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 are exceptionally well prepared for the next stage of their learning. They build their independence, resilience and social skills. Children's communication skills thrive throughout their journey. Babies engage in turn-taking and older children actively listen, express their ideas and confidently share their thoughts. Children make excellent progress through a carefully sequenced curriculum. Babies develop early concepts through sensory exploration. Older children enhance their physical skills with tools and outdoor climbing equipment. They test ideas, manage risk and demonstrate excellent coordination. Children build the confidence needed for the next stage of their education. Children develop their mathematical understanding deeply through hands-on experiences. Younger children count and line up chairs when singing 'The Wheels on the Bus', while older children explore balance and symmetry as they build pirate ships. They test how to make them float and discuss how shapes fit together. These experiences develop children's mathematical skills for future learning. Children become increasingly independent. They confidently manage their personal care needs, develop healthy routines and make choices that support their wellbeing.

Behaviour, attitudes and establishing routines

Strong standard
Leaders prioritise regular attendance and understand its importance for children's learning, development and wellbeing. Staff manage children's behaviour highly effectively. They respond calmly and consistently, while considering children's individual needs and emotional triggers. Babies form secure attachments with their key person and settle well due to sensitive and personalised routines. Staff model positive behaviour highly effectively. They use respectful communication, ensuring children's intentions are understood before responding. Staff are very good role models. For example, when disagreements arise, they calmly demonstrate how to use kind words, listen to others and work towards fair solutions. This helps children learn to manage conflict constructively. Staff support children to recognise and express emotions and to regulate their behaviour. For example, when children become frustrated during a building activity, staff encourage them to talk about how they feel and suggest alternative ways to solve the problem. In addition, when children are unsure about joining a group activity, staff gently encourage them, helping them to build confidence and engage with others. Staff use daily routines highly effectively to promote independence and social skills. For instance, during tidy-up time, children work together, follow instructions and take responsibility for resources. Children are engaged, motivated and curious learners. They listen carefully, follow instructions and show consistently positive attitudes to their learning.

Children's welfare and wellbeing

Strong standard
Leaders and staff prioritise children's welfare and wellbeing, tailoring care to meet each child's individual needs. They foster an environment where every child feels valued and respected. Staff understand children exceptionally well, adjusting routines to their age, development and needs. This ensures children flourish in a nurturing and inclusive environment, where all children feel safe and secure. Children form trusting relationships with staff. They confidently seek comfort and support when needed. New starters settle rapidly, becoming familiar with routines and expectations. Staff recognise babies' early communication cues, responding with sensitivity to their babbling, gestures and emotions. Older children build on these foundations, expressing themselves confidently and developing a deep sense of belonging. Staff are proficient at guiding children to recognise, express and regulate their emotions. They model calm behaviour, acknowledge feelings and offer reassurance. Children demonstrate positive attitudes towards each other and their learning. For instance, younger children share resources and take turns in the sandpit, while older children collaborate during mark-making. When conflicts arise, staff guide children to express emotions and resolve disagreements through discussion. They foster a positive and empathetic approach to relationships. Safe routines are followed for babies, particularly regarding sleeping, weaning and feeding. Staff adhere to safe sleeping guidelines rigorously. They adapt routines carefully to meet children's individual needs. Staff promote healthy eating through home-cooked meals and nutritious snacks. They review and adapt policies based on expert health advice, ensuring children's health and safety. Children embrace appropriate risks and challenges in their play and learning. For example, they build road safety awareness through community walks. This helps children to learn essential safety behaviours and future life skills.

Curriculum and teaching

Strong standard
Leaders have established a highly ambitious curriculum with clear and shared expectations. They focus on developing confident, independent, enthusiastic and resilient learners. Assessment and monitoring are precise, identifying next steps to ensure children build securely on what they know and make excellent progress. Staff have a deep understanding of child development and carefully sequence learning from children's starting points. Teaching is responsive and tailored for children with special educational needs and/or disabilities (SEND), as well as those facing barriers to learning. Children, including babies, benefit from nurturing interactions and consistent routines that promote security and early communication. Staff balance child-initiated play with focused teaching, supporting physical development. For example, while exploring dough, children strengthen their hand and arm muscles to support them with dressing, manipulating tools and writing. Staff embed mathematical teaching in children's play and routines. As children build towers, staff support counting, comparing sizes and recognising shapes. This is reinforced during snack time when children select fruit and count portions. Babies develop early mathematical awareness through language such as 'more', 'all gone', 'big' and 'small'. Teaching is highly effective. Staff use skilful questioning to deepen children's understanding and promote problem-solving. They support communication and language through rich interactions, gestures and props. Support for children who speak English as an additional language is very effective. Staff work closely with parents and carers to share key words in children's home languages, ensuring continuity and language development. Well-sequenced story and song times foster children's early literacy, encouraging communication and social interaction. During storytelling, children respond to questions about characters and events, strengthening their recall and comprehension.

Inclusion

Expected standard
Staff and leaders are committed to identifying, assessing and meeting the needs of children with special educational needs and/or disabilities (SEND), as well as those who face barriers to learning and wellbeing. They use effective strategies, including communication and language screening tools, to monitor children's development. Through observations and assessments, such as the progress check when children are aged between 2 and 3 years, staff identify gaps in children's learning. Leaders take swift action to reduce barriers and support children's development, ensuring children make rapid progress. Staff use targeted strategies to break children's learning into manageable steps and adjust group sizes to meet their individual needs. Staff adapt routines and environments to ensure children's full engagement. For example, they use calm spaces, such as the sensory area, to help children to regulate their emotions. Staff adjust their support as children's needs evolve. Staff collaborate with external professionals to refine practice, particularly for children with SEND and other learning barriers. Partnerships with parents and carers are highly effective. Leaders communicate clearly and work closely with families to support children's learning, individual needs and wellbeing. Leaders acknowledge they engage more successfully with some parents than others regarding their child's learning. They have not consistently enhanced parent partnerships by strengthening two-way communication, ensuring it is effective with all parents. This does not consistently support parents to collaborate with staff to assess and review their children's progress, plan next steps and agree on strategies. It also does not ensure all children, including those requiring additional support, receive consistent and inclusive education.

Leadership and governance

Expected standard
Leaders ensure that the curriculum is inclusive and of consistently high quality. Staff skilfully ensure teaching is responsive and tailored for children with special educational needs and/or disabilities. As a result, all children make wonderful progress in their learning and development from their starting points. Leaders are ambitious for all children and prioritise building trusting relationships with parents and carers, who highly value the staff and share how their children thrive at the setting. While parents speak highly of the nursery and staff, leaders recognise that engagement is more successful with some parents than others, particularly regarding their child's individual learning. Leaders have not consistently strengthened strategies to ensure two-way communication is equally effective with all families, encouraging full engagement in their children's learning. Peer observation and supervision support staff development and confidence. Leaders prioritise safeguarding and strengthen staff knowledge through mentoring and policy refreshers. The team works effectively and is committed to achieving the best outcomes for children. Staff have access to relevant training to support their ongoing development. However, leaders have not yet fully established a sharply focused approach to wider professional development that builds on existing practice and develops staff expertise. Although leaders and staff evaluate strengths and areas for development generally effectively, they have not enhanced this further. For instance, staff do not consistently access training to extend their expertise or adopt innovative approaches to drive improvements. For example, systems to enhance family involvement, particularly for children requiring additional support, are not fully embedded. This limits how precisely improvement planning is focused, reducing ongoing improvement for children, families and staff.

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

Children quickly develop a sense of belonging in this warm and welcoming nursery. Staff provide a nurturing environment that enables every child to thrive and be ready to learn. All children form secure attachments with familiar staff. This is supported by a calm and positive atmosphere created through well-organised arrival routines and caring staff, who greet children warmly each day. Children settle swiftly, showing they are happy, confident and at ease. The environment is filled with laughter, chatter and smiles, reflecting children's enjoyment. Babies form close bonds with familiar adults and respond positively to the nurturing approach. Children's safety, wellbeing and sense of belonging are prioritised through a well-organised environment and thorough risk assessments. Staff respond sensitively, helping children to feel valued and understood. They support children to learn how to keep themselves safe. For example, during outdoor play, children use equipment appropriately and take turns. Consistent routines and deep relationships further strengthen children's confidence and emotional security. Children develop links with their local community. They visit the church and local reading rooms and take part in intergenerational activities, such as sending cards and singing carols. They attend village events, including the scarecrow festival. Effective links with the local primary school support children's transitions and enhance their confidence, social skills and sense of identity. Children learn across a broad curriculum that promotes their curiosity, exploration and engagement. For example, when playing with connecting bricks, they explore shape, space, design and early numbers. Outdoors, children use chalk to make marks and talk about their creations. This supports children's communication, early literacy and creativity. Staff support children to develop friendships through kindness and turn-taking. For example, they take turns riding bicycles and crossing the outdoor bridge, and they share resources during group play. Children's communication and thinking skills are supported through rich interactions. Staff engage them in meaningful conversations, modelling and extending language throughout play and daily routines. Gestures and visual cues support understanding. Babies show engagement through facial expressions and gestures, including raising their hands when asked where someone has gone. Children are confident and motivated learners, who make independent choices and take responsibility in daily routines. At snack time, they use tongs to serve fruit, pour drinks and select from the options provided. Staff offer reassurance when needed and use calm spaces to support children to regulate their emotions. Children who require additional support benefit from adapted routines and resources that reflect their interests.

Next steps

Leaders should strengthen strategies to engage all parents and carers in their children's learning and development, ensuring they are consistently involved in reviewing their progress and planning next steps and understand strategies to support their child's ongoing development. Leaders should provide staff with targeted professional development tailored to their roles and the specific needs of the children they support, empowering them to build expertise and acquire the ongoing skills necessary that prepare all children for their next stage of education, including school where appropriate.

About this inspection

The inspector spoke with leaders, practitioners, the special educational needs coordinator, children, parents and carers during the inspection. We carried out the inspection under section 49 and 50 of the Childcare Act 2006 on the quality and standards 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
2753458
Address
Beckermet Nursery Mill Lane Beckermet Cumbria CA21 2YD
Type
Childcare on Non-Domestic Premises, Full day care
Registration date
23/10/2023
Registered person
Beckermet Nursery
Register(s)
EYR, CCR, VCR
Operating hours
Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday : 07:00 - 16:30
Local authority
Cumberland

Facts and figures

Age range at inspection
1 to 5
Total places
55

Data from 9 April 2026

Raw extracted PDF text
Beckermet Nursery CIO
Unique reference number (URN): 2753458
Address: Beckermet Nursery, Mill Lane, Beckermet, Cumbria, CA21 2YD
Type: Childcare on non-domestic premises
Registered with Ofsted: 23/10/2023
Registers: EYR, CCR, VCR
Registered person: Beckermet Nursery
Inspection report: 9 April 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 are exceptionally well prepared for the next stage of their learning. They build their
independence, resilience and social skills. Children's communication skills thrive throughout
their journey. Babies engage in turn-taking and older children actively listen, express their
ideas and confidently share their thoughts.
Children make excellent progress through a carefully sequenced curriculum. Babies develop
early concepts through sensory exploration. Older children enhance their physical skills with
tools and outdoor climbing equipment. They test ideas, manage risk and demonstrate
excellent coordination. Children build the confidence needed for the next stage of their
education.
Children develop their mathematical understanding deeply through hands-on experiences.
Younger children count and line up chairs when singing 'The Wheels on the Bus', while older
children explore balance and symmetry as they build pirate ships. They test how to make
them float and discuss how shapes fit together. These experiences develop children's
mathematical skills for future learning. Children become increasingly independent. They
confidently manage their personal care needs, develop healthy routines and make choices
that support their wellbeing.
Behaviour, attitudes and establishing routines Strong standard
Leaders prioritise regular attendance and understand its importance for children's learning,
development and wellbeing. Staff manage children's behaviour highly effectively. They
respond calmly and consistently, while considering children's individual needs and emotional
triggers. Babies form secure attachments with their key person and settle well due to
sensitive and personalised routines.
Staff model positive behaviour highly effectively. They use respectful communication,
ensuring children's intentions are understood before responding. Staff are very good role
models. For example, when disagreements arise, they calmly demonstrate how to use kind
words, listen to others and work towards fair solutions. This helps children learn to manage
conflict constructively.
Staff support children to recognise and express emotions and to regulate their behaviour.
For example, when children become frustrated during a building activity, staff encourage
them to talk about how they feel and suggest alternative ways to solve the problem. In
addition, when children are unsure about joining a group activity, staff gently encourage
them, helping them to build confidence and engage with others.
Staff use daily routines highly effectively to promote independence and social skills. For
instance, during tidy-up time, children work together, follow instructions and take
responsibility for resources. Children are engaged, motivated and curious learners. They
listen carefully, follow instructions and show consistently positive attitudes to their learning.

Children's welfare and wellbeing Strong standard
Leaders and staff prioritise children's welfare and wellbeing, tailoring care to meet each
child's individual needs. They foster an environment where every child feels valued and
respected. Staff understand children exceptionally well, adjusting routines to their age,
development and needs. This ensures children flourish in a nurturing and inclusive
environment, where all children feel safe and secure.
Children form trusting relationships with staff. They confidently seek comfort and support
when needed. New starters settle rapidly, becoming familiar with routines and expectations.
Staff recognise babies' early communication cues, responding with sensitivity to their
babbling, gestures and emotions. Older children build on these foundations, expressing
themselves confidently and developing a deep sense of belonging.
Staff are proficient at guiding children to recognise, express and regulate their emotions.
They model calm behaviour, acknowledge feelings and offer reassurance. Children
demonstrate positive attitudes towards each other and their learning. For instance, younger
children share resources and take turns in the sandpit, while older children collaborate
during mark-making. When conflicts arise, staff guide children to express emotions and
resolve disagreements through discussion. They foster a positive and empathetic approach
to relationships.
Safe routines are followed for babies, particularly regarding sleeping, weaning and feeding.
Staff adhere to safe sleeping guidelines rigorously. They adapt routines carefully to meet
children's individual needs. Staff promote healthy eating through home-cooked meals and
nutritious snacks. They review and adapt policies based on expert health advice, ensuring
children's health and safety. Children embrace appropriate risks and challenges in their play
and learning. For example, they build road safety awareness through community walks. This
helps children to learn essential safety behaviours and future life skills.
Curriculum and teaching Strong standard
Leaders have established a highly ambitious curriculum with clear and shared expectations.
They focus on developing confident, independent, enthusiastic and resilient learners.
Assessment and monitoring are precise, identifying next steps to ensure children build
securely on what they know and make excellent progress. Staff have a deep understanding
of child development and carefully sequence learning from children's starting points.
Teaching is responsive and tailored for children with special educational needs and/or
disabilities (SEND), as well as those facing barriers to learning.
Children, including babies, benefit from nurturing interactions and consistent routines that
promote security and early communication. Staff balance child-initiated play with focused
teaching, supporting physical development. For example, while exploring dough, children
strengthen their hand and arm muscles to support them with dressing, manipulating tools
and writing.
Staff embed mathematical teaching in children's play and routines. As children build towers,
staff support counting, comparing sizes and recognising shapes. This is reinforced during

Expected standard
snack time when children select fruit and count portions. Babies develop early mathematical
awareness through language such as 'more', 'all gone', 'big' and 'small'.
Teaching is highly effective. Staff use skilful questioning to deepen children's understanding
and promote problem-solving. They support communication and language through rich
interactions, gestures and props. Support for children who speak English as an additional
language is very effective. Staff work closely with parents and carers to share key words in
children's home languages, ensuring continuity and language development. Well-sequenced
story and song times foster children's early literacy, encouraging communication and social
interaction. During storytelling, children respond to questions about characters and events,
strengthening their recall and comprehension.
Inclusion Expected standard
Staff and leaders are committed to identifying, assessing and meeting the needs of children
with special educational needs and/or disabilities (SEND), as well as those who face
barriers to learning and wellbeing. They use effective strategies, including communication
and language screening tools, to monitor children's development. Through observations and
assessments, such as the progress check when children are aged between 2 and 3 years,
staff identify gaps in children's learning. Leaders take swift action to reduce barriers and
support children's development, ensuring children make rapid progress. Staff use targeted
strategies to break children's learning into manageable steps and adjust group sizes to meet
their individual needs.
Staff adapt routines and environments to ensure children's full engagement. For example,
they use calm spaces, such as the sensory area, to help children to regulate their emotions.
Staff adjust their support as children's needs evolve. Staff collaborate with external
professionals to refine practice, particularly for children with SEND and other learning
barriers.
Partnerships with parents and carers are highly effective. Leaders communicate clearly and
work closely with families to support children's learning, individual needs and wellbeing.
Leaders acknowledge they engage more successfully with some parents than others
regarding their child's learning. They have not consistently enhanced parent partnerships by
strengthening two-way communication, ensuring it is effective with all parents. This does not
consistently support parents to collaborate with staff to assess and review their children's
progress, plan next steps and agree on strategies. It also does not ensure all children,
including those requiring additional support, receive consistent and inclusive education.
Leadership and governance Expected standard
Leaders ensure that the curriculum is inclusive and of consistently high quality. Staff skilfully
ensure teaching is responsive and tailored for children with special educational needs
and/or disabilities. As a result, all children make wonderful progress in their learning and
development from their starting points. Leaders are ambitious for all children and prioritise

building trusting relationships with parents and carers, who highly value the staff and share
how their children thrive at the setting. While parents speak highly of the nursery and staff,
leaders recognise that engagement is more successful with some parents than others,
particularly regarding their child's individual learning. Leaders have not consistently
strengthened strategies to ensure two-way communication is equally effective with all
families, encouraging full engagement in their children's learning.
Peer observation and supervision support staff development and confidence. Leaders
prioritise safeguarding and strengthen staff knowledge through mentoring and policy
refreshers. The team works effectively and is committed to achieving the best outcomes for
children. Staff have access to relevant training to support their ongoing development.
However, leaders have not yet fully established a sharply focused approach to wider
professional development that builds on existing practice and develops staff expertise.
Although leaders and staff evaluate strengths and areas for development generally
effectively, they have not enhanced this further. For instance, staff do not consistently
access training to extend their expertise or adopt innovative approaches to drive
improvements. For example, systems to enhance family involvement, particularly for
children requiring additional support, are not fully embedded. This limits how precisely
improvement planning is focused, reducing ongoing improvement for children, families and
staff.
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 quickly develop a sense of belonging in this warm and welcoming nursery. Staff
provide a nurturing environment that enables every child to thrive and be ready to learn. All
children form secure attachments with familiar staff. This is supported by a calm and positive
atmosphere created through well-organised arrival routines and caring staff, who greet
children warmly each day. Children settle swiftly, showing they are happy, confident and at
ease. The environment is filled with laughter, chatter and smiles, reflecting children's
enjoyment. Babies form close bonds with familiar adults and respond positively to the
nurturing approach.
Children's safety, wellbeing and sense of belonging are prioritised through a well-organised
environment and thorough risk assessments. Staff respond sensitively, helping children to
feel valued and understood. They support children to learn how to keep themselves safe.
For example, during outdoor play, children use equipment appropriately and take turns.
Consistent routines and deep relationships further strengthen children's confidence and
emotional security.
Children develop links with their local community. They visit the church and local reading
rooms and take part in intergenerational activities, such as sending cards and singing
carols. They attend village events, including the scarecrow festival. Effective links with the
local primary school support children's transitions and enhance their confidence, social skills
and sense of identity.
Children learn across a broad curriculum that promotes their curiosity, exploration and
engagement. For example, when playing with connecting bricks, they explore shape, space,
design and early numbers. Outdoors, children use chalk to make marks and talk about their
creations. This supports children's communication, early literacy and creativity. Staff support
children to develop friendships through kindness and turn-taking. For example, they take

Inspector:
Karen James
About this setting
turns riding bicycles and crossing the outdoor bridge, and they share resources during group
play.
Children's communication and thinking skills are supported through rich interactions. Staff
engage them in meaningful conversations, modelling and extending language throughout
play and daily routines. Gestures and visual cues support understanding. Babies show
engagement through facial expressions and gestures, including raising their hands when
asked where someone has gone.
Children are confident and motivated learners, who make independent choices and take
responsibility in daily routines. At snack time, they use tongs to serve fruit, pour drinks and
select from the options provided. Staff offer reassurance when needed and use calm spaces
to support children to regulate their emotions. Children who require additional support
benefit from adapted routines and resources that reflect their interests.
Next steps
Leaders should strengthen strategies to engage all parents and carers in their children's
learning and development, ensuring they are consistently involved in reviewing their
progress and planning next steps and understand strategies to support their child's
ongoing development.
Leaders should provide staff with targeted professional development tailored to their roles
and the specific needs of the children they support, empowering them to build expertise
and acquire the ongoing skills necessary that prepare all children for their next stage of
education, including school where appropriate.
About this inspection
The inspector spoke with leaders, practitioners, the special educational needs coordinator,
children, parents and carers during the inspection.
We carried out the inspection under section 49 and 50 of the Childcare Act 2006 on the
quality and standards 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.

Unique reference number (URN): 2753458
Address:
Beckermet Nursery
Mill Lane
Beckermet
Cumbria
CA21 2YD
Type: Childcare on non-domestic premises
Registration date: 23/10/2023
Registered person: Beckermet Nursery
Register(s): EYR, CCR, VCR
Operating hours: Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday : 07:00 - 16:30
Local authority: Cumberland
Facts and figures used on inspection
This data was available to the inspector at the time of the inspection.
This data is from 9 April 2026
Children numbers
Age range of children at the time of inspection
1 to 5
Total number of places
55
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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