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 progress through the curriculum from their starting points, particularly in communication and language. They quickly develop key foundational skills, such as independence in personal care. Children are able to confidently recognise and express their feelings and use mark-making tools with control. Their language skills develop significantly, enabling them to listen to stories and then retell them with confidence. This prepares them very well for later learning. Children communicate confidently with staff and each other. They use speech and gestures expertly to organise their play. For example, they roll objects back and forth, discussing which moves faster or slower through back-and-forth exchanges. Those who face barriers to learning receive targeted support that enables them to fully access the curriculum. They make meaningful progress. Children who speak English as an additional language quickly learn key vocabulary that allows them to communicate effectively with others. As a result, all children are very well prepared for their next stage of learning and development.

Behaviour, attitudes and establishing routines

Strong standard
Leaders have established a highly positive and nurturing environment. Expectations for behaviour are consistently understood by practitioners, children and families. Practitioners purposefully act as calm role models. Children mirror their behaviours in their own interactions. When conflict happens, staff skilfully guide children through solutions. This helps them understand how to resolve issues independently. As a result, children collaborate well and use consistently polite language. For example, when children's bowls run out of water during play, they politely ask their friends, 'Please can you pour some more in here?' Together, they share and transfer the water as a team. Practitioners create warm, trusting relationships with children. Their interactions are meaningful, gentle and enriching, which underpin the setting's positive culture. Practitioners know children's developmental stages and individual needs exceedingly well. They offer gentle reminders of expectations when needed. Practitioners ensure explanations are clear and age-appropriate. As a result, children rarely repeat unwanted behaviours. Practitioners comment and give explicit praise about how children do something, such as effort, kindness and turn-taking, which helps children build strong self-esteem. Leaders prioritise attendance and punctuality. This prepares families well for the expectations of school. Parents understand the importance of regular attendance, and leaders work closely with those who need additional support, celebrating improvements and addressing barriers sensitively. This consistent approach ensures children feel secure, behave well, and develop the attitudes and routines needed for future learning.

Children's welfare and wellbeing

Strong standard
Leaders have created an inclusive environment that prioritises children's welfare and wellbeing. Practitioners tailor care routines to meet individual needs. They know children very well. Practitioners adapt routines and levels of support to reflect each child's stage of development. They ensure children who face barriers to learning receive the support they need to thrive. For example, practitioners support younger children with a gentle 'hand-over-hand' approach when opening packets. Older children confidently pour their own drinks. Staff have high expectations for all children. For instance, children know and take pride in washing their own cups after snack time. Leaders use mealtimes consistently to promote wellbeing, independence and positive social experiences for children. Secure, responsive relationships help children feel safe, settled and ready to learn. Children develop an understanding of their physical development, personal safety and health through daily routines and meaningful conversations. They learn about healthy choices, practise independence in self-care and gain confidence in expressing and managing their emotions. Leaders enhance this learning further through partnerships with local agencies, such as 'health heroes' and 'clean hands' initiatives.

Curriculum and teaching

Strong standard
Leaders have created a well-planned curriculum that all staff understand and deliver. They are reflective and ensure every child experiences high-quality learning. Leaders accurately identify how well staff implement the curriculum and create wonderful activities that bring learning to life. For example, children love mixing potions in the water tray, and others enthusiastically roll play dough into snails, inspired by their favourite stories. Staff design these activities well to develop children's communication, physical, mathematical and literacy skills. Practitioners are ambitious for children. Children achieve well and remain highly engaged. Practitioners promote children's communication and language development effectively. During rhyming activities, children sound out simple words and decide whether they match. Staff praise their thinking process rather than just the final answer. Leaders model high-quality narration to staff. This supports staff to create purposeful interactions that extend children's vocabulary, communication and mathematical understanding well. Practitioners encourage children to count, recognise shapes and 'pour to the top' when filling containers. Physical, personal, social and emotional development is prioritised. Children's independence is encouraged from their first days at the setting. Through ongoing assessment, leaders and practitioners adapt teaching for every child. When children experience barriers to learning, leaders and practitioners seek advice from external professionals. For example, leaders and practitioners have created speech and language group sessions to seamlessly incorporate advice given by external agencies into the day. Practitioners know their key children very well and weave next steps seamlessly into daily experiences, helping every child achieve, belong and thrive.

Inclusion

Strong standard
Leaders take purposeful action to promptly assess and identify children's individual needs. They gather information from their starting points and continue to do so throughout their time at the provision. When leaders identify needs that require adjustments or adaptations, leaders act swiftly. They put effective systems in place to reduce barriers to learning and support children's overall wellbeing. For example, all staff have learned basic sign language to enhance communication with families of children with special educational needs and/or disabilities. This enables families to actively participate in their children's experiences at the provision, as well as being directly involved in the two-way partnerships between practitioners and parents. Leaders and practitioners effectively and regularly assess the information gathered on children's development, create a plan, implement it, and then review its impact. This ensures children continue to receive precisely tailored support that significantly impacts their learning and development as they start to close any gaps in learning and development between themselves and their peers. Leaders and practitioners have built meaningful and positive relationships with families, professionals and external agencies. They use these partnerships to enhance children's learning, opportunities and experiences. Practitioners speak with parents each morning to gain an insight into how each child is feeling and gently adjust their approach to best support them. When children feel overwhelmed, parents share this and practitioners provide one-to-one time, reading stories before gradually introducing children to the wider group. Practitioners also prepare specific toys and activities that interest children to help create a smoother transition into the day. Leaders use early years pupil premium funding appropriately, ensuring every child can access enriching extracurricular experiences, such as taking part in visits from the mobile farm.

Leadership and governance

Strong standard
Leaders' actions create a culture of continuous improvement. They ensure children receive the care, support and education they need to thrive. The reflective leaders regularly review the support in place for every child and actively involve practitioners in this reflective process. They value suggestions and feedback, using them to drive continual improvement. Leaders have an accurate understanding of the setting's strengths and take purposeful action to swiftly address areas identified for improvement. Leaders make decisions that are in the best interests of all children, particularly those who face additional barriers to learning and wellbeing. They work effectively with external agencies, using professional advice to shape provision and improve outcomes for children and families. For example, leaders source particular resources to ensure every individual child receives the tailored support they need. Leaders manage practitioners' workload sensitively. They adapt expectations and give practical support to maintain practitioners' wellbeing. Leaders prioritise practitioners' professional development with purposeful training. They carefully select development opportunities to enhance staff knowledge and practice. This has had a positive impact on the quality of interactions and the support children receive, which enhances their learning and development. Leaders value practitioners' input and encourage their feedback to support important decisions, such as the design of the curriculum.

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

Children are warmly welcomed into a nurturing and well-organised environment. Here, children receive care, feel safe and are able to thrive. From the moment they arrive, practitioners greet families positively. They gather important information that helps children settle in and feel secure. Secure relationships with their peers and practitioners mean children confidently explore, take part in learning and develop a positive sense of belonging. Children enjoy their learning and make secure progress from their starting points. They engage enthusiastically in a well-planned curriculum that sparks curiosity. For example, children love finding treasure in the sandpit, mixing potions, retelling stories and engaging in fun rhyming activities. These build children's confidence to communicate well with practitioners and peers. Those who face barriers to learning receive tailored support. This enables them to access the curriculum fully and achieve well. Practitioners scaffold learning carefully, helping children build independence, confidence and age-appropriate skills that prepare them well for their next steps. Children learn alongside one another with kindness and cooperation. Practitioners model calm, respectful interactions, and children mirror this in their play. They confidently share resources, solve problems together and use polite manners consistently throughout the day. Children skilfully express their feelings, recognise emotions and use strategies taught by staff to regulate their emotions. Leaders ensure families feel welcomed and valued. Leaders work closely with external agencies to strengthen outcomes for children who need additional support. Children thrive because routines are thoughtfully adapted to meet individual needs. They learn about healthy choices and how to keep themselves safe. These routines help them to develop independence in self-care. Leaders promote attendance positively, helping support families to establish routines in preparation for school.

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 disadvantaged children, those with special educational needs and/or disabilities, and those who may face other barriers to their learning and/or wellbeing.

About this inspection

The inspector spoke with leaders, practitioners, the special educational needs coordinator, the designated safeguarding lead, children, parents and carers during the inspection. The inspection started on 16 January 2026. Inspectors returned on 24 March 2026 to gather additional evidence in line with Ofsted inspections and visits: Deferring, pausing and gathering additional evidence policy. 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
507806
Address
Reading Road South Fleet Hampshire GU52 7TF
Type
Childcare on Non-Domestic Premises, Full day care
Registration date
11/08/1980
Registered person
Fleet Methodist Church Preschool Committee
Register(s)
EYR
Operating hours
Monday,Tuesday,Thursday,Friday,Wednesday : 09:00 - 15:00
Local authority
Hampshire

Facts and figures

Age range at inspection
2 to 4
Total places
28

Data from 16 January 2026

Raw extracted PDF text
Fleet Methodist Church Preschool
Unique reference number (URN): 507806
Address: Reading Road South, Fleet, Hampshire, GU52 7TF
Type: Childcare on non-domestic premises
Registered with Ofsted: 11/08/1980
Registers: EYR
Registered person: Fleet Methodist Church Preschool 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 progress through the curriculum from their starting points, particularly
in communication and language. They quickly develop key foundational skills, such as
independence in personal care. Children are able to confidently recognise and express their
feelings and use mark-making tools with control. Their language skills develop significantly,
enabling them to listen to stories and then retell them with confidence. This prepares them
very well for later learning. Children communicate confidently with staff and each other. They
use speech and gestures expertly to organise their play. For example, they roll objects back
and forth, discussing which moves faster or slower through back-and-forth exchanges.
Those who face barriers to learning receive targeted support that enables them to fully
access the curriculum. They make meaningful progress. Children who speak English as an
additional language quickly learn key vocabulary that allows them to communicate
effectively with others. As a result, all children are very well prepared for their next stage of
learning and development.
Behaviour, attitudes and establishing routines Strong standard
Leaders have established a highly positive and nurturing environment. Expectations for
behaviour are consistently understood by practitioners, children and families. Practitioners
purposefully act as calm role models. Children mirror their behaviours in their own
interactions. When conflict happens, staff skilfully guide children through solutions. This
helps them understand how to resolve issues independently. As a result, children
collaborate well and use consistently polite language. For example, when children's bowls
run out of water during play, they politely ask their friends, 'Please can you pour some more
in here?' Together, they share and transfer the water as a team.
Practitioners create warm, trusting relationships with children. Their interactions are
meaningful, gentle and enriching, which underpin the setting's positive culture. Practitioners
know children's developmental stages and individual needs exceedingly well. They offer
gentle reminders of expectations when needed. Practitioners ensure explanations are clear
and age-appropriate. As a result, children rarely repeat unwanted behaviours. Practitioners
comment and give explicit praise about how children do something, such as effort, kindness
and turn-taking, which helps children build strong self-esteem.
Leaders prioritise attendance and punctuality. This prepares families well for the
expectations of school. Parents understand the importance of regular attendance, and
leaders work closely with those who need additional support, celebrating improvements and
addressing barriers sensitively. This consistent approach ensures children feel secure,
behave well, and develop the attitudes and routines needed for future learning.

Children's welfare and wellbeing Strong standard
Leaders have created an inclusive environment that prioritises children's welfare and
wellbeing. Practitioners tailor care routines to meet individual needs. They know children
very well. Practitioners adapt routines and levels of support to reflect each child's stage of
development. They ensure children who face barriers to learning receive the support they
need to thrive. For example, practitioners support younger children with a gentle 'hand-over-
hand' approach when opening packets. Older children confidently pour their own drinks.
Staff have high expectations for all children. For instance, children know and take pride in
washing their own cups after snack time. Leaders use mealtimes consistently to promote
wellbeing, independence and positive social experiences for children.
Secure, responsive relationships help children feel safe, settled and ready to learn. Children
develop an understanding of their physical development, personal safety and health through
daily routines and meaningful conversations. They learn about healthy choices, practise
independence in self-care and gain confidence in expressing and managing their emotions.
Leaders enhance this learning further through partnerships with local agencies, such as
'health heroes' and 'clean hands' initiatives.
Curriculum and teaching Strong standard
Leaders have created a well-planned curriculum that all staff understand and deliver. They
are reflective and ensure every child experiences high-quality learning. Leaders accurately
identify how well staff implement the curriculum and create wonderful activities that bring
learning to life. For example, children love mixing potions in the water tray, and others
enthusiastically roll play dough into snails, inspired by their favourite stories. Staff design
these activities well to develop children's communication, physical, mathematical and
literacy skills.
Practitioners are ambitious for children. Children achieve well and remain highly engaged.
Practitioners promote children's communication and language development effectively.
During rhyming activities, children sound out simple words and decide whether they match.
Staff praise their thinking process rather than just the final answer. Leaders model high-
quality narration to staff. This supports staff to create purposeful interactions that extend
children's vocabulary, communication and mathematical understanding well. Practitioners
encourage children to count, recognise shapes and 'pour to the top' when filling containers.
Physical, personal, social and emotional development is prioritised. Children's
independence is encouraged from their first days at the setting. Through ongoing
assessment, leaders and practitioners adapt teaching for every child. When children
experience barriers to learning, leaders and practitioners seek advice from external
professionals. For example, leaders and practitioners have created speech and language
group sessions to seamlessly incorporate advice given by external agencies into the day.
Practitioners know their key children very well and weave next steps seamlessly into daily
experiences, helping every child achieve, belong and thrive.

Inclusion Strong standard
Leaders take purposeful action to promptly assess and identify children's individual needs.
They gather information from their starting points and continue to do so throughout their time
at the provision. When leaders identify needs that require adjustments or adaptations,
leaders act swiftly. They put effective systems in place to reduce barriers to learning and
support children's overall wellbeing. For example, all staff have learned basic sign language
to enhance communication with families of children with special educational needs and/or
disabilities. This enables families to actively participate in their children's experiences at the
provision, as well as being directly involved in the two-way partnerships between
practitioners and parents.
Leaders and practitioners effectively and regularly assess the information gathered on
children's development, create a plan, implement it, and then review its impact. This ensures
children continue to receive precisely tailored support that significantly impacts their learning
and development as they start to close any gaps in learning and development between
themselves and their peers.
Leaders and practitioners have built meaningful and positive relationships with families,
professionals and external agencies. They use these partnerships to enhance children's
learning, opportunities and experiences. Practitioners speak with parents each morning to
gain an insight into how each child is feeling and gently adjust their approach to best support
them. When children feel overwhelmed, parents share this and practitioners provide one-to-
one time, reading stories before gradually introducing children to the wider group.
Practitioners also prepare specific toys and activities that interest children to help create a
smoother transition into the day.
Leaders use early years pupil premium funding appropriately, ensuring every child can
access enriching extracurricular experiences, such as taking part in visits from the mobile
farm.
Leadership and governance Strong standard
Leaders' actions create a culture of continuous improvement. They ensure children receive
the care, support and education they need to thrive. The reflective leaders regularly review
the support in place for every child and actively involve practitioners in this reflective
process. They value suggestions and feedback, using them to drive continual improvement.
Leaders have an accurate understanding of the setting's strengths and take purposeful
action to swiftly address areas identified for improvement.
Leaders make decisions that are in the best interests of all children, particularly those who
face additional barriers to learning and wellbeing. They work effectively with external
agencies, using professional advice to shape provision and improve outcomes for children
and families. For example, leaders source particular resources to ensure every individual
child receives the tailored support they need.
Leaders manage practitioners' workload sensitively. They adapt expectations and give
practical support to maintain practitioners' wellbeing. Leaders prioritise practitioners'
professional development with purposeful training. They carefully select development

opportunities to enhance staff knowledge and practice. This has had a positive impact on
the quality of interactions and the support children receive, which enhances their learning
and development. Leaders value practitioners' input and encourage their feedback to
support important decisions, such as the design of the curriculum.
What it's like to be a child at this setting
Children are warmly welcomed into a nurturing and well-organised environment. Here,
children receive care, feel safe and are able to thrive. From the moment they arrive,
practitioners greet families positively. They gather important information that helps children
settle in and feel secure. Secure relationships with their peers and practitioners mean
children confidently explore, take part in learning and develop a positive sense of belonging.
Children enjoy their learning and make secure progress from their starting points. They
engage enthusiastically in a well-planned curriculum that sparks curiosity. For example,
children love finding treasure in the sandpit, mixing potions, retelling stories and engaging in
fun rhyming activities. These build children's confidence to communicate well with
practitioners and peers. Those who face barriers to learning receive tailored support. This
enables them to access the curriculum fully and achieve well. Practitioners scaffold learning
carefully, helping children build independence, confidence and age-appropriate skills that
prepare them well for their next steps.
Children learn alongside one another with kindness and cooperation. Practitioners model
calm, respectful interactions, and children mirror this in their play. They confidently share
resources, solve problems together and use polite manners consistently throughout the day.
Children skilfully express their feelings, recognise emotions and use strategies taught by
staff to regulate their emotions. Leaders ensure families feel welcomed and valued. Leaders
work closely with external agencies to strengthen outcomes for children who need additional
support.
Children thrive because routines are thoughtfully adapted to meet individual needs. They
learn about healthy choices and how to keep themselves safe. These routines help them to
develop independence in self-care. Leaders promote attendance positively, helping support
families to establish routines in preparation for school.

Inspectors:
Beth Wilson
Natasha Jarvis
About this setting
Unique reference number (URN): 507806
Address:
Reading Road South
Fleet
Hampshire
GU52 7TF
Type: Childcare on non-domestic premises
Registration date: 11/08/1980
Registered person: Fleet Methodist Church Preschool Committee
Register(s): EYR
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 disadvantaged children,
those with special educational needs and/or disabilities, and those who may face other
barriers to their learning and/or wellbeing.
About this inspection
The inspector spoke with leaders, practitioners, the special educational needs coordinator,
the designated safeguarding lead, children, parents and carers during the inspection.
The inspection started on 16 January 2026. Inspectors returned on 24 March 2026 to gather
additional evidence in line with Ofsted inspections and visits: Deferring, pausing and
gathering additional evidence policy.
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.

Operating hours: Monday,Tuesday,Thursday,Friday,Wednesday : 09:00 - 15:00
Local authority: Hampshire
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
Age range of children at the time of inspection
2 to 4
Total number of places
28
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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