Alice Miles
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Childminding experts are outraged at plans to raise the Ofsted registration fee for playgroups from, in the case of my local one, £20 to £400 a year. What do we get for that?
It ought to be reasonably simple to run a playgroup: children, teacher, space, lots of activities - no problem. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. When the previous committee handed over to us last year, they did so with muttered warnings and so many files of paper you wouldn't believe it. A year on, I understand why.
First came the registration of the new committee: lots of ID, forms and criminal record checks all round - just so that we, all parents of children at the nursery, could hold meetings and fill in more forms. Then came the registration of the nursery, which had to be done afresh because we were moving 50 yards from one building on the infant school site to a new one. All this fell to the poor person who had offered to be chairman, a lawyer on maternity leave who reckons she has spent 50 hours ticking Ofsted boxes so far. But ah, to pay £400 for the privilege.
My role was smaller - to produce a “welcome pack” for new parents. Boring, I thought, but shouldn't take long. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha.
I rang the early years person on the council. Could she tell me please what a welcome pack ought to contain? That, she said, was up to me. She could send some stuff in the post. Wasn't there anything online; perhaps a template I could adapt, to avoid unnecessary typing? Nothing.
The stuff arrived in the post, sheet upon sheet with opaque references to such things as confidentiality policies and complaints procedures. I shall save you the swearing and the mind-numbing evenings typing out sentences such as: “If a child displays unacceptable behaviour, disapproval is directed at the behaviour, not the child.” Three weeks later we had, in line with official diktat, a “welcome pack” containing the following: our aims, staff, “settling in” procedure, curriculum (this is for two-year-olds), hours and fees, along with “policies” on settling in, healthy eating, sickness, acceptable behaviour, confidentiality, HIV confidentiality, admissions, child protection, equality and parental involvement.
The pack then refers parents to additional policies on demand: a Student Placement Policy, Staffing and Employment Policy, Special Educational Needs/Disability Policy, Health and Safety Policy, Food and Drink Policy, Equipment and Resources Policy, and The Non Collection of Children Policy, which involves social services. It would have been hard to make the nursery sound less welcoming, but Ofsted ought to like it - fingers crossed.
We are due a visit from it shortly. We had the early years person round to check all was in order. She looked through it all, nodded her approval, paused. “But you haven't,” she said, “got a Going Out For a Walk Policy.” No kidding.
Alice Miles has been with The Times since 1999. She began as a Parliamentary Sketch writer before becoming a columnist, writing mainly on politics and national issues such as education and health. She won Columnist of the Year in 2007.
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I suspect the comment from Tom Welsh has more truth than he thinks. Childminding numbers have reduced by 30% in the last three years. More will leave the business because of increased registration fees and the massive extra work involved with the new foundation stage being introduced. Could it be that the government would like to see a growth in the the pre school and after school arrangements being introduced by schools themselves so they have all chikldren under more government control. My experience in this area is childminders are now having to spend a huge amount of time filling in forms and reports . They have almost to become lawyers as well as some of the paperwork is so complicated.
Brian McGrath, Wakefield, West Yorkshire
From another part of the education system -
I work for a large corporate with a training centre which runs apprenticeship programmes for 16 to 21 year olds. As a recipient of Government funding for education, we are sadly subject to inspections from a different part of OfStEd which has the same ludicrous red tape about which you write. I'm a techy - I like to share my enthusiam for making electronic things work properly. However, my days are now spent filling in assessment report forms full of wooly "performance criteria" which apprentices have to fulfil in order to be found "competent" or occasionally "not yet competent" (note - not ever "not competent" or hush-my-mouth, "incompetent"). Many apprentices, in due course, make excellent engineers but I think it's in spite of the ridiculous bureaucratic OfStEd process and NVQ assessment system, certainly not because of it.
Brian, London,
And all over the country, no doubt, hundreds of other playgroup committees are wasting just as much time to come up with similar - but different - documents.
The government's aim may not actually be to stamp out playgroups - but if it were, they couldn't have found a better way of going about it.
Tom Welsh, Basingstoke,
Not with a bang but a whimper
Peter, Oxford,