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Found 931 results for .
Breakfast clubs 'lifeline' for working parents
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News
- Tuesday, January 17, 2017 | Nursery World
Many parents would struggle to hold down a job without the support of a school breakfast club, new research reveals.
Children's 'red books' start to go online from April
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News
- Monday, February 13, 2017 | Nursery World
The ‘red book’, the paper-based personal child health record for under-fives, will be available online for London parents from April ahead of a national rollout.
First aid training can boost pre-school children’s confidence
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News
- Thursday, February 23, 2017 | Nursery World
Children as young as four can learn what to do in an emergency with the help of first aid training tailored specifically for them.
Food quality may be hit by 30 hours offer
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News
- Monday, January 11, 2016 | Nursery World
The quality of food that children eat in their early years settings could suffer as an unintended consequence of introducing the 30-hour childcare entitlement, findings from a
joint survey carried out by Nursery World and the Children’s Food Trust suggest.
Interview - Ellie McCann
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News
- Friday, October 26, 2012 | Nursery World
Project manager for the Coventry Healthy Early Years Setting Award (CHEYSA).
Low attainment linked with poor motor skills
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News
- Monday, October 5, 2015 | Nursery World
There is mounting evidence of a correlation between young
children's balance and co-ordination and how well they do at school.
Research finds link with autism and obesity in pregnancy
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News
- Wednesday, October 7, 2015 | Nursery World
Obese women with high blood sugar levels are nearly 50 per cent more likely to have a child with autism, according to research.
Call for schools and nurseries to be allowed to keep spare asthma inhalers
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News
- Friday, January 13, 2012 | Nursery World
Asthmatic children's lives are being put at risk because of legislation that prevents schools and nurseries from keeping asthma inhalers in their first aid kit, warns a leading charity.
Link between sunnier climes and fewer allergies revealed
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News
- Friday, February 10, 2012 | Nursery World
Children exposed to more sunshine are less likely to develop food allergies and eczema, finds a new study.
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