Found 15263 results for "?type=Feature?year_based=2014?ArticleTypes/Name=Opinion|Opinion?page=4?pageSize=20?orderBy=PublishedDate"
What do the the Government's recent funding announcements mean for children with Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND)? Catherine McLeod, chief executive of Dingley's Promise, looks at...
The National Day Nurseries Association’s new chair sets out how the organisation will continue to support the sector
The Government is not prioritising children with its early years policies and the situation isn’t sustainable for providers or families, says Helen Hayes, shadow early years minister
Beatrice Merrick explains the thinking behind the recent Birth to 5 Matters Spring Festival which focused on key areas of practice including diversity and inclusion, sustainability, children’s rights...
The author explains why she couldn’t ‘in good conscience’ leave available a book she knew to be out of date.
Brett Wigdortz, CEO of Tiney, on the proposals to change rules around childminding
Amid rising food prices, Dr Coulthard, a developmental psychologist, says that the cost of using food in sensory play can be kept to a minimum and that the practice actually reduces food waste...
The arena of Early Childhood Education (ECE) has always been, and continues to be, an intense area of discussion and debate, says James Hempsall, founder of hey!
Richard Forrest at UK data breach solicitors, Hayes Connor, explores why the education sector is the second worst offender for data breaches in the UK.
Emma Fraser, teacher of the deaf, says the Government should use the SEND review to make the involvement of teachers of the deaf mandatory in all two-year-old checks for deaf children.