Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Hello all, we?re trying to work out whether to move our son from a stand-alone nursery to Heber Nursery in September and it?s proving a difficult decision. Our son is happy and settled in his current nursery, but Heber is much closer to home, so we would spend a lot less time getting there and back. We?re expecting another baby in the Autumn, so I could see this becoming a big advantage.


I?ve read through previous threads and seen comments on the size of the classroom and coats being left outside. But we?d be really interested to hear parents? views on whether they felt their children were happy there and whether you felt your child?s time at Heber nursery prepared them well for reception? Also, did you feel there were advantages with the nursery being part of the wider school?


Please feel free to PM me if you would prefer. Thanks very much!

My friend's son has attended Heber nursery and loved it, loads of fun activities, lots of help with basics in phonics and numbers so he's now well prepared for reception (which will be a different school, as his brother attends another primary school).


Best of luck with your decision

My daughter went to Heber nursery (and then to join her older sibling at another local primary) and really loved it. For my eldest, we used a non-school affiliated morning pre-school, and I think my daughter learned way more at Heber, and was a lot more stimulated. Whilst it's obviously all play based learning, I think just the fact that it's a more formal education setting helps, and nursery children can free flow to an extent with reception children should they wish to, and my daughter really loved this. She skipped in every morning, without fail. The staff were beyond lovely, we had no problem with the size of the classroom and no experience of coats left outside.


I would recommend. And you're right, a shorter nursery run is a huge plus!

School nursery?s have highly trained and qualified staff when compared to private nurseries. They are more transparent and accountable which does drive up standards. State nursery?s have a much lower turnover of staff. I was in a private nursery recently and over half the staff were temps who had never been there before. Finally in a school nursery they are in it for the kids and profit does not have to come into it.

No comparison!

It's so hard when you're happy with your existing nursery, but I made the move to Heber for my youngest.


I could not fault Heber nursery. My child was so happy there and the staff are wonderful. As previous posts say - far less turnover (none at all since I knew Heber), well trained, calm and caring staff. The activities they get up to are fantastic - have a look at 'Heber Early Years' @Heber_FS on Twitter to get a flavour for what they do. My experience is that resources (and belongings) are respected.


I'd consider a closer commute twice a day is a big advantage, too :-)

Thanks so much everyone for taking the time to give me your thoughts, really appreciate it. We?re lucky and have had no staff turnover at all his current nursery and it really is a lovely place. But I had a good feeling about Heber when I visited, and combined with your positive feedback and it being much closer, we?re leaning towards that. Thanks again!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Missing Cat! 11 months old/ Our friend, Coco, has gone missing. Last seen evening of 31st October near top of Henslowe rd where it meets Underhill Rd in SE22. We know she has started wandering up Friern Rd and further we guess but we imagine she has been spooked by Halloween / Fireworks goings on. She is a grey Siberian mix with some brown stripes down her, very friendly and likes to eat. Please let us know
    • That said, organised displays could be on Saturday before and after and the actual day, and private ones could just not have the loud ones.  It’s all down to accessibility and people caring/not caring
    • The problem this year is that 5th November falls on a Wednesday. So some places will be bringing their "bonfire night" forward to Saturday 1st and some will be knocking it back to Saturday 8th and there'll probably be a few that just go with Wednesday 5th anyway. If you're doing a public display, having it on a weekend gets more crowds. Which basically means a solid week of fireworks.
    • Fireworks in this area do feel totally incessant at this time of year, almost every evening there is terrible noise. I feel great concern for wildlife, pets (I have a senior cat who hates them), as well as people who struggle with PTSD etc. Last year I even had people setting them off in front of my home. Tonight and yesterday evening have been particularly bad. Is there anything we can do as a community to prevent this? What action can we take? Surely we shouldn’t be expected to just put up with it every year for weeks on end! 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...