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

Grades by area

Achievement

Strong standard
Leaders prioritise the key foundations of children's development, including communication and language, physical development and building children's personal, social and emotional development. Babies form strong attachments, explore confidently and begin to imitate sounds and respond to repeated language. They strengthen their physical skills through crawling and pulling to stand. Toddlers listen carefully, follow instructions and sustain engagement during stories and sensory play. They use mathematical language, such as 'big, small' and number names in their play and match objects to story themes. Pre-school children recognise letters, identify their names and recall repeated story phrases. They re-enact familiar stories using props. For example, when acting out 'The Three Little Pigs' they remember the order of events and confidently introduce characters, such as the wolf. Children repeat familiar phrases, including 'I'll huff and I'll puff and I'll blow your house down' and 'Not by the hair of my chinny chin chin.' Children sustain high levels of concentration and move calmly between active play and group learning. They show pride in their achievements and speak confidently with adults and visitors. Across the setting, children develop independence. They wash hands, serve meals, manage toileting and follow routines confidently. Children with special educational needs and/or disabilities participate alongside their peers. They communicate using gestures, early sounds or emerging words and show the best progress from their starting points. Children gain the knowledge and skills they need and prepare well for the next stage of learning.

Behaviour, attitudes and establishing routines

Strong standard
Leaders create a warm, safe and welcoming environment where children thrive. Clear routines and well-organised spaces help children feel secure and confident. Staff provide daily opportunities for outdoor learning and purposeful play. They respond sensitively to children's changing needs and provide consistently nurturing care. Each child has a key person who builds strong relationships with them and their families. Babies and young children settle quickly and confidently seek reassurance from familiar adults when needed. These secure attachments help children feel safe, develop confidence and engage fully in their learning. Staff consistently teach children how to behave positively and develop strong social skills. They act as positive role models and demonstrate kindness, respect and calm communication in their interactions. Staff help children recognise and understand their feelings and explain how their behaviour may affect others. Clear routines and expectations help children understand what staff expect of them. For example, at mealtimes children wait patiently, pass bowls to their friends and use polite language. When disagreements occur, staff guide children to talk through the problem and find solutions together. As a result, children show empathy, cooperate well with others and increasingly regulate their own behaviour. They demonstrate growing independence and take responsibility for their actions. Children show positive attitudes to learning. They listen attentively during stories, sustain concentration during activities and take pride in their achievements. Staff recognise and praise children's efforts, which builds confidence and perseverance. Leaders monitor attendance carefully and work with families to remove barriers. As a result, children attend regularly and develop positive habits that prepare them well for school.

Children's welfare and wellbeing

Strong standard
Leaders place children's welfare and wellbeing at the centre of their work. They implement robust safeguarding policies and review them regularly to ensure they remain effective. Secure entry systems and daily risk assessments maintain a safe environment. Leaders complete detailed individual risk assessments for children with special educational needs and/or disabilities and share these with all staff, so everyone understands how to support children safely and consistently. Staff follow clear and consistent hygiene routines. They meet babies' sleeping, feeding and personal care needs with care and sensitivity. Staff explain what they are doing before providing personal care and ask children's permission, ensuring they respect children's dignity. This respectful approach helps children feel secure, valued and well cared for. Children develop strong independence in managing their own needs. They wash their hands, use the toilet and serve their own meals with confidence. Staff actively promote healthy lifestyles through daily routines and learning experiences. For example, they talk with children about nutritious foods during mealtimes, encourage them to try new foods and explain how food helps their bodies grow strong. Staff provide daily opportunities for energetic outdoor play, where children run, climb, balance and practise large movements. Leaders work closely with parents to promote healthy routines at home and support children's wellbeing. The key-person system works highly effectively. Children form warm, secure attachments with familiar adults and confidently seek reassurance when needed. Staff provide structured and responsive settling-in arrangements that help children feel emotionally secure. Leaders promptly identify children who need additional support and work with parents and professionals to plan targeted help. As a result, children feel safe, develop confidence and show a strong sense of belonging within the setting.

Curriculum and teaching

Strong standard
Leaders design a broad and ambitious curriculum that reflects the setting's context. They serve a community with high levels of deprivation and many children who speak English as an additional language. Leaders sequence learning clearly from babies through to pre-school so knowledge and skills build progressively over time. Core books sit at the centre of the curriculum and provide clear progression across rooms. Leaders use a structured six-week cycle to review what children know and can do. They observe practice regularly and review children's progress to evaluate how effectively the curriculum is implemented. Leaders use this information to provide precise and accurate staff training, which strengthens teaching. The fully embedded curriculum covers all areas of learning within the early years foundation stage and helps children develop the knowledge, skills and behaviours needed for their next stage of learning. Staff demonstrate secure knowledge of child development and consistently prioritise communication and language. They model vocabulary, repeat key phrases and give children time to respond. Trained staff deliver the 'Early Talk Boost' programme through small-group storytelling, games and structured activities. As a result, children confidently use new vocabulary in their play and conversations. Staff also fully embed mathematical language in everyday play. Children are confident to apply number and size vocabulary during independent play and when problem-solving with their friends. Leaders prioritise physical development within the curriculum. Staff embed this through daily outdoor learning and well-established routines that develop children's strength, coordination, independence and self-regulation. As a result, children move confidently and manage physical challenges during play.

Inclusion

Strong standard
Leaders have high expectations for children with special educational needs and/or disabilities (SEND) and identify any developmental gaps and/or needs early. They know their children and families well, including those who are disadvantaged or speak English as an additional language. When children start, staff gather baseline assessments to ensure they clearly understand the children's starting points. They review the children's progress regularly. Support is put in place quickly and adjusted as it is required. This ensures that children's needs are addressed and helps all children make the best possible progress. Leaders work closely with external professionals, including speech and language therapists, paediatricians and educational psychologists. They follow specialist advice carefully and adapt teaching and routines to meet individual needs. Children with SEND receive highly targeted support and leaders use additional funding effectively to reduce barriers and improve access to learning. For example, leaders arrange staffing so that children with SEND receive one-to-one support when needed. This helps children take part in activities, fully ensuring that they can access the full curriculum alongside their peers. Staff receive specialist training, including training to support children with specific medical or feeding needs. As a result, children feel included, valued and able to access the full curriculum. Staff use highly effective communication strategies. They model language clearly and offer visual cues so children understand what they are asking of them. They support non-verbal children to make choices and help them to communicate preferences. For example, staff present 2 pictures or objects, such as snack options and toys. Children point and reach to photos to communicate their preferences. Bilingual staff help families who speak Urdu or Polish and use simple home language words to support children when they first start.

Leadership and governance

Strong standard
Leaders maintain a precise understanding of the quality of teaching and children's learning. They review practice regularly and act quickly to strengthen provision where needed. Through precise coaching, supervision and targeted training, leaders help staff refine their teaching. As a result, staff deliver the curriculum consistently and children benefit from high-quality learning experiences. Leaders are highly reflective and embed a six-week 'stop, pause and reflect' cycle to support continual improvement. This dedicated time allows staff to review children's learning, reflect on what works well and identify what children need next. Staff then adjust activities, resources and environments to provide meaningful enhancements to learning. This reflective approach helps ensure children receive well-planned and highly engaging learning opportunities. Leaders have strong partnerships with parents and external professionals. They share clear information about children's progress and next steps and provide guidance to help families extend learning at home. Close links with the community and the presence of bilingual staff help families feel welcomed and involved in their children's learning. Leaders also deploy funding strategically to support children who need it most. They provide targeted one-to-one support and carefully plan provision for disadvantaged children and those with special educational needs and/or disabilities. As a result, these children access the full curriculum and receive the support they need to participate fully and make the best progress. Through clear direction, thoughtful use of resources and ongoing staff development, leaders maintain high standards of education and care across the provision.

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

Children flourish in this nurturing and inclusive nursery. They are happy and content, they separate confidently from their parents because staff establish strong, secure attachments. Babies seek comfort from familiar adults and toddlers proudly share their achievements. Pre-school children confidently invite staff to read and enjoy engaging in conversations with them. These warm, responsive relationships ensure children feel safe, valued and foster a sense of belonging. Staff care for children with warmth, dignity and respect. They respond promptly to children's needs and maintain consistently high standards of hygiene and safeguarding. The clear routines and vigilant supervision of children ensure children feel protected and secure. This enables them to focus fully on the planned learning. A high proportion of children speak English as an additional language. Bilingual staff play a key role in supporting both children and families. They use home-language words during the settling-in period. They translate important information to ensure children fully understand what is expected during daily routines. At the same time, staff model clear English and introduce new vocabulary through purposeful interactions. Home languages are respected and celebrated. As a result, children develop confidence in communication and make strong progress in acquiring English. Staff deliver a rich, well-sequenced curriculum that prioritises communication and language, physical development, independence and self-regulation. Carefully chosen books sit at the heart of learning. Staff read core stories repeatedly and with enthusiasm. They use props to bring narratives to life and encourage children to join in with familiar refrains, which they do. They model expressive language, emphasise key vocabulary and revisit texts to strengthen comprehension. These deliberate strategies foster a genuine love of reading while supporting emerging speech and vocabulary development. Staff identify clear starting points and precise next steps for the children. Daily routines promote independence and prepare children well for school. Leaders deploy funding strategically so that children with special educational needs and/or disabilities receive focused support and make meaningful progress. Children thrive as confident, engaged learners with strong communication skills and positive attitudes to learning.

Next steps

Leaders 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, those who are known (or previously known) to children's social care, and those who may face other barriers to their learning and/or wellbeing

About this inspection

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

About this setting

URN
2751455
Address
Sure Start, Homelands House Browning Street DERBY DE23 8DN
Type
Childcare on Non-Domestic Premises, Full day care
Registration date
25/08/2023
Registered person
Sunnyhill Day Nursery Limited
Register(s)
EYR
Operating hours
Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday : 08:00 - 18:00
Local authority
Derby

Facts and figures

Age range at inspection
0 to 4
Total places
92

Data from 18 February 2026

Raw extracted PDF text
Sunnyhill Day Nursery Limited
Unique reference number (URN): 2751455
Address: Sure Start, Homelands House, Browning Street, DERBY, DE23 8DN
Type: Childcare on non-domestic premises
Registered with Ofsted: 25/08/2023
Registers: EYR
Registered person: Sunnyhill Day Nursery Limited
Inspection report: 18 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
Achievement Strong standard
Leaders prioritise the key foundations of children's development, including communication
and language, physical development and building children's personal, social and emotional
development. Babies form strong attachments, explore confidently and begin to imitate
sounds and respond to repeated language. They strengthen their physical skills through
crawling and pulling to stand. Toddlers listen carefully, follow instructions and sustain
engagement during stories and sensory play. They use mathematical language, such as
'big, small' and number names in their play and match objects to story themes.
Pre-school children recognise letters, identify their names and recall repeated story phrases.
They re-enact familiar stories using props. For example, when acting out 'The Three Little
Pigs' they remember the order of events and confidently introduce characters, such as the
wolf. Children repeat familiar phrases, including 'I'll huff and I'll puff and I'll blow your house
down' and 'Not by the hair of my chinny chin chin.' Children sustain high levels of
concentration and move calmly between active play and group learning. They show pride in
their achievements and speak confidently with adults and visitors.
Across the setting, children develop independence. They wash hands, serve meals, manage
toileting and follow routines confidently. Children with special educational needs and/or
disabilities participate alongside their peers. They communicate using gestures, early
sounds or emerging words and show the best progress from their starting points. Children
gain the knowledge and skills they need and prepare well for the next stage of learning.
Behaviour, attitudes and establishing routines Strong standard
Leaders create a warm, safe and welcoming environment where children thrive. Clear
routines and well-organised spaces help children feel secure and confident. Staff provide
daily opportunities for outdoor learning and purposeful play. They respond sensitively to
children's changing needs and provide consistently nurturing care. Each child has a key
person who builds strong relationships with them and their families. Babies and young
children settle quickly and confidently seek reassurance from familiar adults when needed.
These secure attachments help children feel safe, develop confidence and engage fully in
their learning.
Staff consistently teach children how to behave positively and develop strong social skills.
They act as positive role models and demonstrate kindness, respect and calm
communication in their interactions. Staff help children recognise and understand their
feelings and explain how their behaviour may affect others. Clear routines and expectations
help children understand what staff expect of them. For example, at mealtimes children wait
patiently, pass bowls to their friends and use polite language. When disagreements occur,
staff guide children to talk through the problem and find solutions together. As a result,
children show empathy, cooperate well with others and increasingly regulate their own
behaviour. They demonstrate growing independence and take responsibility for their actions.

Children show positive attitudes to learning. They listen attentively during stories, sustain
concentration during activities and take pride in their achievements. Staff recognise and
praise children's efforts, which builds confidence and perseverance. Leaders monitor
attendance carefully and work with families to remove barriers. As a result, children attend
regularly and develop positive habits that prepare them well for school.
Children's welfare and wellbeing Strong standard
Leaders place children's welfare and wellbeing at the centre of their work. They implement
robust safeguarding policies and review them regularly to ensure they remain effective.
Secure entry systems and daily risk assessments maintain a safe environment. Leaders
complete detailed individual risk assessments for children with special educational needs
and/or disabilities and share these with all staff, so everyone understands how to support
children safely and consistently.
Staff follow clear and consistent hygiene routines. They meet babies' sleeping, feeding and
personal care needs with care and sensitivity. Staff explain what they are doing before
providing personal care and ask children's permission, ensuring they respect children's
dignity. This respectful approach helps children feel secure, valued and well cared for.
Children develop strong independence in managing their own needs. They wash their
hands, use the toilet and serve their own meals with confidence. Staff actively promote
healthy lifestyles through daily routines and learning experiences. For example, they talk
with children about nutritious foods during mealtimes, encourage them to try new foods and
explain how food helps their bodies grow strong. Staff provide daily opportunities for
energetic outdoor play, where children run, climb, balance and practise large movements.
Leaders work closely with parents to promote healthy routines at home and support
children's wellbeing.
The key-person system works highly effectively. Children form warm, secure attachments
with familiar adults and confidently seek reassurance when needed. Staff provide structured
and responsive settling-in arrangements that help children feel emotionally secure. Leaders
promptly identify children who need additional support and work with parents and
professionals to plan targeted help. As a result, children feel safe, develop confidence and
show a strong sense of belonging within the setting.
Curriculum and teaching Strong standard
Leaders design a broad and ambitious curriculum that reflects the setting's context. They
serve a community with high levels of deprivation and many children who speak English as
an additional language. Leaders sequence learning clearly from babies through to pre-
school so knowledge and skills build progressively over time. Core books sit at the centre of
the curriculum and provide clear progression across rooms. Leaders use a structured six-
week cycle to review what children know and can do. They observe practice regularly and
review children's progress to evaluate how effectively the curriculum is implemented.
Leaders use this information to provide precise and accurate staff training, which
strengthens teaching. The fully embedded curriculum covers all areas of learning within the
early years foundation stage and helps children develop the knowledge, skills and
behaviours needed for their next stage of learning.

Staff demonstrate secure knowledge of child development and consistently prioritise
communication and language. They model vocabulary, repeat key phrases and give children
time to respond. Trained staff deliver the 'Early Talk Boost' programme through small-group
storytelling, games and structured activities. As a result, children confidently use new
vocabulary in their play and conversations. Staff also fully embed mathematical language in
everyday play. Children are confident to apply number and size vocabulary during
independent play and when problem-solving with their friends.
Leaders prioritise physical development within the curriculum. Staff embed this through daily
outdoor learning and well-established routines that develop children's strength, coordination,
independence and self-regulation. As a result, children move confidently and manage
physical challenges during play.
Inclusion Strong standard
Leaders have high expectations for children with special educational needs and/or
disabilities (SEND) and identify any developmental gaps and/or needs early. They know
their children and families well, including those who are disadvantaged or speak English as
an additional language. When children start, staff gather baseline assessments to ensure
they clearly understand the children's starting points. They review the children's progress
regularly. Support is put in place quickly and adjusted as it is required. This ensures that
children's needs are addressed and helps all children make the best possible progress.
Leaders work closely with external professionals, including speech and language therapists,
paediatricians and educational psychologists. They follow specialist advice carefully and
adapt teaching and routines to meet individual needs. Children with SEND receive highly
targeted support and leaders use additional funding effectively to reduce barriers and
improve access to learning. For example, leaders arrange staffing so that children with
SEND receive one-to-one support when needed. This helps children take part in activities,
fully ensuring that they can access the full curriculum alongside their peers. Staff receive
specialist training, including training to support children with specific medical or feeding
needs. As a result, children feel included, valued and able to access the full curriculum.
Staff use highly effective communication strategies. They model language clearly and offer
visual cues so children understand what they are asking of them. They support non-verbal
children to make choices and help them to communicate preferences. For example, staff
present 2 pictures or objects, such as snack options and toys. Children point and reach to
photos to communicate their preferences. Bilingual staff help families who speak Urdu or
Polish and use simple home language words to support children when they first start.
Leadership and governance Strong standard
Leaders maintain a precise understanding of the quality of teaching and children's learning.
They review practice regularly and act quickly to strengthen provision where needed.
Through precise coaching, supervision and targeted training, leaders help staff refine their
teaching. As a result, staff deliver the curriculum consistently and children benefit from high-
quality learning experiences.

Leaders are highly reflective and embed a six-week 'stop, pause and reflect' cycle to support
continual improvement. This dedicated time allows staff to review children's learning, reflect
on what works well and identify what children need next. Staff then adjust activities,
resources and environments to provide meaningful enhancements to learning. This
reflective approach helps ensure children receive well-planned and highly engaging learning
opportunities.
Leaders have strong partnerships with parents and external professionals. They share clear
information about children's progress and next steps and provide guidance to help families
extend learning at home. Close links with the community and the presence of bilingual staff
help families feel welcomed and involved in their children's learning. Leaders also deploy
funding strategically to support children who need it most. They provide targeted one-to-one
support and carefully plan provision for disadvantaged children and those with special
educational needs and/or disabilities. As a result, these children access the full curriculum
and receive the support they need to participate fully and make the best progress. Through
clear direction, thoughtful use of resources and ongoing staff development, leaders maintain
high standards of education and care across the provision.
What it's like to be a child at this setting
Children flourish in this nurturing and inclusive nursery. They are happy and content, they
separate confidently from their parents because staff establish strong, secure attachments.
Babies seek comfort from familiar adults and toddlers proudly share their achievements.
Pre-school children confidently invite staff to read and enjoy engaging in conversations with
them. These warm, responsive relationships ensure children feel safe, valued and foster a
sense of belonging. Staff care for children with warmth, dignity and respect. They respond
promptly to children's needs and maintain consistently high standards of hygiene and
safeguarding. The clear routines and vigilant supervision of children ensure children feel
protected and secure. This enables them to focus fully on the planned learning.
A high proportion of children speak English as an additional language. Bilingual staff play a
key role in supporting both children and families. They use home-language words during the
settling-in period. They translate important information to ensure children fully understand
what is expected during daily routines. At the same time, staff model clear English and
introduce new vocabulary through purposeful interactions. Home languages are respected
and celebrated. As a result, children develop confidence in communication and make strong
progress in acquiring English.

Inspector:
Ali Lancaster
About this setting
Unique reference number (URN): 2751455
Address:
Sure Start, Homelands House
Browning Street
Staff deliver a rich, well-sequenced curriculum that prioritises communication and language,
physical development, independence and self-regulation. Carefully chosen books sit at the
heart of learning. Staff read core stories repeatedly and with enthusiasm. They use props to
bring narratives to life and encourage children to join in with familiar refrains, which they do.
They model expressive language, emphasise key vocabulary and revisit texts to strengthen
comprehension. These deliberate strategies foster a genuine love of reading while
supporting emerging speech and vocabulary development. Staff identify clear starting points
and precise next steps for the children. Daily routines promote independence and prepare
children well for school. Leaders deploy funding strategically so that children with special
educational needs and/or disabilities receive focused support and make meaningful
progress. Children thrive as confident, engaged learners with strong communication skills
and positive attitudes to learning.
Next steps
Leaders 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, those who are known (or previously known) to children's social care, and
those who may face other barriers to their learning and/or wellbeing
About this inspection
The inspector spoke with the leaders, staff, the special educational needs coordinator,
children and parents during the inspection.
We carried out this inspection under sections 49 and 50 of the Childcare Act 2006 on the
quality and standards of provision that is registered on the Early Years Register. The
registered person must ensure that this provision complies with the statutory framework for
children's learning, development and care, known as the early years foundation stage.

DERBY
DE23 8DN
Type: Childcare on non-domestic premises
Registration date: 25/08/2023
Registered person: Sunnyhill Day Nursery Limited
Register(s): EYR
Operating hours: Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday : 08:00 - 18:00
Local authority: Derby
Facts and figures used on inspection
This data was available to the inspector at the time of the inspection.
This data is from 18 February 2026
Children numbers
Age range of children at the time of inspection
0 to 4
Total number of places
92
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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