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

Grades by area

Achievement

Strong standard
Children make strong and sustained progress from their starting points. Communication and language develop rapidly. Children confidently use new vocabulary when naming animals, describing fruit and vegetables and talking about the weather and seasons. Those with emerging needs show clear improvements in attention, engagement and expressive language. Younger children develop secure physical and sensory skills. They explore materials with increasing control, pull themselves to stand and use equipment to strengthen fine motor development. Older children apply mathematical knowledge independently, counting during songs, comparing quantities in play and anticipating patterns during daily routines. Early writing skills are developing well. Children use a wide range of mark-making materials, write their names on artwork and create letters using loose-parts resources. Children with barriers to learning make steady and sustained progress. Adaptations are timely and purposeful, and leaders monitor impact closely. All children are well prepared for their next stage of learning, showing curiosity, independence and secure foundational knowledge.

Behaviour, attitudes and establishing routines

Strong standard
Leaders have established a calm, respectful and nurturing culture. Children feel secure and show positive behaviour and attitudes to learning. Staff model expectations, treating children with respect. Children help peers, take turns, say 'please' and 'thank you' to each other and even to the virtual-assistance device. This demonstrates embedded respect and social understanding. Children settle quickly and confidently. Routines are predictable and purposeful. As a result, children are engaged in their learning and develop positive relationships with others. Routines support children's independence. For example, younger children are offered choices of aprons at mealtimes. Older children serve their own food and pour their own drinks. A daily 'helping hands' is responsible for helping set and clear the table for lunchtime. They show pride in this role and consider who should do the job next. Interventions to support behaviour are positive. Children work with others, sharing, turn-taking and developing social skills. Leaders understand the importance of attendance and take evidence-led action to anticipate and address barriers to attendance. They are proactive and work closely with parents and carers and in partnership with external agencies. This helps to establish and maintain positive routines.

Children's welfare and wellbeing

Strong standard
Children's welfare and wellbeing are consistently prioritised across the setting. Staff know children extremely well and use this understanding to provide calm, sensitive and highly responsive care. Predictable routines and warm, nurturing interactions help children feel safe, secure and valued throughout the day. Secure and trusting attachments are evident throughout the setting. Babies and young children confidently seek comfort and reassurance from familiar adults, who respond promptly and sensitively to their emotional needs. Staff support children effectively to recognise and regulate their emotions. There is particularly strong support for children with special educational needs and/or disabilities and those requiring additional emotional regulation support. These children benefit from timely, well-matched interventions, including access to the sensory room and small-group support. This enables them to engage positively in learning and play. Daily routines promote children's independence, health and wellbeing. Children develop strong self-care habits through handwashing, toileting and toothbrushing routines, and they are supported to make healthy choices at mealtimes. They demonstrate increasing independence in serving food, pouring drinks and managing personal care. Mealtimes are calm and social occasions, with clear expectations that support children's confidence and security. Children develop a strong sense of belonging within the setting. They form positive friendships, cooperate during play, and show care and consideration for others. The sensory-rich environment and targeted support ensure that children with emerging needs are fully included and supported effectively. As a result, children demonstrate high levels of emotional security, engagement and wellbeing.

Curriculum and teaching

Strong standard
Leaders have designed an ambitious and inclusive curriculum that reflects the setting's curiosity-led ethos and the unique opportunities of the farm environment. The curriculum is carefully sequenced across both rooms, beginning with sensory-rich experiences for younger children. This progresses to more structured learning that prepares older children well for school. Leaders know the quality of education in depth and make well-judged decisions to strengthen practice. Recent training in communication and language has improved staff modelling, vocabulary use and consistency across the setting. Teaching is consistently strong. Staff use high-quality interactions to build children's language, thinking and confidence. They introduce rich vocabulary linked to children's interests. For example, when children explored natural materials, staff extended their ideas by introducing words such as 'habitats' and 'nocturnal'. Children's ideas are valued. For example, when children explored real fruit and vegetables in the role-play area, staff encouraged them to describe textures, tastes and healthy choices. Staff sustain children's curiosity through non-fiction books and purposeful questioning. Mathematical learning is woven through routines and play. Children compare sizes, identify shapes hidden in shredded paper and anticipate patterns on the interactive whiteboard. Early writing is promoted effectively through sensory trays, pipettes, dough discos and role-play opportunities. Teaching is adapted intelligently. Staff use observations, focus weeks and support plans to shape learning so that children of different ages and stages can access the curriculum fully.

Inclusion

Strong standard
Staff make a sustained difference to children who face barriers to learning. They identify emerging needs quickly and put the right support in place. Daily observations, focus weeks and support plans are used effectively. Staff understand children's starting points and what they need to learn next. Children receiving additional support make positive progress because help is timely and consistent. Leaders monitor progress closely to ensure this is sustained. Staff adapt interactions skilfully. Children benefit from targeted modelling, small-group sessions and clear communication strategies. This includes the sensory room and interventions such as the Bucket Sessions, which support communication, language and social skills. These are clearly linked to children's individual targets. Children's enthusiastic involvement shows the positive impact on their development. Leaders rigorously monitor progress. They review support plans and work closely with parents, carers and external agencies. Additional funding is used thoughtfully and checked carefully to ensure it makes a sustained difference to children's outcomes.

Leadership and governance

Strong standard
Leaders have a detailed and accurate understanding of the setting's strengths and priorities. They use this insight to drive continuous improvement. For example, leaders identified an increase in children needing support with communication and language. In response, leaders commissioned targeted training, introducing small-group interventions and strengthening staff modelling. This has led to more consistent practice and clear improvements in children's expressive language and engagement. Leaders are reflective and responsive. They have embedded predictable routines across both rooms, which has improved children's emotional security and independence. The creation of the sensory room shows how leaders use evidence about children's emotional regulation needs to enhance provision. This space is now used daily to support children who benefit from quieter, structured opportunities to settle and refocus. Staff wellbeing and workload are managed thoughtfully. Leaders work alongside staff, ensuring they understand the demands of practice. The induction process is thorough and supportive. Newer staff describe how leaders model expectations, explain safeguarding procedures clearly and provide time to observe high-quality interactions. Leaders also secure training opportunities for staff at different stages of their development, building confidence and consistency. Partnerships with parents and external agencies are strong. Leaders communicate effectively through newsletters, open events and regular discussions, ensuring families are well informed and involved in children's progress.

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

Children thrive in this warm, engaging and unique environment. They form secure attachments with attentive staff who know their routines and respond quickly to their needs. Babies settle quickly and confidently. Staff understand their cues and provide calm and consistent care. Across the setting, children show deep involvement in learning. They share ideas, collaborate and sustain concentration. Routines are fully embedded and expectations are clear and consistent. Staff are excellent role models who demonstrate kindness and respect, which has a positive impact on children's emotional security. Children feel safe and develop strong relationships with staff and each other. Children confidently explore their environment and natural surroundings. They use rich vocabulary to describe what they see and do. The unique environment provides valuable opportunities to engage with the natural world around them. It encourages curiosity, sustained exploration and early scientific thinking skills. Children engage in meaningful activities and learning opportunities that develop their confidence, independence and self-help skills. This means that they are well prepared for school. Children's uniqueness is strongly valued. This is evidenced in the setting's personalised approach to the curriculum, which meets the needs of children of different ages and abilities. All children, including those with special educational needs and/or disabilities and those who face barriers to learning, make strong and steady progress from their starting points. Targeted individualised support, skilled teaching and strong collaboration with families and external agencies mean that children's needs are swiftly identified. This allows them the opportunity to catch up with their peers.

Next steps

Leaders should ensure continued improvement to the setting's highly engaging use of the unique farm context and opportunities for outdoor nurturing provision to have a transformational impact on children's personal, social development and understanding of cultural diversity and personal responsibility.

About this inspection

The inspector spoke with leaders, practitioners, the designated safeguarding lead and the special educational needs coordinator 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
2764520
Address
Park Farm Brasted Road, Brasted Westerham TN16 1LL
Type
Childcare on Non-Domestic Premises, Full day care
Registration date
14/12/2023
Registered person
Finch Nest Preschool Ltd
Register(s)
EYR, CCR
Operating hours
Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday : 07:30 - 18:00
Local authority
Kent

Facts and figures

Age range at inspection
1 to 4
Total places
30

Data from 1 May 2026

Raw extracted PDF text
Finch Nest Preschool
Unique reference number (URN): 2764520
Address: Park Farm, Brasted Road, Brasted, Westerham, TN16 1LL
Type: Childcare on non-domestic premises
Registered with Ofsted: 14/12/2023
Registers: EYR, CCR
Registered person: Finch Nest Preschool Ltd
Inspection report: 1 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
Children make strong and sustained progress from their starting points. Communication and
language develop rapidly. Children confidently use new vocabulary when naming animals,
describing fruit and vegetables and talking about the weather and seasons. Those with
emerging needs show clear improvements in attention, engagement and expressive
language.
Younger children develop secure physical and sensory skills. They explore materials with
increasing control, pull themselves to stand and use equipment to strengthen fine motor
development. Older children apply mathematical knowledge independently, counting during
songs, comparing quantities in play and anticipating patterns during daily routines. Early
writing skills are developing well. Children use a wide range of mark-making materials, write
their names on artwork and create letters using loose-parts resources.
Children with barriers to learning make steady and sustained progress. Adaptations are
timely and purposeful, and leaders monitor impact closely. All children are well prepared for
their next stage of learning, showing curiosity, independence and secure foundational
knowledge.
Behaviour, attitudes and establishing routines Strong standard
Leaders have established a calm, respectful and nurturing culture. Children feel secure and
show positive behaviour and attitudes to learning. Staff model expectations, treating children
with respect. Children help peers, take turns, say 'please' and 'thank you' to each other and
even to the virtual-assistance device. This demonstrates embedded respect and social
understanding.
Children settle quickly and confidently. Routines are predictable and purposeful. As a result,
children are engaged in their learning and develop positive relationships with others.
Routines support children's independence. For example, younger children are offered
choices of aprons at mealtimes. Older children serve their own food and pour their own
drinks. A daily 'helping hands' is responsible for helping set and clear the table for lunchtime.
They show pride in this role and consider who should do the job next.
Interventions to support behaviour are positive. Children work with others, sharing, turn-
taking and developing social skills.
Leaders understand the importance of attendance and take evidence-led action to anticipate
and address barriers to attendance. They are proactive and work closely with parents and
carers and in partnership with external agencies. This helps to establish and maintain
positive routines.

Children's welfare and wellbeing Strong standard
Children's welfare and wellbeing are consistently prioritised across the setting. Staff know
children extremely well and use this understanding to provide calm, sensitive and highly
responsive care. Predictable routines and warm, nurturing interactions help children feel
safe, secure and valued throughout the day.
Secure and trusting attachments are evident throughout the setting. Babies and young
children confidently seek comfort and reassurance from familiar adults, who respond
promptly and sensitively to their emotional needs. Staff support children effectively to
recognise and regulate their emotions. There is particularly strong support for children with
special educational needs and/or disabilities and those requiring additional emotional
regulation support. These children benefit from timely, well-matched interventions, including
access to the sensory room and small-group support. This enables them to engage
positively in learning and play.
Daily routines promote children's independence, health and wellbeing. Children develop
strong self-care habits through handwashing, toileting and toothbrushing routines, and they
are supported to make healthy choices at mealtimes. They demonstrate increasing
independence in serving food, pouring drinks and managing personal care. Mealtimes are
calm and social occasions, with clear expectations that support children's confidence and
security.
Children develop a strong sense of belonging within the setting. They form positive
friendships, cooperate during play, and show care and consideration for others. The
sensory-rich environment and targeted support ensure that children with emerging needs
are fully included and supported effectively. As a result, children demonstrate high levels of
emotional security, engagement and wellbeing.
Curriculum and teaching Strong standard
Leaders have designed an ambitious and inclusive curriculum that reflects the setting's
curiosity-led ethos and the unique opportunities of the farm environment. The curriculum is
carefully sequenced across both rooms, beginning with sensory-rich experiences for
younger children. This progresses to more structured learning that prepares older children
well for school. Leaders know the quality of education in depth and make well-judged
decisions to strengthen practice. Recent training in communication and language has
improved staff modelling, vocabulary use and consistency across the setting.
Teaching is consistently strong. Staff use high-quality interactions to build children's
language, thinking and confidence. They introduce rich vocabulary linked to children's
interests. For example, when children explored natural materials, staff extended their ideas
by introducing words such as 'habitats' and 'nocturnal'. Children's ideas are valued. For
example, when children explored real fruit and vegetables in the role-play area, staff
encouraged them to describe textures, tastes and healthy choices. Staff sustain children's
curiosity through non-fiction books and purposeful questioning.
Mathematical learning is woven through routines and play. Children compare sizes, identify
shapes hidden in shredded paper and anticipate patterns on the interactive whiteboard.

Early writing is promoted effectively through sensory trays, pipettes, dough discos and role-
play opportunities. Teaching is adapted intelligently. Staff use observations, focus weeks and
support plans to shape learning so that children of different ages and stages can access the
curriculum fully.
Inclusion Strong standard
Staff make a sustained difference to children who face barriers to learning. They identify
emerging needs quickly and put the right support in place. Daily observations, focus weeks
and support plans are used effectively. Staff understand children's starting points and what
they need to learn next.
Children receiving additional support make positive progress because help is timely and
consistent. Leaders monitor progress closely to ensure this is sustained.
Staff adapt interactions skilfully. Children benefit from targeted modelling, small-group
sessions and clear communication strategies. This includes the sensory room and
interventions such as the Bucket Sessions, which support communication, language and
social skills. These are clearly linked to children's individual targets. Children's enthusiastic
involvement shows the positive impact on their development.
Leaders rigorously monitor progress. They review support plans and work closely with
parents, carers and external agencies. Additional funding is used thoughtfully and checked
carefully to ensure it makes a sustained difference to children's outcomes.
Leadership and governance Strong standard
Leaders have a detailed and accurate understanding of the setting's strengths and priorities.
They use this insight to drive continuous improvement. For example, leaders identified an
increase in children needing support with communication and language. In response,
leaders commissioned targeted training, introducing small-group interventions and
strengthening staff modelling. This has led to more consistent practice and clear
improvements in children's expressive language and engagement.
Leaders are reflective and responsive. They have embedded predictable routines across
both rooms, which has improved children's emotional security and independence. The
creation of the sensory room shows how leaders use evidence about children's emotional
regulation needs to enhance provision. This space is now used daily to support children who
benefit from quieter, structured opportunities to settle and refocus.
Staff wellbeing and workload are managed thoughtfully. Leaders work alongside staff,
ensuring they understand the demands of practice. The induction process is thorough and
supportive. Newer staff describe how leaders model expectations, explain safeguarding
procedures clearly and provide time to observe high-quality interactions. Leaders also
secure training opportunities for staff at different stages of their development, building
confidence and consistency.
Partnerships with parents and external agencies are strong. Leaders communicate
effectively through newsletters, open events and regular discussions, ensuring families are

well informed and involved in children's progress.
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
What it's like to be a child at this setting
Children thrive in this warm, engaging and unique environment. They form secure
attachments with attentive staff who know their routines and respond quickly to their needs.
Babies settle quickly and confidently. Staff understand their cues and provide calm and
consistent care.
Across the setting, children show deep involvement in learning. They share ideas,
collaborate and sustain concentration. Routines are fully embedded and expectations are
clear and consistent. Staff are excellent role models who demonstrate kindness and respect,
which has a positive impact on children's emotional security. Children feel safe and develop
strong relationships with staff and each other.
Children confidently explore their environment and natural surroundings. They use rich
vocabulary to describe what they see and do. The unique environment provides valuable
opportunities to engage with the natural world around them. It encourages curiosity,
sustained exploration and early scientific thinking skills.
Children engage in meaningful activities and learning opportunities that develop their
confidence, independence and self-help skills. This means that they are well prepared for
school. Children's uniqueness is strongly valued. This is evidenced in the setting's

Inspector:
Lauren Mills
About this setting
Unique reference number (URN): 2764520
Address:
Park Farm
Brasted Road, Brasted
Westerham
TN16 1LL
Type: Childcare on non-domestic premises
personalised approach to the curriculum, which meets the needs of children of different
ages and abilities.
All children, including those with special educational needs and/or disabilities and those who
face barriers to learning, make strong and steady progress from their starting points.
Targeted individualised support, skilled teaching and strong collaboration with families and
external agencies mean that children's needs are swiftly identified. This allows them the
opportunity to catch up with their peers.
Next steps
Leaders should ensure continued improvement to the setting's highly engaging use of the
unique farm context and opportunities for outdoor nurturing provision to have a
transformational impact on children's personal, social development and understanding of
cultural diversity and personal responsibility.
About this inspection
The inspector spoke with leaders, practitioners, the designated safeguarding lead and the
special educational needs coordinator 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.

Registration date: 14/12/2023
Registered person: Finch Nest Preschool Ltd
Register(s): EYR, CCR
Operating hours: Monday,Tuesday,Wednesday,Thursday,Friday : 07:30 - 18:00
Local authority: Kent
Facts and figures used on inspection
This data was available to the inspector at the time of the inspection.
This data is from 1 May 2026
Children numbers
Age range of children at the time of inspection
1 to 4
Total number of places
30
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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