This provides comfort and reassurance, and helps them settle more quickly. As a result, children are beginning to feel more secure. Staff use daily interactions and time spent playing alongside children to get to know them well and notice early signs of emerging needs. Through ongoing observation, staff assess children's emerging needs and follow a simple assess, plan, do and review process to decide on and evaluate the support that helps children to take part with confidence. Typically, children receive the help they need to engage confidently in routines and activities. Staff respond promptly when children may require additional guidance and adapt their approach sensitively. Leaders are developing the curriculum further so it gives staff clearer guidance on how children's learning builds over time. This ongoing work will help staff to continue refine how they support children's individual needs.

Leadership and governance

Expected standard
The new leadership team has taken appropriate steps to address the actions raised. They have strengthened their risk assessment processes and now review these routinely with staff. Leaders have replaced equipment, where needed, to keep the environment safe. In addition, they have improved how accidents are recorded and shared with parents and carers, so records now contain clearer and more accurate information. Leaders understand that the curriculum requires further development and have begun to refine its design and sequencing. They have clear plans in place to support this work. Leaders have chosen to prioritise personal, social and emotional development. This focused approach is already having a positive impact, particularly for children who needed greater emotional support. Staff now help children to feel more secure, and children are becoming more confident and settled as a result. Although the wider curriculum development is ongoing, leaders' actions show purposeful direction and are contributing to steady improvement. Leaders ensure staff have access to relevant training to develop their knowledge and skills, which is helping them to gain confidence in their roles. As many staff are new, leaders are mindful of staff's workload and provide ongoing support. Staff say they feel valued and well supported. This contributes to a positive and improving culture across the setting.

Achievement

Needs attention
Children do not make the progress they are capable of in some areas of learning because planned activities are not consistently matched to children's ages and stages of development. For example, during some group activities, younger children lose interest quickly because the task is too demanding for their stage of development. Some activities are not always matched well to what children already know and can do, which limits how securely they build their learning over time. Despite this, children generally make progress in their personal, social and emotional development. Children enjoy joining in with songs and rhymes and show clear delight as they sing and dance. They are beginning to develop early independence in their self-care routines, such as washing their hands before eating. Children hear numbers used naturally and begin to develop an early awareness of counting. As they play, children benefit from staff commenting on what they are doing, which supports their early communication.

Curriculum and teaching

Needs attention
The new leadership team has begun reviewing and adapting the curriculum. However, it does not yet give staff the guidance they need to plan learning that connects clearly to children's ages and stages of development. Staff are not yet confident in deciding what children need to learn next. As a result, activities do not always reflect what children are ready for. For example, during a sensory activity linked to a story about a bear hunt, staff continue reading even when children lose interest because the story was too long. Children who were keen to practise emerging walking skills were placed in the group but moved away quickly, showing that the activity did not meet their needs or interests. Leaders have strengthened some aspects of the curriculum, particularly in personal, social and emotional development. This early work is helping staff to support children's emotional security more effectively. Staff introduce early concepts naturally through routines and play, such as using songs and rhymes to support simple counting. They model how to explore musical instruments and using positional language, such as 'under' and 'over', to develop children's early understanding. Leaders know the curriculum needs clearer sequencing so staff can plan learning that ensures children's knowledge and skills develop securely over time, and they have begun work to address this.

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

Children enjoy a range of experiences at this setting. However, the curriculum is not yet clearly sequenced or rooted in what children need to learn next. This means that children are not always supported to build their knowledge securely. Despite this, children develop early independence, communication and problem-solving skills as they explore their environment and interact with staff. Children experience a calm start to their day. They arrive to familiar staff and a calm and friendly welcome. Most children settle quickly because staff take time to understand what helps each child feel secure. Before children start, leaders meet with parents and carers to agree on simple and personalised approaches. This helps children to settle smoothly. Children form deep bonds with their key persons, who stay close, offer reassurance and respond gently to their needs. Children show growing confidence in daily routines, such as joining in with the morning hello song and enjoying being part of the group. Throughout the day, children move confidently between spaces that feel homely and inviting. Babies enjoy unhurried nappy changing routines, where staff sing softly or chat to them. This helps babies to feel relaxed and content. Older children show their trust by seeking out staff, sharing toys with them or inviting them into their play. These interactions show that children feel valued and emotionally safe. Children spend time outdoors daily. They dig in soil, explore natural materials and transport water between activities. Indoors, children explore musical instruments and cosy areas, where they can rest or enjoy sensory experiences. For example, children explore coloured sand linked to a space theme. They investigate a variety of sensory materials, such as mud, sand, artificial grass, leaves and shaving foam. These activities give them rich opportunities to experiment with different textures and use their senses to explore.

Next steps

To meet the requirements of the Early years foundation stage the provider must take the following action by the assigned date: Action Completion Date leaders should strengthen the curriculum so it is clearly sequenced and rooted in children's developmental needs, ensuring it identifies what children need to learn next and builds securely over time 17/04/2026

About this inspection

The inspector spoke with leaders, staff, the special educational needs coordinator, children and parents and carers 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
2862951
Address
1458 London Road LEIGH-ON-SEA SS9 2UW
Type
Childcare on Non-Domestic Premises, Full day care
Registration date
08/09/2025
Registered person
Lottie & Ollie Limited
Register(s)
EYR
Operating hours
Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday : 07:30 - 18:00
Local authority
Southend-on-Sea

Facts and figures

Age range at inspection
1 to 3
Total places
30

Data from 10 March 2026

Raw extracted PDF text
Lottie & Ollie
Unique reference number (URN): 2862951
Address: 1458 London Road, LEIGH-ON-SEA, SS9 2UW
Type: Childcare on non-domestic premises
Registered with Ofsted: 08/09/2025
Registers: EYR
Registered person: Lottie & Ollie Limited
Inspection report: 10 March 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.

Expected standard
Behaviour, attitudes and establishing routines Expected standard
Children are cared for in a warm and calm environment, where effective key-person
relationships help them to feel secure. Staff use gentle and reassuring interactions that
support children when they are unsettled and help them to grow in confidence. Children
form trusting bonds with staff and show they feel at ease. For example, they cuddle on their
laps or giggle as staff follow their lead in play.
Children generally behave well. Staff act as positive role models and show children how to
use resources safely. During group times, staff and children sing a welcome song that greets
each child by name. Most children join in with enthusiasm and enjoy being part of the group.
Staff encourage turn-taking and cooperation, which helps children to develop early social
skills.
Children benefit from predictable daily routines, such as getting ready for snack or moving
between activities. Staff know children well and help them to settle quickly during transitions.
Leaders work with parents and carers to promote the importance of regular attendance.
They explain how consistent routines help children to build positive habits that support their
learning. At times, some children lose focus in structured activities, when these are not fully
matched to their stage of development. Leaders recognise that clearer curriculum
sequencing will help staff to plan activities that sustain children's interest more consistently.
Children's welfare and wellbeing Expected standard
Children are generally happy and settled in the setting. Leaders offer settling-in sessions
and agree on simple and bespoke approaches with parents and carers before children start.
This helps children to adjust and supports their wellbeing. Care practices are gentle and
nurturing. Staff sing songs to children during nappy changes, and children enjoy these
interactions. Older children invite staff into their play, showing that they feel secure and
valued. Children enjoy their time in the outdoor area, where they dig, explore and transport
water between activities. These experiences give them space to move, investigate and
follow their interests.
When children become unsettled, staff make thoughtful adaptations to meet their needs and
work closely with parents to understand what may help. There are consistent routines, such
as offering healthy snacks and home-cooked meals. This supports children's wellbeing and
helps them to feel comfortable and secure in the setting. Staff use simple language and
reassurance to help children begin to understand their feelings, when they become
unsettled.
Staff place a focus on building warm and trusting relationships from the moment children
start. Key persons stay close to children, who are new or who find separation difficult. They
offer calm comfort and respond quickly to their needs. This sensitive approach helps
children to form secure attachments and explore the environment with growing confidence.

Inclusion Expected standard
Leaders have established an inclusive culture, where they identify and respond to children's
individual needs with care. They work closely with parents and carers to understand what
may help each child feel secure. This, in turn, supports children to settle and participate
confidently. Although no children currently receive additional funding or have identified
special educational needs and/or disabilities, leaders and staff take appropriate steps to
recognise emerging needs and reduce potential barriers to children's learning and wellbeing.
Where children experience difficulties, such as separating from their parents, leaders work
closely with families and implement effective strategies. For example, staff encourage
children to bring familiar items from home. This provides comfort and reassurance, and
helps them settle more quickly. As a result, children are beginning to feel more secure. Staff
use daily interactions and time spent playing alongside children to get to know them well
and notice early signs of emerging needs. Through ongoing observation, staff assess
children's emerging needs and follow a simple assess, plan, do and review process to
decide on and evaluate the support that helps children to take part with confidence.
Typically, children receive the help they need to engage confidently in routines and activities.
Staff respond promptly when children may require additional guidance and adapt their
approach sensitively. Leaders are developing the curriculum further so it gives staff clearer
guidance on how children's learning builds over time. This ongoing work will help staff to
continue refine how they support children's individual needs.
Leadership and governance Expected standard
The new leadership team has taken appropriate steps to address the actions raised. They
have strengthened their risk assessment processes and now review these routinely with
staff. Leaders have replaced equipment, where needed, to keep the environment safe. In
addition, they have improved how accidents are recorded and shared with parents and
carers, so records now contain clearer and more accurate information.
Leaders understand that the curriculum requires further development and have begun to
refine its design and sequencing. They have clear plans in place to support this work.
Leaders have chosen to prioritise personal, social and emotional development. This focused
approach is already having a positive impact, particularly for children who needed greater
emotional support. Staff now help children to feel more secure, and children are becoming
more confident and settled as a result. Although the wider curriculum development is
ongoing, leaders' actions show purposeful direction and are contributing to steady
improvement.
Leaders ensure staff have access to relevant training to develop their knowledge and skills,
which is helping them to gain confidence in their roles. As many staff are new, leaders are
mindful of staff's workload and provide ongoing support. Staff say they feel valued and well
supported. This contributes to a positive and improving culture across the setting.

Needs attention
Achievement Needs attention
Children do not make the progress they are capable of in some areas of learning because
planned activities are not consistently matched to children's ages and stages of
development. For example, during some group activities, younger children lose interest
quickly because the task is too demanding for their stage of development. Some activities
are not always matched well to what children already know and can do, which limits how
securely they build their learning over time.
Despite this, children generally make progress in their personal, social and emotional
development. Children enjoy joining in with songs and rhymes and show clear delight as
they sing and dance. They are beginning to develop early independence in their self-care
routines, such as washing their hands before eating. Children hear numbers used naturally
and begin to develop an early awareness of counting. As they play, children benefit from
staff commenting on what they are doing, which supports their early communication.
Curriculum and teaching Needs attention
The new leadership team has begun reviewing and adapting the curriculum. However, it
does not yet give staff the guidance they need to plan learning that connects clearly to
children's ages and stages of development. Staff are not yet confident in deciding what
children need to learn next. As a result, activities do not always reflect what children are
ready for. For example, during a sensory activity linked to a story about a bear hunt, staff
continue reading even when children lose interest because the story was too long. Children
who were keen to practise emerging walking skills were placed in the group but moved
away quickly, showing that the activity did not meet their needs or interests.
Leaders have strengthened some aspects of the curriculum, particularly in personal, social
and emotional development. This early work is helping staff to support children's emotional
security more effectively. Staff introduce early concepts naturally through routines and play,
such as using songs and rhymes to support simple counting. They model how to explore
musical instruments and using positional language, such as 'under' and 'over', to develop
children's early understanding. Leaders know the curriculum needs clearer sequencing so
staff can plan learning that ensures children's knowledge and skills develop securely over
time, and they have begun work to address this.

What it's like to be a child at this setting
Children enjoy a range of experiences at this setting. However, the curriculum is not yet
clearly sequenced or rooted in what children need to learn next. This means that children
are not always supported to build their knowledge securely. Despite this, children develop
early independence, communication and problem-solving skills as they explore their
environment and interact with staff.
Children experience a calm start to their day. They arrive to familiar staff and a calm and
friendly welcome. Most children settle quickly because staff take time to understand what
helps each child feel secure. Before children start, leaders meet with parents and carers to
agree on simple and personalised approaches. This helps children to settle smoothly.
Children form deep bonds with their key persons, who stay close, offer reassurance and
respond gently to their needs. Children show growing confidence in daily routines, such as
joining in with the morning hello song and enjoying being part of the group.
Throughout the day, children move confidently between spaces that feel homely and
inviting. Babies enjoy unhurried nappy changing routines, where staff sing softly or chat to
them. This helps babies to feel relaxed and content. Older children show their trust by
seeking out staff, sharing toys with them or inviting them into their play. These interactions
show that children feel valued and emotionally safe.
Children spend time outdoors daily. They dig in soil, explore natural materials and transport
water between activities. Indoors, children explore musical instruments and cosy areas,
where they can rest or enjoy sensory experiences. For example, children explore coloured
sand linked to a space theme. They investigate a variety of sensory materials, such as mud,
sand, artificial grass, leaves and shaving foam. These activities give them rich opportunities
to experiment with different textures and use their senses to explore.
Next steps
To meet the requirements of the Early years foundation stage the provider must take the
following action by the assigned date:
Action Completion Date
leaders should strengthen the curriculum so it is clearly
sequenced and rooted in children's developmental
needs, ensuring it identifies what children need to learn
next and builds securely over time
17/04/2026

Inspector:
Shelly McDougall
About this setting
Unique reference number (URN): 2862951
Address:
1458 London Road
LEIGH-ON-SEA
SS9 2UW
Type: Childcare on non-domestic premises
Registration date: 08/09/2025
Registered person: Lottie & Ollie Limited
Register(s): EYR
Operating hours: Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday : 07:30 - 18:00
Local authority: Southend-on-Sea
Facts and figures used on inspection
This data was available to the inspector at the time of the inspection.
This data is from 10 March 2026
Children numbers
About this inspection
The inspector spoke with leaders, staff, the special educational needs coordinator, children
and parents and carers 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.

Age range of children at the time of inspection
1 to 3
Total number of places
30
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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