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

Strong standard
Children have very positive relationships with their nurturing key persons. Staff explore different rules with children, helping them to think about and understand why they are important. For example, children know how to use the tunnel and steps safely in the garden, so they do not hurt themselves or their friends. These skills help children to independently explore the environment in a safe and engaging way. Staff model kindness, respect and positive behaviour. They support children to regulate their emotions by getting down to their level, using calm voices and offering comfort. Staff reinforce vocabulary around children's emotions to help them to recognise and name their feelings. Staff use everyday practice as purposeful teaching moments to ensure very positive behaviour. This contributes to an extremely calm and positive atmosphere. Children play very well together. Staff praise children when they listen and follow instructions. This helps children to understand expectations and feel proud. Children have consistently positive attitudes to learning. They join activities with curiosity. They take pride in their work and approach tasks with care. Children can increasingly manage their own feelings and behaviour. They show care and positive attitudes to each other. For example, when outdoors in the mud kitchen, children kindly indicate politely to their peers to manoeuvre out of the way so they do not get dirty. During the mixing of the mud, they take turns to use the utensils. Leaders continue to promote children's ongoing attendance to parents and carers. They follow up absences quickly and support parents to remove barriers to attending. Children are therefore able to attend regularly and benefit from their time at the setting.

Children's welfare and wellbeing

Strong standard
Children feel safe, secure and nurtured within the setting. Staff provide a warm welcome and help them to settle quickly. This positive relationship strengthens children's sense of belonging. Children form very positive attachments to staff and friendships with peers. They cooperate in their play and take turns together. Staff give careful consideration to settling new children. They stay close to them and make every effort to give them a calm and positive early experience. Staff promote children's physical health through regular outdoor play. They plan the outdoor area to offer space for imaginative play, climbing and turn-taking. Leaders ensure that policies, procedure and practice are rigorously reviewed, strategically adapted and effectively amended. Staff follow procedures to support children's dietary requirements. They implement effective eating procedures for children with allergies and appropriate food preferences. Leaders encourage healthy eating through planned balanced menus and consistent hygiene routines. Children consistently make their own healthy choices and decisions. Children pour their own drinks and use tongs to collect a variety of fruit slices during snack time. This develops their fine motor control skills. Children manage their personal care routines. For example, they wash their hands before eating. Children also help to tidy up, such as by wiping the tables. This contributes to children developing a sense of responsibility. Staff are highly responsive to the varying needs and changing circumstances of individual children and families. Staff work with parents and carers and, when required, seek advice from external services. They nurture children's emotional wellbeing through calm and positive interactions. Leaders ensure their key-person approach is embedded. Leaders enhance children's experiences by embedding opportunities that widen their horizons and strengthen their sense of belonging. Children are introduced to different languages, including Spanish and Mandarin, in an engaging and playful way, supporting children's confidence and communication skills.

Achievement

Expected standard
Children make encouraging progress across the areas of learning. They respond well to activities generally suited to their different ages and stages of development. Typically, children are confident to ask for help when needed and express their ideas. However, due to weaknesses in some staff's practice, some children, especially quieter and less confident children, do not extend their communication skills further. Children move confidently around the setting and manage familiar routines well. They build on what they already know and can do as they access the range of experiences on offer. Children benefit from outings in the local area, where they learn more about their community. They show an increasing awareness and value that people are different. Children demonstrate kindness and consideration towards others. For example, they include their friends in their play and wait patiently for their turn. These positive interactions support children to develop secure social and emotional skills.

Curriculum and teaching

Expected standard
Leaders have typically developed a broad and inclusive curriculum. In the main, they support and guide staff to ensure the curriculum is implemented across the setting. Children's learning is carefully organised around clear developmental milestones for younger and older children. This ensures that children make progress. Staff adapt their strategies to support children to learn. For example, they use visual cards and words in other languages to support children who speak English as an additional language. Staff provide regular opportunities for children to develop their literacy skills. Children have access to books in all areas of learning. For example, staff read stories to children and share books with them throughout the day. This helps children to develop their interest in reading. Children develop deep bonds with staff during these shared experiences. However, staff sometimes do not typically use strategies to engage quieter and less confident children in their learning. This does not fully support their communication skills at the same rate as their peers. Overall, children demonstrate positive levels of self-esteem and show a sense of belonging within the setting. Staff support children's mathematical development effectively. Children learn about size, shape, numbers, weight and dimensions. Staff ensure that children have opportunities for enhancing their physical development, such as during outside play and going on local trips. Staff plan and deliver a range of ambitious activities that generally engage children well. They help children to develop curiosity in activities, such as creating and flying kites outside. There are, however, slight inconsistencies in the quality of support for children to extend their ideas and understanding. However, children's overall enjoyment and involvement during activities is positive.

Inclusion

Expected standard
Leaders and staff have attended training on supporting children with special educational needs and/or disabilities (SEND). They typically support children's individual needs. Staff use ongoing assessment to identify potential gaps in learning. They work in partnership with parents and carers and other agencies. Children with SEND are well supported. Staff create individual achievable plans to support their next steps in learning and development. Staff use a range of strategies, such as delivering specific activities, to support children with SEND. Staff liaise with other professionals to provide effective and timely support. Leaders have effective working relationships with external professionals and make timely referrals. They invite professionals into the setting to provide advice and guidance on how to best support children's progress and learning. This means children receive prompt support while awaiting specialist interventions. For example, children's speech and language skills benefit from targeted small-group work while they await formal specialist support. Leaders understand that some children's progress is better measured in smaller steps. Leaders implement actions to reduce barriers to children's wellbeing. For example, they continually review and make changes to the learning environment to support children's needs. Leaders have used funding to further enhance a sensory space to support children to regulate their emotions. Staff support children's transitions in their routines and smaller group activities.

Leadership and governance

Expected standard
Leaders know their families, children and local community well. They have a clear and well-defined vision for the setting. Leaders regularly review their curriculum and have an accurate understanding of their strengths and areas for development. For example, they have implemented planning books for staff. These books provide examples of activities, breaking down next steps in children's key skills, such as fine motor development. The management team has also refined procedures for transitioning children around the nursery. These improvements strengthen supervision of children and contribute to maintaining their safety. Leaders work collaboratively with other agencies, including the local authority, to bring about effective change. They also share their strategies for supporting children with special educational needs and/or disabilities and activities with other local settings, supporting wider professional development in the community. There is a positive focus on staff's wellbeing and workload. Leaders engage in open dialogue with staff through supervision sessions and team meetings. New staff benefit from a detailed induction and understand their roles and responsibilities. Staff feel well equipped to carry out their roles. However, leaders have not consistently enhanced all staff's expertise in supporting children's conversational language. This does not enable children to articulate their ideas more fully and in greater depth.

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

Children are happy in this warm and welcoming nursery. They are confident and curious learners. Staff offer a warm welcome to children on arrival. Children access a variety of fun activities and engage in independent learning throughout the day. They show curiosity as they take part in creative activities, strengthen their mathematical skills and join in with familiar stories. Children develop very positive relationships with staff. They follow the nursery routine very well. Children build their ability to make choices for themselves. Staff offer options and listen to children vote for their preference. Staff provide a varied range of activities that reflect children's interests. For example, children remain focused when making pretend pancakes in the mud kitchen outside and volcanoes in the sand. Leaders have high expectations for all children. They monitor children's learning and development and recognise when children require extra support. All children, including those with special educational needs and/or disabilities, make sound progress. Leaders develop and broaden children's understanding of different cultures and the wider world. Children participate in festivals and celebrations that reflect their experiences and their peers. The nursery also provides the opportunity for children to learn new languages as part of their curriculum. This supports children's developing respect for individuality and diversity. Staff plan opportunities for children to engage with the local community, including visits to nearby parks and green spaces. They use these experiences to enhance children's knowledge and understanding of their community.

Next steps

Leaders should continue to provide further guidance for staff to support children's conversational language to enable children to share their ideas in greater depth. Leaders should ensure that staff develop their teaching skills further so that quieter and less confident children are supported to fully engage in and consistently benefit from high-quality learning experiences.

About this inspection

The inspector spoke with leaders, staff and the special educational needs coordinator, parents and carers and children during the inspection. We carried out this inspection under sections 49 and 50 of the Childcare Act 2006 on the quality and standards of provision that is registered on the Early Years Register. The registered person must ensure that this provision complies with the statutory framework for children's learning, development and care, known as the early years foundation stage. A quality assurance visit by an additional inspector was carried out at this inspection.

About this setting

URN
2749219
Address
7 Royal Wharf Walk London E16 2SQ
Type
Childcare on Non-Domestic Premises, Full day care
Registration date
01/09/2023
Registered person
Hestia Education Ltd.
Register(s)
EYR
Operating hours
Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday : 08:00 - 18:00
Local authority
Newham

Facts and figures

Age range at inspection
2 to 4
Total places
65

Data from 26 February 2026

Raw extracted PDF text
Nest Marco Polo
Unique reference number (URN): 2749219
Address: 7 Royal Wharf Walk, London, E16 2SQ
Type: Childcare on non-domestic premises
Registered with Ofsted: 01/09/2023
Registers: EYR
Registered person: Hestia Education Ltd.
Inspection report: 26 February 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
Behaviour, attitudes and establishing routines Strong standard
Children have very positive relationships with their nurturing key persons. Staff explore
different rules with children, helping them to think about and understand why they are
important. For example, children know how to use the tunnel and steps safely in the garden,
so they do not hurt themselves or their friends. These skills help children to independently
explore the environment in a safe and engaging way. Staff model kindness, respect and
positive behaviour. They support children to regulate their emotions by getting down to their
level, using calm voices and offering comfort. Staff reinforce vocabulary around children's
emotions to help them to recognise and name their feelings.
Staff use everyday practice as purposeful teaching moments to ensure very positive
behaviour. This contributes to an extremely calm and positive atmosphere. Children play
very well together. Staff praise children when they listen and follow instructions. This helps
children to understand expectations and feel proud. Children have consistently positive
attitudes to learning. They join activities with curiosity. They take pride in their work and
approach tasks with care.
Children can increasingly manage their own feelings and behaviour. They show care and
positive attitudes to each other. For example, when outdoors in the mud kitchen, children
kindly indicate politely to their peers to manoeuvre out of the way so they do not get dirty.
During the mixing of the mud, they take turns to use the utensils. Leaders continue to
promote children's ongoing attendance to parents and carers. They follow up absences
quickly and support parents to remove barriers to attending. Children are therefore able to
attend regularly and benefit from their time at the setting.
Children's welfare and wellbeing Strong standard
Children feel safe, secure and nurtured within the setting. Staff provide a warm welcome
and help them to settle quickly. This positive relationship strengthens children's sense of
belonging. Children form very positive attachments to staff and friendships with peers. They
cooperate in their play and take turns together. Staff give careful consideration to settling
new children. They stay close to them and make every effort to give them a calm and
positive early experience. Staff promote children's physical health through regular outdoor
play. They plan the outdoor area to offer space for imaginative play, climbing and turn-
taking.
Leaders ensure that policies, procedure and practice are rigorously reviewed, strategically
adapted and effectively amended. Staff follow procedures to support children's dietary
requirements. They implement effective eating procedures for children with allergies and
appropriate food preferences. Leaders encourage healthy eating through planned balanced
menus and consistent hygiene routines. Children consistently make their own healthy
choices and decisions. Children pour their own drinks and use tongs to collect a variety of
fruit slices during snack time. This develops their fine motor control skills. Children manage
their personal care routines. For example, they wash their hands before eating. Children

Expected standard
also help to tidy up, such as by wiping the tables. This contributes to children developing a
sense of responsibility.
Staff are highly responsive to the varying needs and changing circumstances of individual
children and families. Staff work with parents and carers and, when required, seek advice
from external services. They nurture children's emotional wellbeing through calm and
positive interactions. Leaders ensure their key-person approach is embedded. Leaders
enhance children's experiences by embedding opportunities that widen their horizons and
strengthen their sense of belonging. Children are introduced to different languages,
including Spanish and Mandarin, in an engaging and playful way, supporting children's
confidence and communication skills.
Achievement Expected standard
Children make encouraging progress across the areas of learning. They respond well to
activities generally suited to their different ages and stages of development. Typically,
children are confident to ask for help when needed and express their ideas. However, due to
weaknesses in some staff's practice, some children, especially quieter and less confident
children, do not extend their communication skills further.
Children move confidently around the setting and manage familiar routines well. They build
on what they already know and can do as they access the range of experiences on offer.
Children benefit from outings in the local area, where they learn more about their
community. They show an increasing awareness and value that people are different.
Children demonstrate kindness and consideration towards others. For example, they include
their friends in their play and wait patiently for their turn. These positive interactions support
children to develop secure social and emotional skills.
Curriculum and teaching Expected standard
Leaders have typically developed a broad and inclusive curriculum. In the main, they
support and guide staff to ensure the curriculum is implemented across the setting.
Children's learning is carefully organised around clear developmental milestones for
younger and older children. This ensures that children make progress. Staff adapt their
strategies to support children to learn. For example, they use visual cards and words in
other languages to support children who speak English as an additional language.
Staff provide regular opportunities for children to develop their literacy skills. Children have
access to books in all areas of learning. For example, staff read stories to children and
share books with them throughout the day. This helps children to develop their interest in
reading. Children develop deep bonds with staff during these shared experiences. However,
staff sometimes do not typically use strategies to engage quieter and less confident children
in their learning. This does not fully support their communication skills at the same rate as
their peers. Overall, children demonstrate positive levels of self-esteem and show a sense of

belonging within the setting. Staff support children's mathematical development effectively.
Children learn about size, shape, numbers, weight and dimensions.
Staff ensure that children have opportunities for enhancing their physical development, such
as during outside play and going on local trips. Staff plan and deliver a range of ambitious
activities that generally engage children well. They help children to develop curiosity in
activities, such as creating and flying kites outside. There are, however, slight
inconsistencies in the quality of support for children to extend their ideas and understanding.
However, children's overall enjoyment and involvement during activities is positive.
Inclusion Expected standard
Leaders and staff have attended training on supporting children with special educational
needs and/or disabilities (SEND). They typically support children's individual needs. Staff
use ongoing assessment to identify potential gaps in learning. They work in partnership with
parents and carers and other agencies. Children with SEND are well supported. Staff create
individual achievable plans to support their next steps in learning and development. Staff
use a range of strategies, such as delivering specific activities, to support children with
SEND.
Staff liaise with other professionals to provide effective and timely support. Leaders have
effective working relationships with external professionals and make timely referrals. They
invite professionals into the setting to provide advice and guidance on how to best support
children's progress and learning. This means children receive prompt support while awaiting
specialist interventions. For example, children's speech and language skills benefit from
targeted small-group work while they await formal specialist support. Leaders understand
that some children's progress is better measured in smaller steps.
Leaders implement actions to reduce barriers to children's wellbeing. For example, they
continually review and make changes to the learning environment to support children's
needs. Leaders have used funding to further enhance a sensory space to support children
to regulate their emotions. Staff support children's transitions in their routines and smaller
group activities.
Leadership and governance Expected standard
Leaders know their families, children and local community well. They have a clear and well-
defined vision for the setting. Leaders regularly review their curriculum and have an
accurate understanding of their strengths and areas for development. For example, they
have implemented planning books for staff. These books provide examples of activities,
breaking down next steps in children's key skills, such as fine motor development. The
management team has also refined procedures for transitioning children around the nursery.
These improvements strengthen supervision of children and contribute to maintaining their
safety.
Leaders work collaboratively with other agencies, including the local authority, to bring about
effective change. They also share their strategies for supporting children with special
educational needs and/or disabilities and activities with other local settings, supporting wider
professional development in the community.

There is a positive focus on staff's wellbeing and workload. Leaders engage in open
dialogue with staff through supervision sessions and team meetings. New staff benefit from
a detailed induction and understand their roles and responsibilities. Staff feel well equipped
to carry out their roles. However, leaders have not consistently enhanced all staff's expertise
in supporting children's conversational language. This does not enable children to articulate
their ideas more fully and in greater depth.
What it's like to be a child at this setting
Children are happy in this warm and welcoming nursery. They are confident and curious
learners. Staff offer a warm welcome to children on arrival. Children access a variety of fun
activities and engage in independent learning throughout the day. They show curiosity as
they take part in creative activities, strengthen their mathematical skills and join in with
familiar stories. Children develop very positive relationships with staff. They follow the
nursery routine very well.
Children build their ability to make choices for themselves. Staff offer options and listen to
children vote for their preference. Staff provide a varied range of activities that reflect
children's interests. For example, children remain focused when making pretend pancakes
in the mud kitchen outside and volcanoes in the sand. Leaders have high expectations for
all children. They monitor children's learning and development and recognise when children
require extra support. All children, including those with special educational needs and/or
disabilities, make sound progress.
Leaders develop and broaden children's understanding of different cultures and the wider
world. Children participate in festivals and celebrations that reflect their experiences and
their peers. The nursery also provides the opportunity for children to learn new languages as
part of their curriculum. This supports children's developing respect for individuality and
diversity. Staff plan opportunities for children to engage with the local community, including
visits to nearby parks and green spaces. They use these experiences to enhance children's
knowledge and understanding of their community.
Next steps
Leaders should continue to provide further guidance for staff to support children's
conversational language to enable children to share their ideas in greater depth.

Inspector:
Onyi Ojukwu
About this setting
Unique reference number (URN): 2749219
Address:
7 Royal Wharf Walk
London
E16 2SQ
Type: Childcare on non-domestic premises
Registration date: 01/09/2023
Registered person: Hestia Education Ltd.
Register(s): EYR
Operating hours: Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday : 08:00 - 18:00
Local authority: Newham
Facts and figures used on inspection
Leaders should ensure that staff develop their teaching skills further so that quieter and
less confident children are supported to fully engage in and consistently benefit from high-
quality learning experiences.
About this inspection
The inspector spoke with leaders, staff and the special educational needs coordinator,
parents and carers and children during the inspection.
We carried out this inspection under sections 49 and 50 of the Childcare Act 2006 on the
quality and standards of provision that is registered on the Early Years Register. The
registered person must ensure that this provision complies with the statutory framework for
children's learning, development and care, known as the early years foundation stage.
A quality assurance visit by an additional inspector was carried out at this inspection.

This data was available to the inspector at the time of the inspection.
This data is from 26 February 2026
Children numbers
Age range of children at the time of inspection
2 to 4
Total number of places
65
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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