Christina
Norland Nanny
Set 27
Norland has been working with Tamba (Twins and Multiple Births Association) charity since March 2014. Together we have set up the Helping Hands Appeal, providing qualified Norland Nannies, on a voluntary basis, to families with multiples, who are deemed, by Tamba, to be in crisis.
Life at Norland College, studying for a degree and beyond. See what it's like to be a Norland student and graduate.
Wednesday, 17 February 2016
Tuesday, 9 February 2016
The internet in our children’s world
Claire Burgess
@belles28
Early Years Consultancy Manager
How do we keep children safe online?
Today is Safer Internet Day and Norland has been working with Corsham Primary School to develop some training for teachers, teaching assistants, parents and children about how to stay safe when online.
Monday, 14 December 2015
What if?
Claire Burgess
@belles28
Early Years Consultancy Manager
The news provides a constant reminder that the world isn’t always a safe place and that sometimes the worst can happen. But how do we as nannies and parents / carers prepare ourselves and our children for the worst without scaring them?
@belles28
Early Years Consultancy Manager
The news provides a constant reminder that the world isn’t always a safe place and that sometimes the worst can happen. But how do we as nannies and parents / carers prepare ourselves and our children for the worst without scaring them?
Thursday, 26 November 2015
Road Safety Week
Elspeth Pitman
@elspethpitman
It is Road Safety Week and Brake’s theme this year is “Drive less, live more” which in turn will allow us to “Save more, Talk more, Care more and Live more”.
For our older children, we should be teaching them how to be safe on the road. Road Safety GB and the Department for Transport have produced some useful ideas and resources to help teach children about road safety. Now that it is likely to be dark heading to and from school parents and carers should use this opportunity to speak to children about being visible to drivers as a pedestrian. You might get the conversation started about road safety with a fun activity, for example, buy some self-adhesive reflective tape and talk to the children about where they might be able to attach some to their clothing, bags, helmets, scooters and bikes to help the traffic see them better.
Fitting the car seat correctly is not the only
consideration when driving with children.
In this wintery weather it is easy, for convenience, to strap your child
in the car seat with their thick winter coat on, but this could be a dangerous
mistake. A small child could very easily
overheat in their coat and hat and not be able to tell you. It is also harder
to ensure that the harness of a car seat is fitted properly if a child is in a
thick winter coat – the car seat straps might not be secure enough to protect
the child should you have an accident,
as highlighted by Good Egg Car Safety[AS1] . It is much safer to
avoid putting children in their car seat in a winter coat and use an additional blanket if need be.
Remember though, if you plan on having the heaters on in the car, this may not
be necessary.
@elspethpitman
It is Road Safety Week and Brake’s theme this year is “Drive less, live more” which in turn will allow us to “Save more, Talk more, Care more and Live more”.
According to Brake: “Children who are encouraged to walk,
cycle, scoot or skateboard to school tend to engage more with their community,
stay healthy, and arrive alert, relaxed and ready to start the day.” This
statement surely encompasses what we want for all of our children, an
opportunity to live their life to the full. So even when the weather is not
inviting, whenever possible, Norland would promote walking, scooting or cycling
to nursery or school.
Here at Norland we think this week is a great opportunity
to talk about how we can keep children in our care, safe on the roads. Research
has found that when driving, children can be more distracting than mobile
phones. We take our responsibility to ensure children are safe in the hands of
our Norland Nannies when on the road very seriously. Students cover road safety
as a topic on the Norland
Diploma, we provide additional training in fitting car seats properly and on
being safe in icy and wet conditions with skid pan training. Norland students
also undertake Drive
a Child online training as part of their course at Norland. Of
course, keeping children safe on the road is not just about being in a car. Students are also taught about safety as a
pedestrian with children and how to teach children about staying safe whilst
walking, cycling and scooting on the pavement.
For our older children, we should be teaching them how to be safe on the road. Road Safety GB and the Department for Transport have produced some useful ideas and resources to help teach children about road safety. Now that it is likely to be dark heading to and from school parents and carers should use this opportunity to speak to children about being visible to drivers as a pedestrian. You might get the conversation started about road safety with a fun activity, for example, buy some self-adhesive reflective tape and talk to the children about where they might be able to attach some to their clothing, bags, helmets, scooters and bikes to help the traffic see them better.
If driving really is the only option, then we must make
essential checks to ensure the safety of the children we are driving. For
example, are you certain you have fitted your child’s car seat properly? This
is one of the questions you should be asking yourself every time you take a
child out in a car. According to Brake if a child is properly fitted with an appropriate child
restraint, suitable for the child’s size and weight, then the risk of injury in
a crash is reduced by 70%, however, 56% of us get this wrong. Even though we
train our nannies in fitting car seats, there are so many different makes and
models, our students are taught to read the instructions on how to fit the
specific car seat properly. If instructions are no longer available then they
should find the correct instructions online or call the manufacturers to ask for
a new copy. It is also their responsibility to be up-to date with the current
laws on appropriate car restraints for children. The Royal Society for the Prevention of
Accidents have some excellent guidance on how to ensure a child is
safe in a car restraint.
So, this week take the initiative from Road Safety Week advice
to “Drive less and live more” and get talking to your children or charges about
safety whilst out and about.
Wednesday, 18 November 2015
A personal reflection on the important role of a key person

@ElspethPitman
Early Years Consultant
Should we give
children the opportunity to choose their own key person?
Recently I had the pleasure of going to Tanzania for a week
to help run a children’s programme at a Conference for Missionaries. We, 5
volunteers, had the privilege of entertaining 27 children ranging between the
ages of 12 months to 14 years. Due to my Early Years background and Norland
training I took on the responsibility for making sure our five youngest
children, all under the age of 3 years, were well cared for.
This experience gave me the opportunity to reflect on some
of the best practice we at Norland College promote throughout our training. The
two areas of best practice which I found most useful during my time in Tanzania
were, careful observation of each individual child’s needs and regular
reflection on the care and environment provided. Both of these areas of best
practice proved to be invaluable throughout my week in Tanzania to help provide
the best possible care we could under the circumstances.
Transitions, especially short terms ones, are particularly
hard for young children as they are often not fully aware of what is going on
and why they are being left in a different situation with adults they have not
met before. The situation reminded me of a quote by Elinor Goldschmied (2001,
p. 37) “We can never remind ourselves too often that a child, particularly a
very young child and almost totally dependent one, is the only person in the
nursery who cannot understand why he is there.”
With this reflection in mind, and bearing in mind the
children had never met us before, whilst I at first said I would act as key
person for the youngest of children, we decided that we would initially keep all
the children in one room together to see how they settled. Our initial instinct
proved to be invaluable; the youngest of our children would often only settle
if sitting right next to, or even on the same chair as, their sibling. Being in
the same room all together also meant that the youngest children could settle
or be comforted by the adult they felt most comfortable with – in effect choosing
their own key person. The beneficial effect of this was clearly seen in a
little boy of 18 months who, from day 1, would only settle with our only male
volunteer. We facilitated this choice of key person for this little boy as much
as possible and by the 4th and final day of the programme we all
celebrated the confidence this little boy had developed. Helping this little
boy build a secure attachment to one adult helped him to feel more secure in
his whole surrounding and to explore and play independently with all of the
adults in the room.
It is important as an Early Years Practitioner and Nanny we make
sure that through the best practice of careful observation we are supporting
young children through times of transition as sensitively as possible. Recent
research (National
Scientific Council on the Developing Child, 2014) has shown that high
levels of the hormone Cortisol, produced through stressful situations, can
initially reduce young children’s ability to play, learn and develop. Whilst we
cannot remove all stresses on young children, as this is part of life, we
should endeavour to reduce it as much as possible to allow play, learning and
development to flourish in each individual child in our care. This was something which I certainly observed
to be true with the little boy in our care during just 1 week.
The key person practice is not uncommon in nursery settings,
but it did make me reflect upon whether there is always the facilitation for a
young child to choose their own key person if it would benefit the child? This
does not mean that any one practitioner is better than another, but as
individuals we do gravitate more towards some people than others. Parents who
are choosing their nanny and in effect key person for their children might also
consider the Norland recommendation of having the nanny spend a day (or more) with
the children and family as part of the interviewing process. This will provide
the opportunity for the parents and nanny not only to see whether they will be
happy working together, but also the opportunity for the parents to see whether
the children warm to the particular nanny’s personality and style to fully
allow the ‘key person’ relationship, and therefore the children, to thrive.
Friday, 30 October 2015
What is Inclusion and why is it so important in the Early Years?
Anne Purdon
Curriculum Leader
What is inclusion? This is the question we will be posing to our second year students, Set 38, when they return to college after half term. Our second years have been spending the first half of this semester in placement and they will have been working with children from a diverse range of backgrounds of different ages and abilities. As early years practitioners it is vital that our students consider how they can support all children to achieve their potential and how they can help to remove any barriers that might exist to their learning and development.
But what does it really mean to value diversity and promote equal opportunities for all? Aristotle said that ‘‘There is nothing so unequal as the equal treatment of unequals.” Inclusion, according to Rodgers &Wilmot (2011, p2) ‘… is the process by which we value all individuals, recognising their unique attributes, qualities and ways of being.’
When we work with children we must never assume they are all the same and treat them as such. In order to value diversity and promote equal opportunities we need to value each child equally but treat them differently according to their needs. We need to get to know each individual child so well that we can respond to their individual needs and treat them in the unique way in which they as individuals can thrive.
It is important that our students take on board the fact that inclusion is a right, not a luxury as underpinned by the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child 1989 and the Every Disabled Child Matters Inclusion Charter 2015.**
As we continue with the lectures for this module we will be discovering how we can ensure every child is included. A fundamental building block for inclusion is showing respect; this involves recognising that each family we work with has a different set of beliefs and values. By allowing children to make their own choices and respecting those choices we can raise their self-esteem in the knowledge that secure emotional development is vital for a child’s learning and development. We know that’s true for adults too don’t we? When we feel good about ourselves, when we feel valued in what we are doing, we can achieve so much more.
**The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child 1989 requires us to adopt an inclusive approach; for example Article 2 states that ‘Parties shall respect and ensure the rights set forth in the present Convention to each child within their jurisdiction without discrimination of any kind, irrespective of the child’s or his or her parent’s or legal guardian’s race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, national, ethnic or social origin, property, disability, birth or other status.’ (UNICEF,1989). In addition The Every Disabled Child Matters Inclusion Charter states that ‘All children have the right to be included in every aspect of society. Disabled children should not have to ask or fight to be included in the things that other children do.’ (EDCM, 2015)
Wednesday, 19 August 2015
Make Memories this Summer with #NorlandNannyActivity Ideas
Claire Burgess
@belles28
Early Years Consultancy Manager
Over my career I have been asked hundreds of times ‘what made you want to be a nanny?’ and my answer has always been simple, I love being around children and making lasting memories with them. This hasn’t changed and over the years I have seen what a privileged position we nannies have; there are very few professions where you get to influence another person’s life in such a way that you help shape who that person will be in later life. It is amazing what children remember as they grow up and one of the best parts when working so closely with children is seeing precious memories being made and thinking, they’ll remember this for life.
For me last weekend was a great example of how memories are
made with children in the simplest of ways by doing and experiencing things
with others. Research has shown that children
learn more effectively through hands on experiences and emotional connections
with others rather than being told about something.
On
Saturday, a family who I met through my work with Tamba, came to visit me at my
parent’s farm. The afternoon started
with two shy 3 year old twin boys and their 11 year old big brother but quickly
developed into a memory making adventure!
Then it was time to feed the calves and there were 2 very
keen little helpers! From mixing the
milk powder to watching the calves drink, there were lots of questions and new
learning opportunities. It was hands on
learning in the truest sense of the word!
Everyday Norland Nannies around the world are making
memories with children, what memories are you making this summer? Some great
activity ideas have been shared by our Norland Nannies via #NorlandNannyActivity
on Twitter and Instagram, start memory making with your children/charges today!
If visiting a working farm, please remember to be conscious
of children’s safety at all times, for advice on this click here.
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