Brine (Winchester) (Con) I beg to move, That this House has
considered the role of early years educators. It is a pleasure to
see you in the Chair, Mr Gray. Looking around me, I also see many
friends and supporters of our early years sector. I thank them for
taking time out of their schedules to come to debate this issue; I
know that there are a lot of important competing issues in
Parliament today. I start with two declarations of interest. First,
I am...Request free trial
Brine (Winchester) (Con)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered the role of early years
educators.
It is a pleasure to see you in the Chair, Mr Gray. Looking around
me, I also see many friends and supporters of our early years
sector. I thank them for taking time out of their schedules to
come to debate this issue; I know that there are a lot of
important competing issues in Parliament today.
I start with two declarations of interest. First, I am married to
a hard-working early years educator, who will be arriving home
very shortly to pick up the school run and then juggle all the
different things that working mums do while working dads are in
Parliament—or vice versa. Secondly, for the last couple of years
it has been my pleasure to chair the all-party parliamentary
group on childcare and early education; we held our annual
general meeting in the last hour, actually. I want to extend my
thanks to parliamentary colleagues who have supported our work
over the last year and have committed to do so for the year
ahead. I was somehow re-elected chairman of the group for the
next year. I also thank many colleagues old and new who have
agreed to serve as officers for the coming year: we have much to
do.
This afternoon’s debate is timely. It rather wonderfully
coincides with the all-party group’s annual childcare and early
education week, which celebrates and promotes the hard work of
our early years educators and sector. Our theme for this year is
celebrating the role of the early years workforce as educators,
which is what I wanted to place at the heart of my chairmanship
of the group, and seeking to explore the challenges that the
workforce faces and celebrate the good work that it does.
Last week, the all-party group held a forum for parents to share
their experiences of early years educators and settings. It was
chaired by the brilliant Professor Kathy Sylva of Oxford
University. Professor Sylva is at this very moment providing an
update to the meeting of our all-party group, which is being
chaired in my absence by the Father of the House, my hon. Friend
the Member for Worthing West ( ). The session is being
recorded, and I urge any colleagues who would like to catch up on
it to follow our social media channels. Parents provided some
incredible examples. I see this as an example of the very best
work that we can do in Westminster, and I am sure that Professor
Sylva will not mind me touching on some of the things that were
said. One parent spoke about the empathy, patience and humour an
early years educator shows when working with both her and her
child, who has significant special educational needs. Another
reminded us of the little freedoms that early years settings
empower families to have. One lady said she occasionally has
lunch with her partner; that may sound frivolous, but one the
best things that we can do for our children is provide them with
a loving, secure home environment—and making sure that mum and
dad stay mum and dad is rather important, too. One phrase that
touched me was from a parent discussing the key worker in their
child’s early years setting, who said:
“Simply, we would be lost without these people. They are truly
amazing.”
Of course, there are areas for development in the early years
workforce as we strive for its continued betterment. At our
forum, parents raised the issues of settings’ opening hours and,
overwhelmingly, the need to ensure that early years educators are
properly paid, a subject to which I will return.
I commend the Government for acting on this issue in the spending
review. Following a meeting that my hon. Friend the Member for
Bury North () and I had with the Chancellor
of the Exchequer, my right hon. Friend the Member for Richmond
(Yorks) (), he placed early years at the
centre of some of his announcements in this area in the Budget.
He quadrupled the funding for early years settings over the next
three years. That was most welcome, and an important step towards
shoring up a sector that has been heavily hit, it is fair to say,
during the pandemic.
However, as I have said before, this is not just about money. The
early years sector faces an existential crisis as settings are
being forced to close, and the valued early years educators that
we are talking about are then lost to other lines of work, often
due to remuneration. Most worryingly of all, bright young
prospects are put off a career as an early years educator. At a
meeting of our all-party group in December, two apprentices spoke
compellingly about their work with children under five. However,
those brilliant talents were pursuing careers in social care and
not in early years. Social care is an important vocation, but
they are a great loss to the potential early years workforce of
tomorrow, and we need them. So more must be done to draw the
early years educators of tomorrow towards the profession, and not
push them away.
(Hampstead and Kilburn)
(Lab)
Will the hon. Gentleman give way?
I will give way to my predecessor as chair of the all-party
group.
I know the hon. Member is a doughty champion for the early years
sector. I have heard him mention his wife on several occasions
and admire the work that she does. In an ideal world I would stay
and make a speech in this debate, but I have to leave because I
have moved to the shadow Treasury team and I have a
commitment.
I wanted to come and pay tribute to the early years educators,
and I am pleased the hon. Member still uses the term “educators”,
because they are educators. They are not just key workers. They
are the unsung heroes of our nation who make a massive difference
to our children’s life chances. I do not think he mentioned how
much they are paid, but on average, as he knows, it is only £7.42
an hour, which is dismal compared with how much it costs to
live.
I wonder whether the hon. Member will comment on the fact that we
need a cultural change in how we value and talk about early years
practitioners and educators. Instead of just referring to the
early years sector as childcare, we should also refer to early
years educators and talk about early education. I could go on
about this for ever.
It is funny how often, in my almost 12 years in this House,
people say, “That is amazing; I was just about to come on to that
in my speech”, and funnily enough, I was. The hon. Lady led on
this subject when she led the all-party group, and she is
absolutely right. Far too often we have seen early years
practitioners presented as well-meaning amateurs who are good at
changing and plasticine. They are good at those, but they are
also educators, so she is absolutely right. Following on from
what she said, I think a major contributing factor to the fact
that we are losing people from the profession and not attracting
them into it is that early years educators have been subject to
so many misconceptions about their role that it has affected how
their profession is viewed and then how it can attract
people.
First and most commonly is the notion that early years educators
somehow do not hold the same status as those who work in the
subsequent parts of the education profession. That could not be
further from the truth. The first few years of early education is
the foundation on which lifelong learning, health and wellbeing
are built. Handling this phase of a child’s life requires
specialist knowledge and specialist approaches from trained,
qualified practitioners. Early years educators are highly trained
professionals and they hold specialist qualifications
accordingly. Despite that, many settings are struggling to pay
competitive salaries, and providers have therefore reported that
staff are increasingly moving into sectors such as retail.
(Twickenham) (LD)
I congratulate the hon. Gentleman on securing this important
debate. I apologise because I cannot stay for the full debate,
either. On the point about pay, is it not linked to the fact that
so many providers simply cannot cover the cost of their staff and
their settings with the amount that they get from the Government
for the so-called free hours of childcare—the 15 hours that is
universal for three and four-year-olds and the 15 hours
additional? We could have a whole debate on whether somebody like
me should be entitled to those hours, which is a separate point,
but I speak from experience as the mother of a three-year-old who
gets only 27 hours of childcare a week, yet I still pay half of
what I paid before he turned three. The providers simply cannot
make ends meet, and that is why they cannot pay the staff
properly and cannot train them well enough.
The hon. Lady is right. The early years settings that we hear
from in the group report that funding for the hours offered under
the flagship 30-hours entitlement, which of course I support, has
not kept pace with the rise in minimum wage and all the other
costs, so the gap between the cost of providing each hour versus
what comes in has narrowed and narrowed, and the lines have
crossed. That is why we are seeing a squeeze and settings
closing. I thank her for that point.
Competitive pay is the least that any qualified professional
should expect. I hope the funding announcement in the spending
review, as I mentioned, will help to address that. However, the
pandemic has added stress for everyone. It has added to the
stress of skilled staff, including with the increased risk of
exposure to infection that our early years professionals face. A
loss of skilled staff means that the early years sector cannot
deliver high-quality early education, which will especially
affect the most deprived areas and the most disadvantaged
children. I want to stress that point to the Minister; I know
that he is acutely aware of it, and I hope he can address it in
his closing remarks.
The early years workforce needs a step change in wages. The
Government have gone far, but they need to go further. The
Minister has my full support to take up our cause inside
Government; we will back him all the way. Being a former junior
Minister in the Department of Health and Social Care, I know that
Under-Secretaries of State do not always have the swing vote on
decisions in Her Majesty’s Treasury, which is why the Minister
will need all the ballast we can provide. I think that I speak
for all of us present in saying that we are there to provide
it.
Urgency in addressing this area is underlined by my next point.
Most early years places are delivered through private, voluntary
or independent childcare settings. Maintained nurseries, such as
Lanterns Nursery School in my constituency, play a vital role as
well, but PVI providers deliver more than 80% of childcare
places. PVI providers have a consistently good reputation across
the board; like their maintained counterparts, PVI settings are
overseen by Ofsted, which is good. In 2020, Ofsted ranked 96% of
PVI providers as good or outstanding—up from 72% in 2012.
Most PVI providers—about 57%—have only one site. Only 9% of PVI
providers are what we would call a chain, with 20 or more sites.
Most of those settings are hard-working small businesses that
employ people exclusively from the local community. They invest
any surplus they have into upgrading the nursery environment and,
crucially, developing their most important asset—their staff. We
are not talking about people lining their pockets with those
ever-dwindling surpluses. They are simply seeking to make a fair
living while pursuing the brilliant vocation of shaping young
lives, which brings me to my next point.
Earlier, hon. Members heard the story of how one parent and their
child benefited from the support and inspiration offered by their
early years educator, which is a tale that is replicated time and
again across the country; I suspect other hon. Members will refer
to it. Early years educators provide support, advice and guidance
to parents, caregivers and families, including on nutrition,
play, schooling and health. They are educators in the widest
possible sense of the word. They often form great teams with
parents and provide families with valuable insights into their
child’s development. We know children form multiple attachments
at an early stage, and one of those can be with those working
with them in a nursery setting.
Crucially, as policymakers, we all understand the importance of
early intervention in making a difference to life chances. For
every £1 invested in early education, about £7 would be required
to have the same impact in adolescence. Every £1 spent in early
years saves about £13 in later interventions.
One parent and NHS worker captured it best when they said that,
while
“nurses, doctors and other healthcare staff got most of the
accolades,”
and rightly so, early years settings and their workers
“selflessly continued to open to look after keyworker children
such as ours, even though it potentially put them at risk so we
could continue to work.”
At the end of last year, there were press reports of adjusting
staffing ratios in early years settings as part of an aim to
lower the cost for parents, which I would gently caution the
Minister against. Safe, secure and necessary monitoring in early
years settings requires a higher staffing ratio than in schools.
Leading voices from across the early years sector, including the
Early Years Alliance and the National Day Nurseries Association,
have warned against it.
I believe that early years professionals deserve pension
contributions and pay increases that can keep in line with
increases in the cost of living—a very hot political subject at
the moment—which must be delivered through more investment and
better recognition of the work of the early years workforce. We
are in a position where the Government require early years
settings to be open in order to deliver the 30-hour funding
entitlement, but, as I have said, there is a shortfall in
funding, and that situation can only go on for so long. The
result of that shortfall is that many early years settings run at
a loss and even face closure, especially those in disadvantaged
areas. As a Conservative, I of course want small businesses—I
mentioned how many of these early years providers are small
businesses—to thrive: indeed, I believe that all Members in the
House, from all parties, would want that. As a parent, I want all
children to have access to the very best early education,
wherever they live.
In the case of PVI early years settings, those two things are not
mutually exclusive. Those who pursue a career in early years
education do so because, above all else, they believe
passionately in making a difference in children’s lives, and that
is because early years education is vital in tackling
inequalities. We know that the first five years of a child’s life
are the most formative. However, when providers in the most
deprived areas report themselves as being twice as likely to
close as those in more affluent areas, we must acknowledge that
something is going seriously wrong in the sector.
The Early Years Alliance has said that poorer families are more
likely to lose access to early years settings because of what I
have described as a market failure. I am sure that colleagues
will speak about other experiences from their own area, but it is
important to set the context. If we are to deliver on our
promises and level up all parts of the country that have been
left behind, the early years workforce is a vital tool in that
project.
So what can we do? We can begin squaring the circle here today by
supporting the APPG and our call for the early years workforce to
take their rightful place as educators. I encourage colleagues to
take advantage of the relaxation of covid restrictions to meet
local early education providers in their area; I am sure that
everybody who is participating in this debate already does so. We
can all show our support for the work of those providers by
thanking them during this debate.
However, it is to the Minister I look. I have sat in his seat
many times. He is most welcome to his post, which I know he is
still relatively new in, and I hope that he can find time to come
and speak to us on the APPG in short time. We know that there is
a lot in his in-tray, but we also know that he is a parent and no
doubt a lot of what I have said today will resonate with him.
Before coming to my conclusion, I just need to qualify one point
that I made earlier when I said that this issue is not all about
money. I meant that, but so many of the challenges facing early
years educators can be addressed by more targeted investment. We
must address the workforce challenge that our early years sector
faces. In my opinion, that can only be done by paying our early
years educators the same amount as those working with the
reception year group. The present system is inequitable and
unfair. That change would be transformative for our valued early
years workers. It is the cornerstone of what the Government can
do to deliver for our early years professionals and the families
they support.
Extra cash will be meaningless, however, unless it is accompanied
by the wider transformation that I have spoken about, regarding
how we view the early years workforce. It is a problem best
encapsulated by the fact that they are highly skilled but
low-paid professionals. We trust them with our most precious
resource—our children—in the very early years of their lives,
when so much attachment is formed. It is only right that we view
them for what they are, which is educators.
2.48pm
(Strangford) (DUP)
Thank you, Mr Chairman, for calling me to speak.
It is, as always, a pleasure to speak in a Westminster Hall
debate, but it is also a pleasure to follow the hon. Member for
Winchester (). I will put on the record, as
others have, my thanks to him for all he does in relation to
early years education. There is absolutely no doubt in my mind—I
suspect that there is no doubt in the minds of any of us here
today—that he has a deep passion and interest in this subject
matter. That was illustrated in his speech today. He often raises
crucial issues that impact our early years educators and I
value—to be fair, I think we all value—his continued efforts in
that regard.
I appreciate that, as the Minister will know, the early years
system in England is different to that in Northern Ireland.
Regardless, it is great to be here in Westminster Hall and to
hear the view of others, and perhaps I can compare some of the
things that happen here with what happens back home.
Particularly during the pandemic, our early years educators have
had to deal with an unprecedented number of stresses, staffing
being one of them; the hon. Gentleman referred to that in his
contribution, as others did in their interventions on him. In a
survey conducted by the Early Years Alliance in the autumn of
2021, 84% of respondents said that they were finding it difficult
to recruit suitable new staff. No big surprise there, really; it
is the same in Northern Ireland. Early Years has stated that
“Before Covid-19, Northern Ireland’s childcare sector worked hard
but was under-resourced. Now it faces huge challenges, and
shortages could hamstring our economic and social recovery from
coronavirus.”
Thankfully, there is some hope and we in Northern Ireland have
taken some action, including financially. The Health and
Education Ministers have issued a £12 million support package for
childcare providers. The two Ministers responsible in Northern
Ireland have recognised the issue and responded in a constructive
and physical way, to ensure that finances are there.
There were long-term issues prior to the pandemic, including the
retention of staff, especially those who are highly qualified.
The hon. Member for Hampstead and Kilburn () referred to the wage
structure, as did the hon. Member for Winchester. There is a need
to have a wage structure in place, so that people involved in
early years education can feel they are being reimbursed
accordingly for all their hard efforts.
There are also ongoing issues relating to provision for special
educational needs. SEN children rely heavily on routine and
consistency; without it they risk a major hindrance in their
development. I have regular contact on that in my constituency; I
am sure others have the same. The role of early years is crucial
for young children’s development. Positive benefits are dependent
on several factors, including the quality of care, the nature of
activities, relationships that children develop in their
settings, group size, child-to-teacher ratios, staff retention,
and teachers’ training and professional development. All those
things collectively are critically important.
Does the hon. Gentleman agree that it is concerning that a report
by the Education Policy Institute found that more than 40% of
staff working in early years settings did not have access to
training for speech and language? That is a growing area of
concern, particularly as a result of the pandemic, and
exacerbates the attainment gap for those from disadvantaged
backgrounds. I am sure the Minister will say that the Government
are putting money into early years training but, when that is
worked out, it is about £460 per head of those working in the
sector, and it will not cover the amount of need if we want to
professionalise the workforce.
The Minister heard that request from the hon. Lady. I know the
Minister is very interested in the subject and, when it comes to
answering the requests from the hon. Lady, others and myself, he
will be able to say what the Government are doing, with time to
put that in place.
Most early years settings are private, run through unions and
independent organisations. It is essential that they are given
sustainable funding to carry out their role to the best of their
ability. I am sure the Minister has engaged, as he always does,
with his counterparts in the devolved nations, to ensure that the
correct funding is going to the correct sectors of early years.
When the Minister has responded in previous debates, I have
always been very impressed by his interaction with the Northern
Ireland Assembly. The Minister has been very up to speed on the
matter. I am sure when he replies he will be able to confirm
again that that is the case. I thank him in advance for his
answer, ever conscious that it will be positive.
In relation to back home specifically, there are 1,200 local
early care and education providers, 30,000 parents and a
workforce of more than 10,000. The past year has demonstrated how
essential high-quality education and childcare provision is for
families and children in Northern Ireland, and that has been
echoed in this debate today. Addressing childcare must be a key
priority. If parents cannot access the childcare they need in
order to work, we will not be able to rebuild fully our economy.
The Minister responsible for that task is not here, but the work
of Government to address and rejuvenate the economy is
self-evident in the unemployment rates and job opportunities that
we have heard about in the past few days. There is some good
stuff being done there.
All discussion in relation to childcare and education starts with
early years, and the importance of early learning for young
children. Childcare settings have closed due to the pandemic and
other factors, which may be purely financial, but Ofsted data
show that there has been an ongoing decline in the number of
childcare settings since 2015, due to the lack of childminders.
From August 2015 to 2021, the decline levelled at 17%.
I will conclude with this comment, because I know a number of
others wish to speak, and the Minister will be keen to have time
to respond. I also look forward to the contribution from the
shadow Minister, the hon. Member for Dulwich and West Norwood
(). I would like to thank each
and every early years employer who goes above and beyond to help
the development of our young people. I have met some of them, and
I am greatly impressed by them and their vocational commitment to
their jobs. Their role in society is admirable, but they
undoubtedly face struggles, especially with staffing, with
closures and sometimes with their wage structure, so we must do
more. As I have said, I hope that further discussions between the
Minister and his counterparts across the UK will enable us to
exchange ideas and thoughts on how we can do better. We can all
learn; we can learn from the Minister and, I hope, the Minister
can learn from us.
2.55pm
(Truro and Falmouth)
(Con)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Gray. I
congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Winchester () on securing the debate during
Childcare and Early Education Week. Like him, I pass on my thanks
to all nursery and early years workers, who have done such a
fantastic job over the last two difficult years, particularly
those working in Cornwall.
A child’s early education is key to their future success, so it
is essential that every child has the best start in life, which
means giving them the best possible support between the ages of
nought and five. That is a critical stage in someone’s life, and
it is essential that the early years programme is properly
effective. That is why the issues in the sector need to be
urgently addressed. Statistics show that 28% of four and
five-year-olds finish their reception year at school without the
early communication, language and literacy skills that they need
to thrive.
Early years educators are crucial. It is harder to produce a
curriculum in which children learn and get to the stage that they
need for reception year while they think they are only
playing—that takes quite a skillset. The quality of teaching is
just as important to outcomes in the early years as it is in
other stages of education. Quality is key for pre-schools to have
the biggest impact on children’s life chances. In my opinion,
early years educators should enjoy the same status as those in
other teaching roles: they should be included in the same teacher
training schemes and have the same bursaries and salaries as in
primary teaching.
I come at the subject as someone who took full advantage of the
Government’s 30 hours scheme. In 2015, when my daughter was nine
months old, I had to go back to work part-time. I got to work for
my hon. Friend the Member for North Cornwall (), who is a very flexible
employer, but not everyone is as lucky as me. Having said that,
even though I was working part-time, I had help from grandparents
until my daughter was old enough for me to take advantage of the
Government’s scheme. I was very grateful for all that help.
Now that I have become an MP, I find myself on the other side of
the fence, hearing from early years providers how difficult it is
to work in that sector. There are problems in recruitment and
retention. Nurseries in my constituency are struggling to retain
well-qualified staff, while recent research found that many early
years practitioners have left for better-paid jobs. In Cornwall,
people probably earn more in hospitality than in an early years
setting.
Many people in the sector are pushed out of the job that they
love because of a combination of low pay, low status and
increasing workload. Some workers in the profession said that the
challenges of supporting their own families on the salary of a
childcare worker were too great and that staying in the sector
was no longer a career option.
Furthermore, the early years sector is reliant on a largely
female workforce. At a time when families are generally reliant
on two incomes, with greater pressure on single parents always to
be in work, I am sorry to say that working in the early years
sector is increasingly unviable. There is evidence of increasing
paperwork and demands from parents and employers, so it is of
little surprise that the workforce is such an unstable one.
Compared with some Scandinavian countries, where jobs working
with babies are highly sought after and most staff are graduates
with higher degrees in child psychology, qualification levels for
nursery workers in the UK remain low, and access to ongoing
training is very limited. Investment in training is important
because replacing staff is costly in both money and time. In an
industry where word of mouth matters, good staff are key to
occupancy. Providers should explain to staff why training is good
for them, but when will they find the time to do it?
Pay is also important. It may not necessarily be possible for
employers to pay for all study time, but if people are forced to
work outside work hours, they will be overworked and burnt out,
and they may choose to take their expertise elsewhere. That is
not good when teaching children.
With my other hat on as a member of the APPG on baby loss, one of
the things I am campaigning for is continuity of care for
pregnant women, which I feel should go on into the early years
sector. It is important to have a stable workforce while the
children are developing attachments, knowing that they are going
to see the same person every time they go to that setting.
As mentioned previously, staff feel a lack of status in their
roles. Pay is very difficult in the sector, but being open about
it offers the opportunity to explain why things are the way they
are. Providers need to show staff that they are in line with
market rates and what staff can do to get increased wages; clear
structures and career paths give early educators better prospects
and make the sector more attractive to school leavers. I look
forward to hearing from the Minster how the Government seek to
address this.
More positively, I should add that I sit on the Early Years
Taskforce with my right hon. Friend the Member for South
Northamptonshire (Dame ). I have had feedback from
Cornwall Council and met with providers and the children and
families sector in the council. We were both pleased to hear that
Cornwall is already doing a lot for what we want to achieve in
the sector.
I would particularly like to pay tribute to Meredith Teasdale and
the excellent Together for Families team at Cornwall Council.
Cornwall Council has a strong partnership with two things of
particular note. It gave welcome support and advice to its early
years providers during the lockdown, which was pleasing to hear,
and the support has also seen an increase in the take-up of early
years education places for Cornwall’s two-year-olds.
Cornwall has also maintained a network of family hubs in
difficult times, which supports multidisciplinary working to
support families, introducing the Best Start for Life
apprentices, who provide direct support to families that need it
for the first 1,001 days of a child’s life. Those are both
excellent examples of where we can continue to innovate in this
important area. With that in mind, I am hopeful of and want to
put out another call for any pilot schemes or funding schemes
that are going to be running in the early years sectors;
Cornwall, with its clean boundaries and co-operative team of MPs,
councillors and brilliant council officers, will always put
itself forward for them.
3.02pm
(Ruislip, Northwood and
Pinner) (Con)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Gray. I
would like to add my congratulations to my hon. Friend the Member
for Winchester () for securing today’s
debate.
We know from all the research that attention from adults is a
crucial factor in the earliest part of a child’s life. That fact
has a long history in public policy, dating in the modern era
back to the Plowden Report of 1967 and reflected in decisions
taken by Governments ever since, in respect of both primary
education and the provision of initiatives such as the
neighbourhood nurseries, children’s centres, early years centres,
and now family hubs.
It seems to be a point that underpins the issue highlighted by my
hon. Friend the Member for Winchester in respect of ratios: the
need to ensure that we have sufficient adults in any particular
setting to have an effective relationship and to give sufficient
attention to the children. However, it is also incredibly
important as we consider the future role and shape of our early
years education. As has been highlighted today, we see a mixed
economy of provision in which there are examples of outstandingly
good practice that make a fundamental, evidence-based difference
to the lives of children.
The nursery schools we see around the country and the excellent
childminders, many of whom I see in my own constituency of
Ruislip, Northwood and Pinner, are part of a bigger picture,
where research done in the world of academia drawing on the
experience of other countries—the United States, for example—in
developing new initiatives designed specifically to tackle
disadvantage and drive social mobility has been applied here, in
the UK. I would like to focus my contribution primarily on the
considerations that that brings forward for public policy as we
begin to shape it for the coming years.
When we consider the shape of the system we have today, we see
that our earliest educators are operating in a system of funding
that is very much dominated by the needs and demands of our big
secondary schools. It is a common piece of feedback from early
years practitioners and those who own early years
businesses—those who lead in this area—that the allocation of
resources to early year settings in any given area tends to be an
afterthought. It comes after the distribution of funding: first,
to secondary schools; secondly, to primary schools; thirdly, to
further education settings; and, finally, early years settings
are thought of just before the tea break. We need to change that.
Research that has come from the What Works Network, funded by the
Department for Education and done over many years, shows that the
funding that we allocate to the early years of a child’s life has
the biggest impact on social mobility and in challenging
disadvantage. It is very telling that Leon Feinstein, formerly
head of evidence at the Early Intervention Foundation, where I
served as a trustee, now with the Children’s Commissioner, has
highlighted that the indicators from the early years foundation
stage outcomes for children are extremely good predictors of how
a child will do in their A-levels. We can tell pretty accurately
from how a child is developing academically in their nursery
school how they will do in their A-levels as they leave school at
18. We know there is very good evidence of the difference that it
makes when we get this right.
In the past we have seen the Government beginning to look at not
just the professionalisation of early years educators but the
greater professionalisation of the workforce as a whole, for
example, with the Children’s Workforce Development Council. A
number of Members have referred to early years education becoming
more of a graduate profession. We have seen, in respect of the
teaching profession, consistency brought in to ensure that
teachers are educated to master’s degree level, as a minimum.
That is all part of an agenda that is about raising the
attainment level of the people who are undertaking this crucial
work. Clearly, the cross-party points that have been made about
funding and what that means for rates of pay are also
significant.
It seems to me that, as we survey the scene within the context of
Government levelling-up policy, investment in doing the right
things in the early years educator workforce is something that
will pay dividends. It is unlikely, perhaps, to pay dividends in
the short term—in two or three years—but we can see the
contribution that this will make, especially to economic
opportunity, in parts of our country that currently fall
behind.
We have an opportunity to build on some real strengths within
this overall workforce. One of the striking things is that in
most parts of the country there is a significant local
authority-run early years service. I am aware that in the London
borough of Hillingdon, which covers about two thirds of my
constituency, it is conspicuous that staff who work in that
environment tend to be people who have 30 or 40 years’ experience
and the highest levels of training and development. We need to
make sure that, where we have access to that kind of resource,
the benefits are spread so that those smaller, private voluntary
providers—new entrants to the market—can learn from people who
have been providing child care to a very high standard for 30 or
40 years. These are the people who have seen different trends
come in and out and who know how to support parents who may be
struggling with the challenges of bringing up extremely young
children. It is an opportunity to connect what happens in the
early years education workforce with our family hubs, our
children’s centres, our nursery schools and into primary
education and childminding. It would mean the skills and insights
that we see in some settings are able to be shared
effectively.
It is worth recognising that as we face this future we know—there
is a cross-party acknowledgment—that this is not just about
freeing parents to be more economically active. We have gone
through periods in the past when the primary purpose of
Government intervention in this area was intended, in particular,
to make it possible for mums to return to work or to increase
their working hours. That is important; we know that the mother’s
level of both education and income is very important to a child’s
life chances—to a greater degree than is the case with fathers.
We also know that all this research demonstrates that the quality
of early education really can drive a child’s opportunity later
on.
As we see more Government interventions, such as the growth of
tax-free childcare—something that I personally benefit from,
having two young children—there is a need to ensure that ratios
continue to support a high-quality offer. There is also a need to
ensure that childcare is not something that arises as a
consideration in a parent’s life only once the child is born and
they need to think about going back to work. As my hon. Friend
the Member for Truro and Falmouth () said, it should instead
be something that is considered during antenatal care. That way,
parents will know what to expect and how to make sure they are
getting the right support for their child. All those things are
incredibly important.
If I may offer a final suggestion to the Minister as a way of
beginning to join some of these ideas up, we know that all local
authorities have a sufficiency duty around childcare, which was
introduced by the last Labour Government. That duty is often
misunderstood. It is not about ensuring a sufficient supply; it
is about having a plan to reflect the needs of the local
population. How that happens varies quite a lot around the
country, according to local demographics and local resources.
However, there is an opportunity to use that sufficiency duty as
a vehicle to bring together so many of these issues that affect
not just the workforce but the future of children. We should
consider how it can become more of a driver to share good
practice and ways of addressing some of the financial challenges
that individual settings of different kinds may face. It can be
used to ensure that the research funded by the Department for
Education and the research taking place in universities is
brought together in a way that supports the agenda that we all
share.
I hope that my contribution has been useful, and in particular
that it has highlighted my experience in a local authority. I
will finish by welcoming the continued focus that my hon. Friend
the Member for Winchester brings to this issue. Often, the
Government are rightly accused of thinking only about things that
will make a difference in the next two or three years, but if we
get early years right, it will make a difference to the lives of
children and to their future as adults for decades ahead.
3.11pm
(Northampton South) (Con)
I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Winchester () for securing this important
debate. Sensible contributions have already been made about the
need for investment in the early years workforce, the development
and retention of staff, and the impact of early years education,
especially for the most disadvantaged children in our
constituencies—an issue in which I have held a long-term interest
since my local government days and via my mother, Mrs Sandra
Lewer, who was a nursery nurse and infant teacher.
The many challenges facing early learning providers have been
exacerbated by the pandemic but also, importantly, by changes in
funding from central Government and local authorities and the
impact that they could have on post-covid recovery. That is what
I will focus my contribution on.
Last week, I met Lyndsey Barnett, the CEO of Camrose early years
centre, which is based in one of the most deprived areas in my
constituency of Northampton South. The centre is a maintained
nursery school and day care provider. It offers a fantastic
quality of service from 8 am to 6 pm, including during school
holidays. That is hugely important, because it means that working
parents can drop their children off before work and collect them
after the working day. Camrose is a benchmark for the excellent
service that can be provided across my constituency and beyond to
families from low-income areas who want to do all they can to
work, and it is therefore crucial to the economy’s post-covid
recovery. With the proposed restructuring of funding from the
local authority as a result of central Government funding
changes, the centre may have to cut back the services it
offers.
That centre already faces many challenges in looking after
vulnerable children, but it goes well beyond the remit of just a
day care provider, not only supporting and educating young
children—I reflect on the comments with which my hon. Friend the
Member for Winchester set the scene for the debate—but offering
support to their families. It is that complete child approach,
acknowledging the crucial nature of the first 1,001 days—a
frequent and key concern of my constituency neighbour, my right
hon. Friend the Member for South Northamptonshire (Dame )—that makes recent
Government announcements about family hubs so welcome. As a
county council leader from 2009 to 2013, I must say that this
renewed focus seems very like the children’s centre network that
I promoted at that time, although I understand that Ministers
will wish to stress that this time, it is different.
As Confucius said:
“By three methods we may learn wisdom: first, by reflection,
which is noblest; second, by imitation, which is easiest; and
third by experience, which is the bitterest.”
3.14pm
(Mansfield) (Con)
I apologise, Mr Gray, for appearing a couple of minutes late; I
sprinted across the courtyard to try to get here to speak in this
important debate. I am grateful to my hon. Friend the Member for
Winchester () for bringing it forward.
Early years education is vital to the development of our
children—our future adults—and to our levelling-up agenda.
Education and early years are key when we talk about what that
means, what we are going to do, and how we tie together a
coherent package around the phrase “levelling up”. Education is
absolutely at the heart of that.
Just a week or so ago, I was lucky enough to visit Kangaroo
Teacher Led Childcare in my constituency, where I met Alison, the
owner and manager of the centre. She was adamant—my hon. Friend
made this argument too—about the importance of the education
element of early years settings. They do not just provide
childcare—particularly not her setting, as she is a qualified
teacher and a former deputy head of a primary school.
Alison explained how important her setting and others are to
everything we understand about development in those preschool
years—everything from nutrition to brain development, and the
social, language and communication skills that are important.
Even in that setting, I could see the difference between those
children who had had many hours of early years education
throughout their childhood and those who had not been socialising
in the same way in their early years. The difference in speech
and communication between those children was profound. We know
that there is a huge correlation between children’s communication
skills, in particular—their ability to express themselves and how
they feel about things—and negative outcomes such as being
expelled, being unemployed or even going to prison in later life,
so this is hugely important from that perspective.
As someone who believes in small government and low taxes, I have
always felt that if there is one area of life or society that the
Government absolutely should invest and intervene in, it is
education, because that is what sets people up to be independent
adults who can make their own decisions in later life, and who
hopefully will not need the Government to intervene.
From that perspective, I welcomed the Chancellor’s Budget last
year, which put more money into the sector, with funding for
workforce development in particular. We have already touched on
how important that is for the sector. All of us in the room, who
run what are effectively very small businesses, will recognise
the challenge of having a very shallow structure where the most
junior person in the office might only be one or two layers below
us. There are very few places for people to go in that hierarchy,
and often, after not many years, it is difficult to continue to
progress and develop people, so they leave. We often find that in
early years settings.
To retain staff, we need to help them and continue to develop and
train them throughout their careers; those careers will be short
if we do not do that. I would love to see a joined-up workforce
strategy across early years, as was mentioned earlier, but also
into other education and care pathways, such as primary schools
and children’s services. People could then start—yes, perhaps on
low wages—in an early years setting, but clearly see and
understand the many varied, positive routes to all sorts of
different careers. I think we need to do the same for social care
and health; if people starting as care workers could see the
massive range of opportunities that exist within the NHS, that
would change our ability to recruit and retain people in social
care. That is hugely important.
There was also £500 million in the Budget for family hubs and the
Start4Life advice service. All that will be beneficial to our
wider set of children’s services, and to those interventions in
support of the most disadvantaged children.
My hon. Friend the Member for Winchester used the phrase “market
failure” to describe early years. I hear that phrase a lot around
children’s services and early years settings. I think it has also
been used by Josh MacAlister when talking about the wider
children’s services sector—about foster care and looked-after
children. All these areas are hugely important to our ability to
support the most disadvantaged kids and to churn out—for want of
a better phrase—adults who can live productive and happy lives. I
know that my hon. Friend the Minister feels strongly about this,
too. There is so much to grasp, and trying to fix the market
failure will be a huge challenge, but it is such an important
challenge for him to focus on.
I will make two practical suggestions before concluding. They are
only simple, and they are perhaps not the answer to all these
problems, which will take much wider and more challenging work.
First, a couple of Members have already touched on the fact that
they access free childcare. I access free childcare—30 hours—for
both my children. I waited with bated breath for the day when my
bills would be halved, when my elder son turned three, and we
took advantage of that great benefit. We did not need it; I was
on an MP’s wage and my wife worked part time. People on up to
£100,000 a year can access that taxpayer-funded benefit. I am all
for extending the benefits system—the universal credit
system—into the workplace slightly if that helps to encourage
people to be in work rather than getting trapped on benefits, but
a hundred grand a year is kind of pushing it. I am not sure that
that is entirely necessary. I think we could redistribute that
money in a way that helps more of the most disadvantaged
children, where we see a particularly acute issue. I think that
more children accessing free childcare would get much more bang
for the buck.
Secondly, one way to use that might be to offer the early years
experience to more looked-after children. I raised this with the
Minister informally last week. It is really important to
recognise that not every child in the care system, even, is able
to access early years education in the same way or in the same
amount. A child in foster care does not have the same right to 30
hours as other children in the care system do. There is no reason
why they should not, other than an arbitrary line that has been
drawn in the sand. For those children who have either lost
parents or been taken away from their parents and had very
traumatic experiences in their early lives, consistency and
support from an early years provider could be hugely beneficial.
It could be life-changing for those children. There is no reason
why a child should not be able to get that if they are living
with their nan or auntie rather than in children’s residential
care. We could make a very simple change there, and I think it
would also help us to incentivise people to begin to be foster
carers or to take on their nieces and nephews in those
circumstances. I think that would happen if there were the offer
of a bit of respite and some incentive for people to join and
help in those services.
Those are some small examples of areas where I think we could
make an early change that would benefit a lot of young people. As
many Members have said, this is a hugely important sector, and
the Minister has a huge task on his hands to try to fix just some
of it, but I know that he feels very strongly about it, as we all
do. There is a real opportunity, through the MacAlister review
and these kinds of conversations about early years and additional
changes in funding, to make a real difference to the most
disadvantaged children. That needs to be at the heart of our
levelling-up agenda, and I trust that it will be when we see the
work from the Government on this over the next months and
years.
3.23pm
(Stroud) (Con)
I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Winchester () for initiating this debate
today. To be debating this issue in Childcare and Early Education
Week is really important, but it is even more important that
every single person in the House is constantly celebrating the
role of early years providers and the workforce, and recognising
them as educators. My hon. Friend is absolutely right: we could
not do without these people.
My husband and I work full time. We work incredibly long hours.
It is definitely not a nine-to-five existence, and I need a real
muddle of support to get me out of the house dressed, on time and
able to string sentences together, which I probably will not be
able to do brilliantly today. The childcare costs and pressures
on families around the country are acute. I urge hon. Members to
have a look at Instagram and to google the hashtags #parenting,
#children and #childcare. Some of the statistics and information
that come out are quite worrying. People are incredibly
stretched.
I have said this before, but the juggle is real. It does not
matter what someone does as a job or if they are not working at
all; if mums and dads have little people running around with
seemingly infinite energy each day, that means that every day is
stretched even before they find out that their early years
provider, nursery or childcare person cannot be helpful that day
because they are stuck at home in isolation—they are perfectly
well, but they have had a positive covid test—or that the nursery
has had to close down because it just cannot make the numbers
work on the business case. Military planning goes into all my
friends’ days to get children to the right place at the right
time. Families just cannot cope with these sudden shocks. It is
for us in this place to try to find ways of smoothing out those
shocks, or at least lessening their impact.
If anyone has the chance, I encourage them to listen the podcast
“Parenting Hell” by the comedians and dads Josh Widdicombe—I
can’t say his name; they get kids to try to say “Josh
Widdicombe”, and they say it better than I can—and Rob Beckett.
It is a brilliant look at an entertaining version of all the
chaos that comes from real-life parenting. It is a nice bit of my
week to know that I am part of a big club that is very
dysfunctional.
We know that the transition to parenthood is one of the greatest
pressures on a relationship or a marriage, so we have to do
better at stopping these sudden shocks and problems. The system
is quite literally causing family breakdowns, and we know the
impact of family breakdowns on the country, on relationships, on
families and on finances.
As we heard from a number of Members, the Prime Minister and the
Chancellor of the Exchequer are incredibly committed to this
issue. They have recognised the early years workforce and are
very respectful of them. The new Secretary of State for
Education, upon being appointed, included the word “families” in
his strapline and mission statement, alongside “education” and
“skills”. That shows a real commitment to the cause. All that has
led to the Treasury quadrupling the money going into early years
education, and millions of pounds to support family hubs, which
will be transformational in our local areas where we can get them
off the ground. The “Best Start for Life” programme is
transformational and will provide a focus for families and our
little people. However, we have to go further.
Let me make a couple of points that have already been touched on.
In 2019, the staff turnover rate in the early years workforce—I
am thinking only about nursery staff at the moment, excluding
childminders—was 24%, compared with the UK average of 15% to 18%
in other sectors. The cost of that turnover in 2019 alone was
calculated as £879 million.
The Social Mobility Commission, in its report “The stability of
the early years workforce in England”, found that the six most
salient barriers to a stable early years workforce were low
income; high workload and responsibilities; over-reliance on
female practitioners; insufficient training and opportunities for
progression; low status and reputation, and negative
organisational culture. That is a pretty stark list. This is a
workforce who feel they have low status, and they are the people
we trust with our most precious charges—we send our little people
into their care. They are people who are incredibly skilled and
have solid qualifications—it is often a vocational passion to
work in the profession—and they have reserves of patience that I
certainly do not have when I am trying to feed my toddler
vegetables, which she will not eat.
The other point is about the low public funding in comparison
with other levels of education. The public subsidy for early
years is about £3,000 per pupil, compared with £5,000 in primary,
£6,600 in secondary and £6,500 for university students. That is
incredibly frustrating given that it is now accepted that the
first 1,001 days of a child’s life are the most important. We
have heard that early intervention can change not only the life
of the child and their family early on, but the path of their
life; it will probably change the type of state services that the
child—and then the adult—uses. Why are we not investing more up
front and upstream?
I want to thank the early years providers in Stroud and around
the country. They are levelling up on a daily basis. They were
levelling up even before it was a thing with a title. There is a
small but perfectly formed gang of MPs and peers, and a very
dedicated ministerial team, who really believe in the early years
workforce and the value that they all bring to future
generations. I am working with the think-tank Onward to
investigate and research many of the childcare issues, including
costs, that we have heard about today. I also sit on the Work and
Pensions Committee. The Chair and the Committee have kindly
agreed to investigate the childcare element of universal credit,
with the cap and the up-front payments. We will be doing work on
that this year, and I hope it will be helpful to the ministerial
team who are thinking about this.
I am grateful for this debate. I am sure that all of us could
talk about this subject all day long. I look forward to hearing
the outcome and the views of the Minister.
3.30pm
(Bury North) (Con)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Gray, and
to follow all my hon. Friends. As one of the final speakers, I
could simply say that I agree with everything that has been said
and then sit down, but I will try a little harder than that.
There have been excellent contributions, all of them articulate
and passionate, because we all know the importance of the
sector.
I should start by saying that I am the chair of—I have to check
this because it has a long title—the APPG on nursery schools,
nursery and reception classes, which essentially covers the
grant-maintained sector. I am passionate about that, as was
somebody else, and I wish he were here today. I spent many hours
with the late and much-missed Member for Birmingham, Erdington,
who was a passionate vice-chairman of the APPG for many years
before I became chair. I will always be grateful for the insights
that he gave me. We were both driven by the same thing.
When looking at this sector, we have to ask whether we just talk
about money or whether we say, “Let us put a little bit here and
a little bit there.” This debate is fundamental to why we are all
MPs. If we are MPs or politicians because we want to get the
fabled equality of opportunity for everyone, we must recognise
that unless we get this right, there is no equality of
opportunity. All the academic evidence in the world shows that
the most important developmental stage for a child is, as has
been stated, between zero and five. If they are behind
academically and socially during that period, they do not catch
up.
I am also chair of the APPG on youth employment. We do a lot of
work on training and skills at age 16 and the choices that young
people make at that stage. My hon. Friend the Member for
Winchester () talked about the impact of
skilled workers. I talk repeatedly about how that decides—it
cannot be any stronger than that—their ability to make the
correct choice as to where they want to go with their career,
what skills they want to have and where they want to be in their
life.
I see that time is ticking on, Mr Gray, but I want to talk about
my own experiences, if I may. I have been a governor at Hoyle
Nursery School in Bury for the best part of 10 years. When I went
there, we had a budget of about £500,000. There is a fundamental
difficulty because the business model for the grant-maintained
sector is very different from the business model in the private,
voluntary and independent sectors. We certainly do not have time
for a debate on how to equalise that, but it is an important
factor.
We had no money. I remember that on the first day I went to the
school, I looked around and I said, “Where is the investment? I
know a lot of investment has gone into this school over the
years. Under the Labour Government, lots of money was put into
nursery schools.” The headteacher said to me, “Nothing has really
changed. If you had been here five, six or seven years ago, you
would probably have seen the same thing.” What we did do was put
the money into training highly motivated staff to get the
outcomes that were necessary for the young people who were
there.
There were some challenges. We were a failing school when I first
went there and we changed a few things. I became chair of
governors, and in four years we got two outstanding Ofsted
reports. In that school, 17 different languages are spoken.
One thing that has not been talked about today is the impact of
intensive work at a nursery level on children with special
educational needs. The SEN unit in the school that I am a
governor of, and have been for a decade, literally changes lives.
I want to pay tribute to the late, great Val Kay. Sadly, she
passed away, but I worked with her for many years. Rachel O’Neil,
who is the headteacher now, is driving forward a facility that
does not differentiate between kids. It has an all-inclusive,
progressive provision that gives SEN children the same ability to
progress as it does children from any other background.
We have many children who have English as a second language and
many children from dysfunctional families. The challenges are
overcome. I do not have time to put into words the work, skill
and love that are put into those children to ensure that when
they leave that school, they have the best chance not only to
progress emotionally, academically and socially, but to go on to
the next stage of their education and take that further. I
believe that in the sector I am talking about, the Government
provided three years of supplementary funding, which was much to
be welcomed.
I will make a few brief points to the Minister. He will know,
because he is not only a good man but very much on top of his
brief, that in the grant-maintained sector the costs of covid are
mounting. There is also an argument for a consultation, or at
least an interaction, regarding fair funding for the
grant-maintained sector, so that funding is in the places where
it is most needed, where this provision can make a difference.
What does this sector do? It transforms lives, not just for the
next five minutes, but throughout life. It improves relationships
and gives people opportunity.
Returning to the start of my speech, when I went into that
school, I looked at the young kids around that table and wondered
what I wanted for them, if I were to be chair of governors. If I
wanted them to have the chance to be astronauts, bus drivers,
doctors or whatever they wanted to be, the only way to do that
would be with investment and highly motivated, skilled educators
who would put that provision in place.
As ever in this place, we talk a lot in general about putting in
money, but unless there are bespoke leaders at a local level, it
will not work. We are lucky in my area that we have fantastic
teachers; I am sure that is so in Cornwall and everywhere else.
This has been a brilliant debate and I thank my hon. Friend the
Member for Winchester. To call him a doughty campaigner does not
do him justice. I was pleased to be under his wing at the meeting
with the Chancellor. I know that the Minister will do what he can
to ensure that this sector thrives and flourishes.
3.37pm
(Dulwich and West Norwood)
(Lab)
It is a pleasure to see you in the Chair, Mr Gray. I congratulate
the hon. Member for Winchester () on securing this important
debate to mark Childcare and Early Education Week, and on his
work with the APPG on childcare and early education to establish
and promote this important week to acknowledge, celebrate and
reflect on the vital role of the early years sector.
I pay tribute to everyone who works in early years education and
childcare. There are few more important tasks than ensuring that
every child has the best possible start in life. We owe a huge
debt of gratitude to everyone who dedicates their working time to
looking after and supporting very young children to grow, develop
and thrive, whether as childminders or in nursery settings. It is
a vocation to work with children. Across the country, as we
speak, hundreds of thousands of early years professionals, the
vast majority of them women, are nurturing and caring for
children, and supporting them to develop and grow.
The theme for this year’s Childcare and Early Education Week is,
“We are educators”. Under-fives learn in different ways from
older children, but they are learning voraciously every single
day. The best early years provision is underpinned by an
understanding of child development and a richness of curriculum,
every bit as complex as that found in our formal school system.
Early years educators have the capacity to have a dramatic and
lifelong impact on a child’s life, protecting against the effects
of poverty and disadvantage, and reducing inequality. They can
literally alter the foundations. “We are educators” is an
important statement of fact, but it is also a challenge,
particularly to the Government, to give early years professionals
the status they deserve as a vital part of our education system
that has parity with post-five provision.
I thank all hon. Members who have spoken this afternoon. We are
in danger of an outbreak of consensus on the importance of
improvements in the status and pay of early years professionals,
of staffing ratios and of good SEND provision and support for
kinship carers. I would like to pay tribute in her absence to my
hon. Friend the Member for Hampstead and Kilburn (), who was my predecessor in
this role and who for six years tirelessly showed her dedication
to the early years sector. I join the hon. Member for Bury North
() in paying tribute to , who was a dedicated champion
of early years education and who I know is very much missed by
Members from all parties in the House.
Today, we are celebrating the early years and childcare sector,
but the speeches we have heard are in stark contrast to the
woeful neglect of the sector that we have seen during the past
two years of the coronavirus pandemic. Time after time, early
years provision has been an afterthought for this Government,
considered and treated differently from the rest of the education
system, and too often early years providers are left to fend for
themselves.
(Barnsley East) (Lab)
I congratulate my hon. Friend on her powerful speech. Does she
agree that the situation she just described is reflected in the
Government’s decision to cut over 1,300 Sure Start centres in the
last decade? In one year alone in Barnsley, nine were shut and we
have a quarter of our kids growing up in poverty. Although family
hubs are welcome, does she share my disappointment that we could
have prevented there being a need for them by not shutting Sure
Start centres in the first place?
I agree entirely with my hon. Friend. We had that infrastructure
in Sure Start centres across the country, but 1,000 of them have
closed, which is a shameful part of this Government’s record.
Although it is welcome that they have recognised that terrible
mistake with the introduction of family hubs, 150 family hubs
across the country are no substitute for the 1,000 Sure Start
centres that have closed their doors for good.
Early years settings have been open to all children since July
2020, without access to lateral flow tests or to additional funds
for enhanced cleaning or personal protective equipment, despite
the obvious inability of staff working with very small children
to socially distance. Staff have been left vulnerable to
infection and anxious about their own health and that of their
families. I have been contacted by many providers in recent weeks
who are struggling to stay open because of exceptionally high
levels of sickness absence, as omicron has whipped through early
years settings. With that coming on top of two years of stress
and uncertainty, many who work in early years settings are
exhausted and burnt out, and they are quite simply bewildered
that the Government have not had their back.
Even before the pandemic, there were deep structural problems in
the early years sector. The way in which the Government’s 30-hour
entitlement is implemented does not work for providers and it
certainly does not work for parents. A freedom of information
request by the Early Years Alliance revealed that the cost of
“fully funding” the entitlement would reach £7.49 an hour by
2020-21. Knowing that, the Government contribute average hourly
funding of just £4.89 for a place for a three or four-year-old.
Is it any wonder that the cost of childcare for working parents
is spiralling up and up, while thousands of providers have closed
and child-adult ratios are increasing in many settings?
The UK is among the most expensive places in the OECD for
childcare, despite spending more than £4 billion of public money
on it a year. The cost of childcare is a huge pressure on
household finances at the best of times, but in the context of
the current cost of living crisis, the pressure is unbearable for
many families. High costs also deepen disadvantage, creating a
system in which wealthier families can afford the highest quality
provision, while families on lower incomes all too often have to
settle for less.
As we begin to emerge from the pandemic, dealing with the
devastating impact that it has had on our children should be a
top priority for the Government. The youngest children are
suffering the consequences of lockdown in their speech and
language development, gross motor skills and social skills, and
they have been denied many vital, indeed formative, experiences.
In contrast to our Prime Minister, most of our youngest children
will not have had a birthday party in the past two years—a
contrast that shames him.
As a result of all that has been sacrificed, primary schools are
reporting higher numbers of children who are not school-ready
when they arrive in reception, and the impacts are worst for the
poorest children. There is a gaping disadvantage gap that must be
addressed urgently.
However, while the Government are mired in defending an
indefensible Prime Minister, they have no vision or plan for the
early years sector. There was no plan to support the sector
through the pandemic; providers felt, in the words of the Early
Years Alliance, as if they were “the forgotten sector”. There is
no plan to support families with young children who are
struggling with exorbitant childcare costs and who now also face
a biting cost of living crisis. Most importantly, there is no
plan for children, to provide the additional input that the
youngest children need to catch up on all that they have lost
during the pandemic.
Labour fully recognise the vital role of early years educators,
who deserve recognition, gratitude and support, as well as a plan
from this Government. I pay tribute to them today and I hope that
this afternoon the Minister will provide the plan that is so
desperately needed.
3.44pm
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Education ()
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Gray.
I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Winchester () on securing this important
debate, which comes during the APPG’s Childcare and Early
Education Week. I know—I can get the sense from Westminster Hall
today—how passionately all Members care about this issue. Given
the importance of this sector, I welcome the awareness of it that
this week will rightly bring. I am very keen to meet the APPG; I
am sorry that we could not make that happen today, due to
pre-existing commitments. Nevertheless, I am very keen to meet
the members of the APPG and to work with them in the future.
I thank all hon. Members for their contributions to the debate,
which have been constructive and thoughtful, and for the points
they have made. I will endeavour to respond to as many as I can
during the course of my response, conscious that we will have a
Division in about 10 or 15 minutes.
I put on the record my and the Government’s sincere thanks and
appreciation for the hard work, dedication and compassion that
early years educators show every day. Despite the turbulence over
the course of the pandemic, they have continued to keep our
children safe and learning.
The early years experience is a vital part of a child’s
education, as so many Members have set out today, that develops
cognitive, social and emotional skills that set them up for life.
Those who work in the sector are rightly passionate about those
issues, and I have seen that at first hand. I have only been in
my role as Minister for Children and Families since September,
but I have visited numerous early years settings, and it is one
of the best bits of the job. Every single one is a truly
uplifting and inspirational experience, and I look forward to
many more. A visit is always full of laughter, because the
children come out with the funniest things—I forget, because mine
are a little older now. We also see the passion and dedication of
the staff, as well as their love, care and compassion—it is
overwhelming.
Evidence shows that high-quality childcare supports children’s
development, prepares children for school and, of course, allows
parents to balance work and family life. We are doing more than
any previous Government to ensure that as many families as
possible can access high-quality and affordable childcare. I am
proud of the progress that the early years sector has made in
recent years. In 2019, nearly three out of four children achieved
a good level of development, compared to around one out of two in
2013. In 2021, 97% of providers were rated good or outstanding by
Ofsted, which was up from 85% in 2015. I am sure that Members
will welcome that considerable progress.
It is important not to be complacent, and I will certainly not
be. We must build on that excellent performance by the sector,
particularly in the current tough circumstances. The question is,
how can we do better, because we can do better? In my opinion,
and my hon. Friend the Member for Winchester set this out
elegantly and articulately, the answer is people. It is all about
people who are educators. As of spring 2021, there were 62,000
providers offering 1.5 million Ofsted-registered childcare places
in England, with almost 330,000 educators in those settings. The
majority of educators work in group-based settings, or for such
providers, with 16% in school-based settings—as my hon. Friend
the Member for Bury South said—
North.
North, I apologise to my hon. Friend the Member for Bury North
()—I should not have got that one
wrong! I will address his point later.
A further 12% are childminders and assistants. The expertise of
those educators is our greatest asset in ensuring that early
years provision is of the highest quality. We must invest in the
workforce, and that is exactly what the Government are doing. I
will set out how in more detail later.
I now turn to some of the specific points made in the debate,
before going on to some of the broader themes. My hon. Friend the
Member for Winchester, in his constructive contribution, had a
quote—
“we would be lost without these people. They are truly
amazing”—
and I could not agree more. I have—from next week—a 10-year-old
and a six-year-old. Recently, they have been through numerous
childcare settings. I understand the importance of the settings
and how vital they are not only to the parents, but to the
children. They love—I use that word deliberately—the people who
look after them in the day, those educators in the early years
settings.
We have to address how the profession is viewed and valued—as
educators and more than just childcare. My hon. Friend was
absolutely right about that, and I will come on to it. He started
and finished his speech with how early years staff are educators;
early years is far more than just childcare. I totally agree, and
I look forward to working with him and the APPG to see what more
we can do in that area.
The hon. Member for Strangford () talked about the work we do with the devolved
Administrations. A huge amount of work goes on at the level of
officials. I have to confess, I have not yet met my counterpart
to discuss this issue, but I very much look forward to doing
so.
The hon. Member for Twickenham (), who is not in her place but
to whom I will respond none the less, raised the vital issue of
speech and language. We have created the professional development
programme and we have put a lot of emphasis on speech and
language, because of its importance. We invested an extra £27
million, as part of the £180 million recovery programme. We also
have the SEND review and, as part of that, it is vital that we
have early identification and early intervention. It is important
that that happens in early years settings wherever possible.
On the point about SEN provision, I have been contacted by a
nursery in Barnsley which provides support—one-to-one support, in
many cases—for children with SEN. It is worried that a number of
nurseries are having to turn away children because there simply
is not the funding. My local council has a deficit of £11
million, which is set to double in the coming years. What are the
Government doing on SEN generally, and more specifically on
funding?
The hon. Lady is right that there are significant issues within
the SEND system, which is why we have the SEND review. There are
local authorities with significant pressure on their budgets. We
are putting more money into the high-needs budget—about 10%, year
on year—but we are conscious that money alone will not solve the
issue. That is why we have the SEND review. I am working at pace
on that as we speak. The SEND review will conclude and we will
launch a Green Paper and a consultation by the end of March, so
within the first quarter of the year. The hon. Lady’s point is
well made.
My hon. Friend the Member for Truro and Falmouth () mentioned people
leaving the profession. I will come back to that point, because
it is really important. Recruitment and retention are key. I hear
her call about the pilots in Cornwall and I will certainly look
into that; I am always keen to visit Cornwall, whenever possible,
so I will bear that in mind.
My hon. Friend also mentioned a largely female workforce, which
is something I want to address. I want to see more men working in
early years settings. It is really important. As my hon. Friend
the Member for Winchester referenced, the Government want
families to stay together wherever possible. Where they do not,
there is not necessarily a male role model in the household, so
it is really important in education settings that there are good
male role models for children to look up to. We have the Pulse
survey, which monitors the private, voluntary and independent
sector. We meet with the sector regularly to keep on top of these
issues.
My hon. Friend the Member for Ruislip, Northwood and Pinner
() mentioned ratios, which I
will come on to very briefly. I assure him that local authorities
can retain only 5% of the funding allocated; they have to pass
the rest on. My hon. Friend the Member for Northampton South
() referenced the whole-child
approach, the first 1,001 days and family hubs. I recognise that
he welcomes the £300 million investment that the Government are
making in this area.
Numerous hon. Members mentioned funding. I agree that
high-quality childcare supports children’s learning and
development and prepares young people for school, as well as
having a huge impact on later outcomes. That is why the sector is
working really hard to support children and their parents. It is
also why the Government have spent more than £3.5 billion in each
of the last three years on early education entitlements, and we
will continue to support families with their childcare costs.
As my hon. Friend the Member for Winchester rightly pointed out,
we announced additional funding of £160 million for 2022-23, £180
million the year after and £170 million the year after that,
compared to the current year. That is for local authorities to
increase the hourly rates paid to childcare providers and
reflects the cost pressures that are anticipated and the changes
in the number of eligible children.
So what does that mean? For 2022-23, we will increase the hourly
funding rates for all local authorities—by 21p an hour for the
disadvantage entitlement for two-year-olds in the vast majority
of areas and by 17p an hour for the entitlement for three and
four-year-olds.
I want to come on to the point about recruitment and retention,
because they are really important.
Will the Minister give way on that point?
If the hon. Lady will give me time, I will come back to that
point if I can.
Recruitment and retention are really important. Early years
provision in 2021 was delivered by an estimated 328,000 staff.
The majority of providers work to the required staff to child
ratios for each age group, with some providers reporting that
their ratios are more generous than the statutory minimum. We
recognise that recruitment and retention are key issues for the
sector, and local authorities are reporting significant pressures
on providers. Importantly, we are working with the sector to
build our understanding of the situation and how we might better
support providers. We have commissioned qualitative research
interviews on the theme of the early years workforce and a survey
on the impact that covid is having on the workforce. We are
working closely with the sector to identify some of those
issues.
To aid recruitment and retention, we have also invested £153
million in programmes to support workforce developments as part
of the £180 million package that I referenced. However, I hear
what my hon. Friend the Member for Winchester said about the
pressures and the questions he rightly raised about salary and
how that impacts on recruitment. I will continue to listen to
him, the all-party parliamentary group and the sector.
On ratios, the statutory framework for early years foundation
stage sets out the staff to child ratios to help ensure that
there is adequate staffing to meet the needs of, and to
safeguard, children. They assume that the youngest children are
the most vulnerable—I think that is the right approach—and need
the greatest number of staff, but providers may need more staff
where other needs are identified—for example, special educational
needs. The Government are committed to working with the sector to
support covid recovery, as well as on the broader concerns.
I want to clarify that there is a difference in ratios between
England and Scotland, and I will look at that closely, but I
assure all those who have raised the issue of ratios that I will
always take an evidence-based approach. I will be very careful
and considered in the way that I approach this and I will always
put at the heart of this issue the needs of children and young
people and the safeguarding of children. I will of course work
with the APPG.
My hon. Friend the Member for Stroud () referenced military-style
childcare planning. I very much recognise that myself. Childcare
costs and pressures are acute for many families. They are the
second highest cost only to their mortgage or rent. We recognise
that and it is something I am looking at that closely as part of
my portfolio. I am interested to hear about her work on the
universal credit offer. At the moment, the take-up for that is,
frankly, too low.
With regard to maintained nursery schools, the points were well
made and I echo the comments made about the late Member for
Birmingham Erdington, , who was a passionate advocate
in this area. He last raised this with me just before Christmas
and his voice will be sorely missed. The funding rate for
maintained nursery schools will increase by 3.5% next year. That
gives them the long-term certainty that they asked for. However,
I recognise that they have some unique characteristics, such as a
headteacher and a special educational needs co-ordinator, so I am
looking at this closely and I will raise this with the
Treasury.
Finally, I will touch again on SEND, which is absolutely a
passion of mine. As part of the SEND review, we have to get early
identification and early action at the heart of that. The earlier
we identify the need, the better the support we can put in place,
giving parents confidence, but most importantly, providing better
outcomes for children and young people with special educational
needs.
To close, I am enormously grateful to my hon. Friend the Member
for Winchester for the support he has given this agenda today and
to all those who have contributed to the debate. The steps we
have taken underline the importance of early education and the
role of educators in that sector. The Government have made a
substantial financial commitment that will in decades to come
provide the workforce with the skills and expertise to ensure
that no child is left behind. I look forward to continuing to
work with my hon. Friend, the APPG and the sector to progress
these issues further.
3.37pm
I thank the excellent Minister, who has given us much that we
across the sector and the different all-party groups represented
here today can work with. He is a breath of fresh air to the
sector and I thank him.
There has been a consistency and clarity across the speakers
today, and they have all made very good points. However, there
has been some consistent messaging around the workforce and pay.
An early years worker once sent me an advert from the local
newspaper that showed that dog walkers were offered more pay than
those who look after our precious little ones. As long as that is
the situation, Houston, we have a problem.
I repeat my call that we have to treat early years workers as
educators and we have to pay them at a level commensurate with
reception year teachers. We should have a policy aim to bridge
that gap. It is very much a policy aim that I and the all-party
group have and we would like to get it on to the Government’s
agenda and make it their policy aim.
I thank my colleagues, and I thank the hon. Member for Dulwich
and West Norwood () on the Opposition Front Bench
for her constructive comments, although I would have liked to see
more of her Back Benchers behind her—I really would.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered the role of early years educators.
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