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 achieve remarkably well. They make sustained progress from their starting points, particularly in communication and language, which underpins success across all areas of learning. From the youngest age, children confidently use a wide range of words to express their needs, ideas and feelings. Older children engage in extended conversations, accurately recall prior learning and apply vocabulary when discussing scientific ideas, showing learning is retained over time. Babies settle quickly, form secure attachments and actively explore their environment, developing early communication, physical confidence and curiosity as they move, interact with others and engage in sensory and musical play. Children with special educational needs and/or disabilities and those who face barriers to learning thrive and make wonderful progress from their individual starting points. Children develop inspiring levels of independence, confidence and positive interaction. They manage self-care routines, regulate emotions and demonstrate highly secure early mathematical understanding, equipping them with the knowledge, skills and attitudes needed for the next stage of learning.

Behaviour, attitudes and establishing routines

Strong standard
Staff implement clear, effective practices that consistently support positive behaviour, excellent attitudes to learning and well-established routines across the setting. They create a shared understanding of expectations, ensuring behaviour policies are understood and applied securely. This results in a calm, purposeful environment where children know what is expected and feel confident to engage in learning. Staff build exceedingly warm, trusting relationships with children through sensitive, responsive interactions. Children approach adults readily for reassurance and respond positively to support. As a result, children feel emotionally safe, settle quickly and confidently explore their environment. Children demonstrate highly positive attitudes to learning. They show amazing curiosity, sustained engagement and resilience. Children remain focused for extended periods and return eagerly to activities. Staff ensure flexible, developmentally appropriate routines reduce waiting times and support children's autonomy, enabling them to manage transitions calmly and remain motivated throughout the day. Leaders promote the importance of punctuality and attendance thoroughly. They communicate clear expectations to families and monitor attendance closely, particularly for vulnerable and disadvantaged children. Leaders act promptly where concerns arise, ensuring children benefit from continuity of care and learning. Staff professionally weave inclusive approaches throughout the provision. Thoughtful adaptations, including sensory spaces and personalised strategies, support children with complex needs. These reduce distress, promote self-regulation and ensure all children can participate fully. As a result, children behave exceedingly well, while developing confidence and respect for others.

Children's welfare and wellbeing

Strong standard
Staff promote children's welfare and wellbeing highly effectively, ensuring all children receive responsive, nurturing care that enables them to thrive. Leaders prioritise early identification of need and coordinated support, working closely with families and external professionals. Consequently, this reduces barriers to learning, enabling children to make sustained progress while feeling thoroughly valued and understood. Secure, responsive relationships are a clear strength. Key persons form nurturing attachments with babies and children, providing reassurance, comfort and emotional security. Children confidently seek comfort, settle well and separate from parents with ease. Consistency of care, including key-person continuity, supports children's emotional wellbeing and confidence. Children develop a highly secure understanding of health, self-care and physical wellbeing. Staff use daily routines to promote healthy choices, such as hydration, nutritious food and physical activity. Targeted initiatives around oral health, such as 'Denzel the dinosaur', help children understand how to care for their bodies. Therefore, children confidently take responsibility and make healthy choices. Children develop a secure understanding of personal safety through staff tailoring support carefully to their individual needs and developmental stages. For example, children access specialist seating recommended by occupational therapists to ensure safe posture at the table. Children learn to recognise, express and manage their emotions effectively. Practitioners model rich emotional language, respond sensitively to distress and support children to self-regulate. Children show an abundance of resilience, confidence and positive social interaction. Routines for sleeping, feeding and weaning are highly effective and tailored to individual needs. Babies follow familiar home routines, benefit from safe sleep practices and experience calm, predictable transitions from staff. Children experience continuity of care, ensuring their comfort, wellbeing and readiness to learn.

Curriculum and teaching

Strong standard
Staff demonstrate a clear and accurate understanding of the quality of curriculum design and teaching. Since the last inspection, leaders have strengthened the curriculum to ensure it is ambitious, coherent and inclusive. Leaders use local data, reflective evaluation and staff feedback to make informed improvements, ensuring teaching remains purposeful and responsive across all age groups, including babies. The curriculum is well designed and carefully sequenced. It provides clear progression from babies to children preparing for school, with a particular focus on secure attachments, repetition and retrieval. Children confidently recall historical facts about the Tudors, highlighting that learning is memorable and supports deeper understanding. Leaders ensure practitioners understand what they intend children to learn and how this translates into daily practice, resulting in consistent, high-quality teaching grounded in secure knowledge of child development. Practitioners prioritise communication and language development across the curriculum. They model rich vocabulary, such as 'Antarctica', and use open-ended questions to deepen thinking. Mathematical knowledge is embedded seamlessly throughout the day by staff. They introduce number, quantity and measure using precise language, building cumulatively on what children already know. Consequently, children develop secure early mathematical understanding and confidently apply number, quantity and measure in meaningful contexts. Staff place a high priority on children's physical, personal, social and emotional development. Calm routines, flexible transitions and opportunities for choice support independence and emotional regulation. Practitioners adapt teaching effectively for all children, using careful assessment to tailor support and ensure all children access learning successfully.

Inclusion

Strong standard
Leaders and staff create a highly inclusive culture where all children feel a nurturing sense of belonging and make excellent, sustained progress from their starting points. Staff identify children's individual needs swiftly through robust assessment, ongoing observation and close partnership with families. As a result, emerging needs, including special educational needs and/or disabilities (SEND), communication delay and physical development needs, are acted on early. Staff reduce barriers to learning through well-planned reasonable adjustments and targeted support. Children with SEND access the same ambitious curriculum as their friends, with staff implementing adaptations such as specialist equipment, visual communication strategies and consistent key-person support. Staff ensure coordinated input from external professionals, environmental adaptations and structured support to enable children with complex needs to make significant progress. As a result, children develop substantially in independence, confidence and engagement with others. Progress is monitored rigorously by staff through regular reviews and shared evaluations with parents and professionals. Leaders assess impact carefully and adjust support promptly. Additional funding is used effectively to secure one-to-one support and specialist resources, leading to clear gains in children's communication, self-regulation and wellbeing. Staff receive high-quality training, supported by highly impactful special educational needs coordinator leadership and ongoing professional development. Staff implement motivational support consistently and confidently, ensuring children's needs are identified early, barriers to learning are reduced and progress is sustained over time.

Leadership and governance

Strong standard
Leaders provide highly effective leadership and governance that are sharply focused on improving outcomes for children. They demonstrate a clear understanding of the setting's strengths and priorities and take decisive action where improvement is needed. Since the last inspection, leaders have strengthened curriculum implementation, inclusion and safeguarding, resulting in consistently impactful day-to-day practice and improved experiences for children. Leaders respond well to changes in context, for example, staff have adapted mealtime routines in response to the increased number of children on roll. Leaders manage the nursery's growth carefully to maintain the quality of interactions, routines and care, refining transitions and increasing monitoring to ensure calm, purposeful environments. As a result, children feel secure and ready to learn. Leaders make well-informed decisions in the best interests of children, particularly those with special educational needs and/or disabilities, those known to social care and those facing barriers to learning. Funding is used strategically to secure specialist input, additional staffing and targeted resources. This significantly reduces barriers and enables children to make impressive progress and maintain emotional wellbeing. Leaders manage staff wellbeing and workload thoughtfully through regular supervision, open communication and responsive support. High-quality professional development, such as Makaton, safeguarding and curriculum delivery training, strengthens staff confidence, resulting in consistent, high-quality teaching. Consequently, children feel extremely safe, understood and supported to make sustained progress.

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

Children feel safe, cared for and valued from the moment they arrive. Warm, consistent relationships with familiar adults help children settle quickly and feel emotionally secure. Staff respond sensitively to children's needs, offering comfort, reassurance and encouragement. As a result, children separate confidently from parents and approach adults freely for support. Children build prominent social skills and wonderful relationships. Staff support children to share, take turns and collaborate through well-established routines and carefully supported play. For example, children work together at mealtimes to lay tables and count cutlery, and they invite peers to join activities. This helps children develop cooperation, empathy and an excellent sense of belonging. Children enjoy learning and show high levels of curiosity and engagement. Staff ensure activities are purposeful, exciting and responsive to children's interests. For example, staff create Arctic scenes in pre-school to promote the investigation of melting ice and sing together in the baby room. Staff use rich language, questioning skills and repetition to deepen learning. Consequently, children sustain high levels of attention, recall prior learning and confidently use ambitious vocabulary, such as 'Tudor' and 'hydration'. Children achieve exceedingly well from their different starting points. Communication and language are a clear strength, including for children with special educational needs and/or disabilities. Staff use tailored support, such as signing, one-to-one input and adapted environments to reduce barriers and enable children to thrive alongside their friends. Children grow in independence, managing self-care routines, making choices and solving problems. Leaders promote attendance and work very closely with families to support routines and wellbeing. Families feel welcomed and listened to, strengthening the consistency of care between home and nursery. As a result, children are abundantly happy, confident and motivated learners who feel they belong, achieve well and are well prepared for their next steps.

Next steps

Leaders and those responsible for governance should sustain their work to ensure continued improvement and high standards. They should focus on creating a transformational impact on the outcomes and experiences of those with special educational needs and/or disabilities and those who may face any other barriers to their learning and/or wellbeing.

About this inspection

The inspectors spoke with leaders, practitioners, the special educational needs coordinator, apprentices, children and their parents 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
EY289579
Address
Phoenix Square, Wyncolls Road Severalls Industrial Park Colchester Essex CO4 9AS
Type
Childcare on Non-Domestic Premises, Full day care
Registration date
16/06/2004
Registered person
Busy Bees Nurseries Limited
Register(s)
EYR, CCR, VCR
Operating hours
Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday : 07:15 - 18:00
Local authority
Essex

Facts and figures

Age range at inspection
0 to 4
Total places
106

Data from 6 February 2026

Raw extracted PDF text
Busy Bees Day Nursery at Colchester SeverallsBusiness Park
Unique reference number (URN): EY289579
Address: Phoenix Square, Wyncolls Road, Severalls Industrial Park, Colchester, Essex, CO4 9AS
Type: Childcare on non-domestic premises
Registered with Ofsted: 16/06/2004
Registers: EYR, CCR, VCR
Registered person: Busy Bees Nurseries Limited
Inspection report: 6 February 2026
Exceptional
Strong standard
Expected standard
Needs attention
Urgent improvement

Strong standard
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.
Achievement Strong standard
Children achieve remarkably well. They make sustained progress from their starting points,
particularly in communication and language, which underpins success across all areas of
learning. From the youngest age, children confidently use a wide range of words to express
their needs, ideas and feelings. Older children engage in extended conversations,
accurately recall prior learning and apply vocabulary when discussing scientific ideas,
showing learning is retained over time. Babies settle quickly, form secure attachments and
actively explore their environment, developing early communication, physical confidence
and curiosity as they move, interact with others and engage in sensory and musical play.
Children with special educational needs and/or disabilities and those who face barriers to
learning thrive and make wonderful progress from their individual starting points. Children
develop inspiring levels of independence, confidence and positive interaction. They manage
self-care routines, regulate emotions and demonstrate highly secure early mathematical
understanding, equipping them with the knowledge, skills and attitudes needed for the next
stage of learning.
Behaviour, attitudes and establishing routines Strong standard
Staff implement clear, effective practices that consistently support positive behaviour,
excellent attitudes to learning and well-established routines across the setting. They create
a shared understanding of expectations, ensuring behaviour policies are understood and
applied securely. This results in a calm, purposeful environment where children know what is
expected and feel confident to engage in learning.
Staff build exceedingly warm, trusting relationships with children through sensitive,
responsive interactions. Children approach adults readily for reassurance and respond
positively to support. As a result, children feel emotionally safe, settle quickly and confidently

explore their environment. Children demonstrate highly positive attitudes to learning. They
show amazing curiosity, sustained engagement and resilience. Children remain focused for
extended periods and return eagerly to activities. Staff ensure flexible, developmentally
appropriate routines reduce waiting times and support children's autonomy, enabling them to
manage transitions calmly and remain motivated throughout the day.
Leaders promote the importance of punctuality and attendance thoroughly. They
communicate clear expectations to families and monitor attendance closely, particularly for
vulnerable and disadvantaged children. Leaders act promptly where concerns arise,
ensuring children benefit from continuity of care and learning.
Staff professionally weave inclusive approaches throughout the provision. Thoughtful
adaptations, including sensory spaces and personalised strategies, support children with
complex needs. These reduce distress, promote self-regulation and ensure all children can
participate fully. As a result, children behave exceedingly well, while developing confidence
and respect for others.
Children's welfare and wellbeing Strong standard
Staff promote children's welfare and wellbeing highly effectively, ensuring all children receive
responsive, nurturing care that enables them to thrive. Leaders prioritise early identification
of need and coordinated support, working closely with families and external professionals.
Consequently, this reduces barriers to learning, enabling children to make sustained
progress while feeling thoroughly valued and understood. Secure, responsive relationships
are a clear strength. Key persons form nurturing attachments with babies and children,
providing reassurance, comfort and emotional security. Children confidently seek comfort,
settle well and separate from parents with ease. Consistency of care, including key-person
continuity, supports children's emotional wellbeing and confidence.
Children develop a highly secure understanding of health, self-care and physical wellbeing.
Staff use daily routines to promote healthy choices, such as hydration, nutritious food and
physical activity. Targeted initiatives around oral health, such as 'Denzel the dinosaur', help
children understand how to care for their bodies. Therefore, children confidently take
responsibility and make healthy choices. Children develop a secure understanding of
personal safety through staff tailoring support carefully to their individual needs and
developmental stages. For example, children access specialist seating recommended by
occupational therapists to ensure safe posture at the table.
Children learn to recognise, express and manage their emotions effectively. Practitioners
model rich emotional language, respond sensitively to distress and support children to self-
regulate. Children show an abundance of resilience, confidence and positive social
interaction.
Routines for sleeping, feeding and weaning are highly effective and tailored to individual
needs. Babies follow familiar home routines, benefit from safe sleep practices and
experience calm, predictable transitions from staff. Children experience continuity of care,
ensuring their comfort, wellbeing and readiness to learn.

Curriculum and teaching Strong standard
Staff demonstrate a clear and accurate understanding of the quality of curriculum design
and teaching. Since the last inspection, leaders have strengthened the curriculum to ensure
it is ambitious, coherent and inclusive. Leaders use local data, reflective evaluation and staff
feedback to make informed improvements, ensuring teaching remains purposeful and
responsive across all age groups, including babies.
The curriculum is well designed and carefully sequenced. It provides clear progression from
babies to children preparing for school, with a particular focus on secure attachments,
repetition and retrieval. Children confidently recall historical facts about the Tudors,
highlighting that learning is memorable and supports deeper understanding. Leaders ensure
practitioners understand what they intend children to learn and how this translates into daily
practice, resulting in consistent, high-quality teaching grounded in secure knowledge of child
development.
Practitioners prioritise communication and language development across the curriculum.
They model rich vocabulary, such as 'Antarctica', and use open-ended questions to deepen
thinking. Mathematical knowledge is embedded seamlessly throughout the day by staff.
They introduce number, quantity and measure using precise language, building cumulatively
on what children already know. Consequently, children develop secure early mathematical
understanding and confidently apply number, quantity and measure in meaningful contexts.
Staff place a high priority on children's physical, personal, social and emotional
development. Calm routines, flexible transitions and opportunities for choice support
independence and emotional regulation. Practitioners adapt teaching effectively for all
children, using careful assessment to tailor support and ensure all children access learning
successfully.
Inclusion Strong standard
Leaders and staff create a highly inclusive culture where all children feel a nurturing sense
of belonging and make excellent, sustained progress from their starting points. Staff identify
children's individual needs swiftly through robust assessment, ongoing observation and
close partnership with families. As a result, emerging needs, including special educational
needs and/or disabilities (SEND), communication delay and physical development needs,
are acted on early.
Staff reduce barriers to learning through well-planned reasonable adjustments and targeted
support. Children with SEND access the same ambitious curriculum as their friends, with
staff implementing adaptations such as specialist equipment, visual communication
strategies and consistent key-person support. Staff ensure coordinated input from external
professionals, environmental adaptations and structured support to enable children with
complex needs to make significant progress. As a result, children develop substantially in
independence, confidence and engagement with others.
Progress is monitored rigorously by staff through regular reviews and shared evaluations
with parents and professionals. Leaders assess impact carefully and adjust support
promptly. Additional funding is used effectively to secure one-to-one support and specialist
resources, leading to clear gains in children's communication, self-regulation and wellbeing.

Staff receive high-quality training, supported by highly impactful special educational needs
coordinator leadership and ongoing professional development. Staff implement motivational
support consistently and confidently, ensuring children's needs are identified early, barriers
to learning are reduced and progress is sustained over time.
Leadership and governance Strong standard
Leaders provide highly effective leadership and governance that are sharply focused on
improving outcomes for children. They demonstrate a clear understanding of the setting's
strengths and priorities and take decisive action where improvement is needed. Since the
last inspection, leaders have strengthened curriculum implementation, inclusion and
safeguarding, resulting in consistently impactful day-to-day practice and improved
experiences for children.
Leaders respond well to changes in context, for example, staff have adapted mealtime
routines in response to the increased number of children on roll. Leaders manage the
nursery's growth carefully to maintain the quality of interactions, routines and care, refining
transitions and increasing monitoring to ensure calm, purposeful environments. As a result,
children feel secure and ready to learn.
Leaders make well-informed decisions in the best interests of children, particularly those
with special educational needs and/or disabilities, those known to social care and those
facing barriers to learning. Funding is used strategically to secure specialist input, additional
staffing and targeted resources. This significantly reduces barriers and enables children to
make impressive progress and maintain emotional wellbeing.
Leaders manage staff wellbeing and workload thoughtfully through regular supervision,
open communication and responsive support. High-quality professional development, such
as Makaton, safeguarding and curriculum delivery training, strengthens staff confidence,
resulting in consistent, high-quality teaching. Consequently, children feel extremely safe,
understood and supported to make sustained progress.
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
Children feel safe, cared for and valued from the moment they arrive. Warm, consistent
relationships with familiar adults help children settle quickly and feel emotionally secure.
Staff respond sensitively to children's needs, offering comfort, reassurance and
encouragement. As a result, children separate confidently from parents and approach adults
freely for support. Children build prominent social skills and wonderful relationships. Staff
support children to share, take turns and collaborate through well-established routines and
carefully supported play. For example, children work together at mealtimes to lay tables and
count cutlery, and they invite peers to join activities. This helps children develop cooperation,
empathy and an excellent sense of belonging.
Children enjoy learning and show high levels of curiosity and engagement. Staff ensure
activities are purposeful, exciting and responsive to children's interests. For example, staff
create Arctic scenes in pre-school to promote the investigation of melting ice and sing
together in the baby room. Staff use rich language, questioning skills and repetition to
deepen learning. Consequently, children sustain high levels of attention, recall prior learning
and confidently use ambitious vocabulary, such as 'Tudor' and 'hydration'.
Children achieve exceedingly well from their different starting points. Communication and
language are a clear strength, including for children with special educational needs and/or
disabilities. Staff use tailored support, such as signing, one-to-one input and adapted
environments to reduce barriers and enable children to thrive alongside their friends.
Children grow in independence, managing self-care routines, making choices and solving
problems.

Inspectors:
Laura Paternoster
Becky Brame
About this setting
Unique reference number (URN): EY289579
Address:
Phoenix Square, Wyncolls Road
Severalls Industrial Park
Colchester
Essex
CO4 9AS
Type: Childcare on non-domestic premises
Leaders promote attendance and work very closely with families to support routines and
wellbeing. Families feel welcomed and listened to, strengthening the consistency of care
between home and nursery. As a result, children are abundantly happy, confident and
motivated learners who feel they belong, achieve well and are well prepared for their next
steps.
Next steps
Leaders and those responsible for governance should sustain their work to ensure
continued improvement and high standards. They should focus on creating a
transformational impact on the outcomes and experiences of those with special
educational needs and/or disabilities and those who may face any other barriers to their
learning and/or wellbeing.
About this inspection
The inspectors spoke with leaders, practitioners, the special educational needs coordinator,
apprentices, children and their parents 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.

Registration date: 16/06/2004
Registered person: Busy Bees Nurseries Limited
Register(s): EYR, CCR, VCR
Operating hours: Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday : 07:15 - 18:00
Local authority: Essex
Facts and figures used on inspection
This data was available to the inspector at the time of the inspection.
This data is from 6 February 2026
Children numbers
Age range of children at the time of inspection
0 to 4
Total number of places
106
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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