Found 39379 results for "?sort=recent?type=News?page=1?pageSize=5?Tags/Name=Health|Child Development|Families"
More than a quarter of children in the UK are growing up in families with a number of difficulties, including financial hardship and parental depression, that are risking their cognitive and...
Nearly half of all children are not considered by their teachers to have a good level of development by the age of five, according to a new report.
Emotional Literacy has been identified as key to a child's development. But what is it, why is it so important in the early years and what can practitioners do to nurture it? asks Yasmin Mukadam.
The Level 5 Early Years Lead Practitioner apprenticeship has been formally approved for delivery by the Institute for Apprenticeships & Technical Education.
Children at two are not 'ready' for reading, says Sally Goddard Blythe. They don't have the physical equipment for learning formal skills.
Supporting the maths development of four-year-olds requires meeting this age group’s widely varying needs, writes Judith Dancer
Identifying children's relationships with the adults in their home is no longer a matter of Bob's your uncle, says <STRONG> Mary Evans </STRONG>
Parenting and improving parents' lives should be given as much focus as children's health and development, according to new guidance for children's centres.
Research interviews began last week with families taking part in one of the largest ever Government-funded studies into early years education.
Why is breastfeeding so important? Alison Burton, maternity and early years lead at Public Health England, explains.