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

Grades by area

Achievement

Strong standard
All children progress extremely well from their starting points. This is evident across all areas of learning and development. Children achieve their personal next steps in a rapid, timely and sustained manner. For example, younger children confidently take their first independent steps. Children consistently demonstrate that they are happy, safe and emotionally secure within the nursery. This is supported by highly effective and seamless handovers. It is also strengthened because children have exceptionally strong and secure bonds with their key workers. Children purposefully and confidently develop their physical skills through planned activities. For example, they cut spaghetti, thread pasta onto a pipe cleaner and roll and shape the play dough with increasing control, precision and dexterity. Older children demonstrate a highly secure pencil grip and make purposeful and detailed marks in preparation for early writing. Children enjoy being independent and support each other exceptionally well. For example, they help to put aprons on each other before playing in the water tray. They also, when age-appropriate, confidently and independently self-serve their own meals. This enables children to develop the essential life skills, confidence and self-help abilities they need for future learning and continued success.

Children's welfare and wellbeing

Strong standard
Children from an early age have independent care practices. This is highly effective and embedded at the setting, for example, blowing their own noses and then putting the tissue in the bin and washing their hands. This supports children to effectively manage their own personal needs. Staff create meaningful relationships with the children and families in their care. Children have deep trust in the staff they work with. This supports the children to feel reassured at the setting, creating a safe and nurturing space for all children. Leaders ensure that children's welfare is highly prioritised. They have embedded and tailored sleeping routines for the children. This supports children to rest at the setting. Leaders also ensure that, when needed, individual health care plans are in place. As a result, this meets the needs of the children, including those with special educational needs and/or disabilities. Staff follow such plans and have a deep understanding of how they are implemented. Children benefit from healthy and nutritious meals, for example, chickpea curry served with rice and naan bread. Staff freshly prepare the meals on site for the children. They are well balanced and created with the children's preferences in mind. This supports children to make healthy food choices.

Curriculum and teaching

Strong standard
Leaders have securely embedded a highly coherent and clearly sequenced curriculum outlining the precise skills and knowledge they want children to learn across all rooms. There is a significant and sustained focus on communication and language development, with a strong emphasis on fostering a lifelong love of books. Children independently and purposefully choose books within their play and regularly take them home to share with their families. These experiences are further strengthened through carefully designed home reading packs, which include highly effective props and purposeful linked activities, successfully extending and deepening learning beyond the setting. Children engage in a rich and stimulating range of sensory experiences that are intentionally designed to support expression, communication and early thinking skills. For example, children make chalk paint and use it with increasing confidence and creativity to create meaningful marks and patterns. Teaching is highly intentional, precisely focused and consistently linked to children's next steps, ensuring that learning builds cumulatively over time. For example, when children were developing their understanding of colour recognition and naming, staff provided carefully selected and highly effective resources such as colour-matching jigsaws, which successfully reinforced and secured learning. Children benefit from a well-resourced, stimulating and recently enhanced outdoor learning environment, which they access with enthusiasm and confidence. Leaders have clear, ambitious and well-targeted development plans in place for this area, closely aligned to children's next steps, including further opportunities to extend risk-taking, challenge and physical development. Staff consistently ensure that highly effective learning opportunities are delivered across all age groups, enabling children to deepen their understanding of the world. For example, children use live plants in the mud kitchen and demonstrate care, curiosity and respect as they explore and nurture living things.

Inclusion

Strong standard
Staff consistently identify children's needs quickly. This allows them to make reflective adaptations to the learning environment. This ensures all children can access the learning offer, for example by making physical adaptations. This ensures the height of furniture is accessible to all. Leaders ensure a robust oversight of assessment. This supports them to consistently meet the needs of all children, for example by doing early high-impact interventions, such as intensive interactions, and making referrals to other specialists. Staff work hard to reduce barriers for all children by working with families. This ensures children feel safe and welcome at the setting. Staff have developed the skills and knowledge to support children with special educational needs and/or disabilities. Staff are eager to take part in training to develop their knowledge. For example, they took part in a training day with a specific focus on autism. This followed requests by staff. This ensures that staff can meet the needs of children in their care. Staff work with their local authority and charities to ensure children get the timely support they need. Leaders use additional funding with the child's needs in mind. For example, they have purchased sensory equipment to support children's emotional wellbeing. Leaders also track the impact of this to ensure it is effective and making a significant impact.

Leadership and governance

Strong standard
Leaders know their local area and families extremely well and ensure the setting's offer is closely matched to their needs. They work proactively with families to ensure they receive the right support at the right time. For example, they work effectively with local schools and alternative provisions to secure smooth transitions. Leaders also accompany families on transition visits and school visits, ensuring a highly supportive and consistent approach. They ensure families remain positively engaged with the setting and the learning offer, including those who are harder to reach, for example by offering stay-and-play sessions at flexible times throughout the year to support working families. Leaders demonstrate a highly proactive approach to identifying and addressing areas for development within the setting. They understand key priorities and act swiftly to ensure consistency across practice and provision. Where weaknesses are identified, leaders implement clear actions and follow through rigorously to ensure sustained improvement. This includes consistency around supporting staff at mealtimes and with behaviour. Leaders are aware and reflective about this. Leaders prioritise staff wellbeing and ensure staff feel highly valued for their contribution. They promote an active listening culture, for example through a suggestion box and regular wellbeing meetings with all staff. Staff report feeling supported and valued and benefit from team-building opportunities. Leaders also monitor workload carefully and take effective action to ensure it remains manageable and does not impact staff wellbeing. Staff engage in a wide range of professional development opportunities, supported by a strong culture of continuous learning. Leaders ensure staff are well informed about upcoming training opportunities, for example in relation to further developing knowledge and practice in special educational needs and/or disabilities.

Behaviour, attitudes and establishing routines

Expected standard
Children show an active interest in learning. This is due to staff knowing their children very well and listening to them. For example, the children make choices by using voting pom-poms in the older rooms. All children benefit from warm and positive attachments with their key person. This includes the setting having arrangements in place for when staff are off work. This supports children's emotional development. Staff follow routines at the setting to support children in understanding what is coming next. However, there are some minor inconsistencies in the implementation of mealtime routines across rooms, which can result in occasional waiting times and less efficient transitions for children. Leaders are aware of this variation in practice and are proactively working with staff to further strengthen consistency, ensuring that routines are embedded uniformly across the setting to support smooth and efficient daily flow for all children. Leaders have a clear, proactive and supportive approach to attendance. They work with families to develop positive habits for learning. They follow their policy, which includes carrying out home visits on children. This ensures that children are well cared for and take full advantage of the learning offer. Behaviour is typically positive across the setting. Leaders are working proactively to ensure consistency across all rooms, with all staff sharing the same high expectations for children's behaviour and conduct. As a result, children are increasingly learning to regulate their behaviour, cooperate well with others and take responsibility for caring for resources and the environment. Leaders and staff make appropriate adjustments when considering children's individual needs, ensuring that all children are supported to achieve the highest possible standards of behaviour.

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

All children, including those with additional needs and/or disabilities, make good progress from their individual starting points. Staff use ongoing assessments effectively to track children's progress, ensuring they swiftly implement appropriate adaptations and interventions to support individual needs. Children are eager to come to the setting and show positive attitudes to learning. They engage well in a wide range of activities that support progress across all areas of learning. For example, children particularly enjoy song and dance circle time. They sing familiar songs and use dancing scarves and shakers to join in. This supports their physical development and communication and language skills. Staff also provide purposeful activities that reflect children's next steps. For example, children working on physical development take part in pasta threading activities to strengthen fine motor control. Children build strong and trusting relationships with their key workers and staff, who know them well and ensure they feel safe and secure. Staff work effectively with families to help children settle and feel welcome in the setting, for example through regular stay-and-play sessions, which also provide opportunities to share learning and progress updates. Children enjoy learning with and alongside their peers. For example, in the mud kitchen, they work together to make biscuits, showing cooperation and shared engagement. Staff support children's interactions effectively and guide their learning when needed. Independence is a key strength of the setting from an early age. Staff support children to confidently self-serve their meals. Children also put on their own aprons and support their friends to do the same. These opportunities build children's confidence, independence and self-help skills.

Next steps

Leaders should continue to support all staff to consistently embed the highest expectations for children's behaviour. Leaders should review and refine mealtime routines to reduce minor inconsistencies in practice, helping to minimise waiting times for children and ensure that transitions remain smooth, consistent and efficient across the setting.

About this inspection

The inspector spoke with leaders, practitioners, the special educational needs coordinator and the designated safeguarding lead 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
EY451274
Address
St. Bridgids Church, Elland Road Churwell, Morley LEEDS LS27 7QR
Type
Childcare on Non-Domestic Premises, Full day care
Registration date
17/10/2012
Registered person
Little Buttons (Churwell) Limited
Register(s)
EYR
Operating hours
Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday : 07:30 - 18:00
Local authority
Leeds

Facts and figures

Age range at inspection
0 to 4
Total places
75

Data from 6 May 2026

Raw extracted PDF text
Little Buttons Nursery
Unique reference number (URN): EY451274
Address: St. Bridgids Church, Elland Road, Churwell, Morley, LEEDS, LS27 7QR
Type: Childcare on non-domestic premises
Registered with Ofsted: 17/10/2012
Registers: EYR
Registered person: Little Buttons (Churwell) Limited
Inspection report: 6 May 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
All children progress extremely well from their starting points. This is evident across all areas
of learning and development. Children achieve their personal next steps in a rapid, timely
and sustained manner. For example, younger children confidently take their first
independent steps. Children consistently demonstrate that they are happy, safe and
emotionally secure within the nursery. This is supported by highly effective and seamless
handovers. It is also strengthened because children have exceptionally strong and secure
bonds with their key workers.
Children purposefully and confidently develop their physical skills through planned activities.
For example, they cut spaghetti, thread pasta onto a pipe cleaner and roll and shape the
play dough with increasing control, precision and dexterity. Older children demonstrate a
highly secure pencil grip and make purposeful and detailed marks in preparation for early
writing.
Children enjoy being independent and support each other exceptionally well. For example,
they help to put aprons on each other before playing in the water tray. They also, when age-
appropriate, confidently and independently self-serve their own meals. This enables children
to develop the essential life skills, confidence and self-help abilities they need for future
learning and continued success.
Children's welfare and wellbeing Strong standard
Children from an early age have independent care practices. This is highly effective and
embedded at the setting, for example, blowing their own noses and then putting the tissue in
the bin and washing their hands. This supports children to effectively manage their own
personal needs.
Staff create meaningful relationships with the children and families in their care. Children
have deep trust in the staff they work with. This supports the children to feel reassured at the
setting, creating a safe and nurturing space for all children.
Leaders ensure that children's welfare is highly prioritised. They have embedded and
tailored sleeping routines for the children. This supports children to rest at the setting.
Leaders also ensure that, when needed, individual health care plans are in place. As a
result, this meets the needs of the children, including those with special educational needs
and/or disabilities. Staff follow such plans and have a deep understanding of how they are
implemented.
Children benefit from healthy and nutritious meals, for example, chickpea curry served with
rice and naan bread. Staff freshly prepare the meals on site for the children. They are well
balanced and created with the children's preferences in mind. This supports children to
make healthy food choices.

Curriculum and teaching Strong standard
Leaders have securely embedded a highly coherent and clearly sequenced curriculum
outlining the precise skills and knowledge they want children to learn across all rooms.
There is a significant and sustained focus on communication and language development,
with a strong emphasis on fostering a lifelong love of books. Children independently and
purposefully choose books within their play and regularly take them home to share with their
families. These experiences are further strengthened through carefully designed home
reading packs, which include highly effective props and purposeful linked activities,
successfully extending and deepening learning beyond the setting.
Children engage in a rich and stimulating range of sensory experiences that are intentionally
designed to support expression, communication and early thinking skills. For example,
children make chalk paint and use it with increasing confidence and creativity to create
meaningful marks and patterns.
Teaching is highly intentional, precisely focused and consistently linked to children's next
steps, ensuring that learning builds cumulatively over time. For example, when children
were developing their understanding of colour recognition and naming, staff provided
carefully selected and highly effective resources such as colour-matching jigsaws, which
successfully reinforced and secured learning.
Children benefit from a well-resourced, stimulating and recently enhanced outdoor learning
environment, which they access with enthusiasm and confidence. Leaders have clear,
ambitious and well-targeted development plans in place for this area, closely aligned to
children's next steps, including further opportunities to extend risk-taking, challenge and
physical development. Staff consistently ensure that highly effective learning opportunities
are delivered across all age groups, enabling children to deepen their understanding of the
world. For example, children use live plants in the mud kitchen and demonstrate care,
curiosity and respect as they explore and nurture living things.
Inclusion Strong standard
Staff consistently identify children's needs quickly. This allows them to make reflective
adaptations to the learning environment. This ensures all children can access the learning
offer, for example by making physical adaptations. This ensures the height of furniture is
accessible to all.
Leaders ensure a robust oversight of assessment. This supports them to consistently meet
the needs of all children, for example by doing early high-impact interventions, such as
intensive interactions, and making referrals to other specialists. Staff work hard to reduce
barriers for all children by working with families. This ensures children feel safe and
welcome at the setting.
Staff have developed the skills and knowledge to support children with special educational
needs and/or disabilities. Staff are eager to take part in training to develop their knowledge.
For example, they took part in a training day with a specific focus on autism. This followed
requests by staff. This ensures that staff can meet the needs of children in their care. Staff

Expected standard
work with their local authority and charities to ensure children get the timely support they
need.
Leaders use additional funding with the child's needs in mind. For example, they have
purchased sensory equipment to support children's emotional wellbeing. Leaders also track
the impact of this to ensure it is effective and making a significant impact.
Leadership and governance Strong standard
Leaders know their local area and families extremely well and ensure the setting's offer is
closely matched to their needs. They work proactively with families to ensure they receive
the right support at the right time. For example, they work effectively with local schools and
alternative provisions to secure smooth transitions. Leaders also accompany families on
transition visits and school visits, ensuring a highly supportive and consistent approach.
They ensure families remain positively engaged with the setting and the learning offer,
including those who are harder to reach, for example by offering stay-and-play sessions at
flexible times throughout the year to support working families.
Leaders demonstrate a highly proactive approach to identifying and addressing areas for
development within the setting. They understand key priorities and act swiftly to ensure
consistency across practice and provision. Where weaknesses are identified, leaders
implement clear actions and follow through rigorously to ensure sustained improvement.
This includes consistency around supporting staff at mealtimes and with behaviour. Leaders
are aware and reflective about this.
Leaders prioritise staff wellbeing and ensure staff feel highly valued for their contribution.
They promote an active listening culture, for example through a suggestion box and regular
wellbeing meetings with all staff. Staff report feeling supported and valued and benefit from
team-building opportunities. Leaders also monitor workload carefully and take effective
action to ensure it remains manageable and does not impact staff wellbeing.
Staff engage in a wide range of professional development opportunities, supported by a
strong culture of continuous learning. Leaders ensure staff are well informed about
upcoming training opportunities, for example in relation to further developing knowledge and
practice in special educational needs and/or disabilities.
Behaviour, attitudes and establishing routines Expected standard
Children show an active interest in learning. This is due to staff knowing their children very
well and listening to them. For example, the children make choices by using voting pom-
poms in the older rooms.
All children benefit from warm and positive attachments with their key person. This includes
the setting having arrangements in place for when staff are off work. This supports children's
emotional development.

Staff follow routines at the setting to support children in understanding what is coming next.
However, there are some minor inconsistencies in the implementation of mealtime routines
across rooms, which can result in occasional waiting times and less efficient transitions for
children. Leaders are aware of this variation in practice and are proactively working with
staff to further strengthen consistency, ensuring that routines are embedded uniformly
across the setting to support smooth and efficient daily flow for all children.
Leaders have a clear, proactive and supportive approach to attendance. They work with
families to develop positive habits for learning. They follow their policy, which includes
carrying out home visits on children. This ensures that children are well cared for and take
full advantage of the learning offer.
Behaviour is typically positive across the setting. Leaders are working proactively to ensure
consistency across all rooms, with all staff sharing the same high expectations for children's
behaviour and conduct. As a result, children are increasingly learning to regulate their
behaviour, cooperate well with others and take responsibility for caring for resources and the
environment. Leaders and staff make appropriate adjustments when considering children's
individual needs, ensuring that all children are supported to achieve the highest possible
standards of behaviour.
What it's like to be a child at this setting
All children, including those with additional needs and/or disabilities, make good progress
from their individual starting points. Staff use ongoing assessments effectively to track
children's progress, ensuring they swiftly implement appropriate adaptations and
interventions to support individual needs.
Children are eager to come to the setting and show positive attitudes to learning. They
engage well in a wide range of activities that support progress across all areas of learning.
For example, children particularly enjoy song and dance circle time. They sing familiar songs
and use dancing scarves and shakers to join in. This supports their physical development
and communication and language skills. Staff also provide purposeful activities that reflect
children's next steps. For example, children working on physical development take part in
pasta threading activities to strengthen fine motor control.
Children build strong and trusting relationships with their key workers and staff, who know
them well and ensure they feel safe and secure. Staff work effectively with families to help
children settle and feel welcome in the setting, for example through regular stay-and-play
sessions, which also provide opportunities to share learning and progress updates.

Inspector:
Toby Hammond
About this setting
Unique reference number (URN): EY451274
Address:
St. Bridgids Church, Elland Road
Churwell, Morley
LEEDS
LS27 7QR
Children enjoy learning with and alongside their peers. For example, in the mud kitchen,
they work together to make biscuits, showing cooperation and shared engagement. Staff
support children's interactions effectively and guide their learning when needed.
Independence is a key strength of the setting from an early age. Staff support children to
confidently self-serve their meals. Children also put on their own aprons and support their
friends to do the same. These opportunities build children's confidence, independence and
self-help skills.
Next steps
Leaders should continue to support all staff to consistently embed the highest
expectations for children's behaviour.
Leaders should review and refine mealtime routines to reduce minor inconsistencies in
practice, helping to minimise waiting times for children and ensure that transitions remain
smooth, consistent and efficient across the setting.
About this inspection
The inspector spoke with leaders, practitioners, the special educational needs coordinator
and the designated safeguarding lead 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.

Type: Childcare on non-domestic premises
Registration date: 17/10/2012
Registered person: Little Buttons (Churwell) Limited
Register(s): EYR
Operating hours: Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday : 07:30 - 18:00
Local authority: Leeds
Facts and figures used on inspection
This data was available to the inspector at the time of the inspection.
This data is from 6 May 2026
Children numbers
Age range of children at the time of inspection
0 to 4
Total number of places
75
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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