One in seven Norfolk toddlers falling behind

That's according to new figures

Author: Tommy Lumby, Data ReporterPublished 23rd Feb 2021

One in seven two year olds in Norfolk were behind on developing key life skills last year, figures suggest.

Children’s charities say the worrying number of toddlers across England who are falling behind will have grown during the pandemic, and said urgent investment in the early years sector is needed to get them 'school-ready'.

Nursery nurses and health visitors examine thousands of children aged between two and two-and-a-half years old across the country to check their mental and physical development, as part of the Healthy Child Programme.

The assessment gives parents an insight into how well their child is progressing and is used to help plan and improve local services.

In 2019-20, 85.9% of children in Norfolk met expected standards across the five areas of communication, problem solving, social interaction, using fine motor skills such as holding a pencil, and gross motor skills including kicking a ball.

That was similar to the average of 85.1% across the East of England, which was the fourth-highest proportion of England’s nine regions.

Across the country, 83.3% of children met expectations in all five areas of development in 2019-20.

The charity Action for Children said it was 'deeply worrying' to see so many toddlers falling behind.

Director of policy and campaigns Imran Hussain said:

"Sadly what is not reflected in these latest statistics is that the situation has become much worse over the last 12 months.

"We know how critical the first few years are to children as they develop at a whirlwind pace, unmatched at any other time in their lives, yet over the last year our frontline staff have seen children off all ages regress in speech, behaviour, education and social skills."

The Government must urgently invest in children’s centres and family hubs to give children the support they need to be school-ready, he added.

The proportion of children hitting development milestones varied widely across the country - just a third of children were at the expected levels across the board in the London borough of Brent, while nearly all (94.6%) of those assessed in Bracknell Forest in the South East were doing well in all skills.

Neil Leitch, chief executive of the Early Years Alliance, said the early years sector has been 'severely underfunded' for years.

He said:

"This is especially detrimental in disadvantaged areas, where parents have limited funds to pay for additional hours or optional extras, and many children have additional needs."

Mr Leitch added that the Government should urgently review the early years pupil premium - extra childcare funding for parents receiving certain benefits and tax credits - so children who have missed out due to the pandemic can get extra support.

A Department for Education spokeswoman said:

"We want every child to have the best start in life.

"We have kept nurseries and childminders open during lockdown to ensure the continuation of the care and education of our youngest children, and we continue to fund settings as usual."

The department has provided ÂŁ9 million for the Nuffield Early Language Intervention programme to support children in Reception to catch up on lost learning, more than ÂŁ4 million for early years charities, and committed ÂŁ14 million to champion family hubs, the spokeswoman added.

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