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Sensory boards, often called busy boards, are interactive panels designed to stimulate children’s senses and encourage hands-on exploration. They combine everyday objects, locks, switches, textures, zippers, bells, into a safe, engaging platform that nurtures curiosity, problem-solving, and fine motor skills.

The International Day of Happiness, observed globally on 20th March, is an opportunity to highlight the importance of well-being, joy, and positive relationships in children’s lives. In early childhood settings, celebrating this day can foster belonging, resilience, and emotional literacy. By embedding happiness-focused activities into daily routines, educators can nurture environments where children, families, and staff thrive together.

The Child Safe Standards provide a nationally consistent framework to ensure that organisations working with children create environments that are safe, inclusive, and empowering. In OSHC settings, these standards are not just about compliance; they are about embedding a culture where children’s rights, voices, and well-being are central to everyday practice.

Reflection is a powerful tool for educators: it helps identify strengths, highlight gaps, and ensure that child safety is lived in daily routines rather than just written in policy. The following reflection questions are designed to guide OSHC teams in critically examining how each of the 10 Child Safe Standards is enacted in practice. They encourage staff to move beyond “tick‑box” compliance and towards genuine, child‑centered engagement.

Supervision in an OSHC setting means more than just “watching” children; it’s about actively ensuring their safety, wellbeing, and engagement while balancing freedom and responsibility. Effective supervision requires constant awareness, positioning, and interaction, guided by the National Quality Standards (NQS) and regulatory requirements.

In OSHC, “child agency” means recognising children as capable decision‑makers who actively shape their experiences, rather than simply following adult‑led routines. It’s about giving them voice, choice, and ownership in the program and showing this through practical, everyday practices.

Educational leaders often face the challenge of guiding educators who resist change, dismiss feedback, or communicate rudely. While this can feel discouraging, strong leadership lies in responding with clarity, consistency, and emotional intelligence. Below are practical strategies to help you maintain professionalism, shift mindsets, and inspire lasting change.

Children’s gardens are more than just spaces for growing plants—they are living classrooms where curiosity, responsibility, and creativity flourish. By weaving upcycling into these gardens, educators can transform everyday discarded items into vibrant, functional learning tools. This approach not only reduces waste but also models sustainability and innovation for children in ways they can see, touch, and nurture.

Many parents feel uneasy when their child comes home from nursery with paint on their sleeves, mud on their shoes, or sand in their hair. Yet, as Annette Rawstrone explains, these signs of “mess” are actually proof that children have been engaged in beneficial activities.

Family newsletters are more than just updates; they are a bridge between the centre and the home, fostering trust, transparency, and community connection. When thoughtfully designed, they can strengthen relationships with families while reinforcing the service’s philosophy and values.

 In early childhood, literacy learning is most powerful when it grows from children’s natural curiosity. While handwriting and tracing are often seen as “formal” skills, they can be introduced in ways that honour children’s interests, build fine motor strength, and connect meaningfully to the EYLF outcomes.

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