Early education is vital for children born in lockdown

14 Nov 2022 02:05 PM

Ofsted has published the first in a series of reviews on early years education.

The review underpins the inspectorate’s new strategic focus on early education and giving children ‘the best start in life’ following the Covid-19 pandemic.

Yesterday’s report draws on a range of published research to consider how early years practitioners deliver high-quality education for children from birth to 4 years old.

Read the report ‘Best start in life: a research review for early years’.

The report stresses the value of play and teaching, and the importance of developing communication skills. What matters most is that practitioners have considered what they want children to know and be able to do, before deciding how best to teach. Making sure children catch up after the pandemic is still a key challenge in the early years, so practitioners need to think carefully about what content to prioritise. However, the report does not prescribe how to teach a high-quality early years curriculum.

The report found that, high-quality early years curriculum and pedagogy may have the following features:

Amanda Spielman, His Majesty’s Chief Inspector, yesterday said:

Every child deserves a good early education. Their first few years equip children with the building blocks they need to succeed in childhood and beyond.

Many children in nurseries or childcare began life during the pandemic and have had to catch up with communication and social skills. Early years practitioners have worked hard to teach children things they’ve missed and to embed that knowledge through play. I hope our review helps them – and highlights the vital work that they do introducing children to education.

Notes for Editors

Subsequent early years reviews by Ofsted’s will explore the Early years foundation stage’s (EYFS) 7 areas of learning.

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