Ofsted inspections don’t need to be stressful – or dreaded. With enough pre-planning, and with a game plan for the day of, you will find that it can turn into a celebration of all your hard work!
Our setting, Blossom Tree Montessori, received an Outstanding rating at our last inspection (before Ofsted removed single-word outcomes) and now we want to help you reach the same standard.
Read on!
Getting that 24 hours' notice
You can expect to receive a telephone call at around midday on a working day before the start of the inspection. You will always get 24 hours’ notice unless Ofsted has received a concern about your nursery. In that case, this will trigger a surprise inspection.
After the call, you will be surprised how quickly the word spreads of the anticipated inspection in your setting. You want to have control over it as you do not want panic to ensue. After you hang up, try to resist the urge to frantically make a ‘to-do’ list. We’ve saved you the trouble. Here’s our one:
Blossom Tree’s Own Inspection Experience
You may be interested to know that the night before our own inspection, we threw a pizza party! It was more of a celebration of what we had accomplished together as a nursery. This excited and relaxed energy carried into the inspection the next day – which the inspector immediately picked up on.
Documents to have ready
It is no secret that your Ofsted nursery inspector will need to review certain important documentation during their visit. And you need to be ready. Fiddling around at the eleventh hour to find papers is the last thing you want on the day (and it is avoidable stress).
Sorting documents for the inspection can get a bit confusing and stressful. Our main piece of advice is to prepare these the day before the inspection. Here are the documents that need to be readied according to page 9 of The Early Years Inspection Handbook:
- List of current staff and their qualifications, including in paediatric first aid
- Register/list showing the date of birth of all children on roll and routine staffing arrangements
- List of children present at the setting during the inspection (if not shown on the register)
- Disclosure and Barring Service (DBS) records and any other documents summarising the checks on, and the vetting and employment arrangements of, all staff working at the setting
- All logs that record accidents, exclusions, children taken off roll, and incidents of poor behaviour
- All logs of incidents of discrimination, including racist incidents
- Complaints log and/or evidence of any complaints and their resolutions
- Safeguarding and child protection policies
- Fire-safety arrangements and other statutory policies relating to health and safety
- List of any referrals made to the local authority designated person for safeguarding, with brief details of the resolutions
- Details of all children who are open cases to social care/children’s services and for whom there is a multi-agency plan.
Blossom customers are able to find nursery, staff, and child files instantly. Documents can be uploaded to the system for cloud-based storage and quick, stress-free access. Plus you are able to generate formative reports (such as termly/half-termly reports) to make Ofsted inspections less stressful.
Inside the inspector's mind
Let’s get inside the mind of the inspector for a second. If you know what the inspector is looking for, you can ensure that your setting meets those requirements. It’s important to create an open and honest dialogue with your Ofsted nursery inspector.
Remember, these are people who have been considered outstanding nursery teachers and leaders by Ofsted in the past. So there’s no “pulling a fast one” with them.
How an inspector prepares for the inspection
They will conduct sufficient research on you and your setting. They will pick up information from a variety of sources such as word of mouth, and of course your website.
What types of evidence do they gather?
Inspectors must spend as much time as possible gathering evidence about the quality of care, teaching, and learning. According to the handbook, they will:
- Observe the children at play
- Talk to the children and practitioners about the activities provided
- Talk to parents to gain their views on the quality of care and education provided
- Observe the interactions between practitioners and children
- Gauge children’s levels of understanding and their engagement in learning
- Talk to practitioners about their assessment of what children know and can do and how they are building on it
- Observe care routines and how they are used to support children’s personal development, including the setting’s approach to toilet training
- Evaluate the practitioners’ knowledge of the EYFS curriculum.
How will an inspector decide their judgements?
Based on evidence gathered (and the criteria set out in part 2 of the handbook as set out above) your inspector will put forward a series of grades for your setting in the four areas of inspection.
Blossom customers are able to provide this evidence easily thanks to the EYFS 2021, usable on our platform.
Make all events past and present shine
Your inspector only sees a snapshot of your setting on inspection day. They don’t know you had a potato planting session a couple months ago, or about that parent picnic… therefore you need to show them!
Photos are excellent tangible evidence that your inspector can collect all in support of improving your rating.
Blossom’s diary feature sends parents daily updates of their child’s activities (photos and videos), as well as highlights ‘golden moments,’ making it much faster and easier to show off.
Master learning walks
It’s good to focus on things you are doing well (rather than what needs some work). If you wish, you can delegate some duties of the walk to other managers/ leaders in your setting.
However, ensure that they are well prepared – with specific points to highlight. Overall, make it a celebration of your nursery’s achievements and what impact it has made.
Joint observations
At some point during your inspection, there will come a time for joint observations. This is when the inspector and manager (or assigned leader) will take part in observing activities together. According to the handbook, Joint Observations should enable the inspector to:
- Gain an insight into the effectiveness of the provision’s professional development programme for practitioners
- Learn about the provider’s view of staff’s interactions with children
- See the quality of the implementation of the curriculum/educational programmes
- Consider how effectively the manager supports staff to promote the learning and development of all children.
Insider tip:
What they are mainly looking for is the manager’s ability to recognise anything done well and more importantly anything that needs improving. How well you observe will relate to solutions you put forward to better the nursery and methods you put in place to continue operating at a high standard. This is what your inspector is evaluating.
List of things not to do
Now that we’ve covered everything you should do on the day, what should you avoid? The two most important things not to on the day are:
We have heard horror stories of nurseries attempting new activities on inspection day and children piping up saying, “Why are we doing this? We’ve never done this before…”