Found 32948 results for "?tag=Knowledge Bank?type=Other?year_based=2018?Tags/Name=Provision|Families|Working%20With%20Parents?page=4?pageSize=10"
What does early years education and childcare look like through the eyes of a typical working mother? In the first of a new series, Working Mum explains how settling her second daughter into nursery...
We have 20 sets of 10 hand magnifiers (Galt, Pounds 8.99) to give away to Nursery World readers. Send your name and address on the back of a postcard or envelope, marked 'magnifiers', to the address...
For most developing countries, the World Bank is the agency with the greatest involvement in early childhood provision. But in whose interests is it? Professor Helen Penn takes a critical look.
We have ten copies of Here comes the Crocodile by Kathryn White (Little Tiger Press, 5.99) to give away to Nursery World readers. Send your name and address on the back of a postcard or envelope,...
We need an affordable and much simpler childcare support system, backed by employers, that helps all parents and carers into work
Research from Working Families reveals the extent to which parents are worried about juggling their jobs with childcare and other responsibilities, when restrictions are lifted.
One of the most ambitious policies for childcare has been dogged by problems, as Mary Evans reports The Working Families Tax Credit, which boosts the income of low and middle earning families and...
By 2015 children's centres could be available to nearly all families, children would stay there until they start school at six and there would be fewer private day nurseries and childminders,...
Maintaining high-quality provision is ‘challenging but achievable’, Nicole Weinstein discovers, as she talks to small and large nursery groups about how economic and staffing pressures are impacting...
Our resident employment lawyer, Caroline Robins, principal associate solicitor at Eversheds Sutherland, answers your questions