Our Kids Early Learning Centre - Onehunga

Education institution number:
47274
Service type:
Education and Care Service
Definition:
Not Applicable
Total roll:
47
Telephone:
Address:

208a Church Street, Onehunga, Auckland

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 Our Kids Early Learning Centre - Onehunga

1 ERO’s Judgements

Akarangi | Quality Evaluation evaluates the extent to which this early childhood service has the learning and organisational conditions to support equitable and excellent outcomes for all learners. Te Ara Poutama Indicators of quality for early childhood education: what matters most are the basis for making judgements about the effectiveness of the service in achieving equity and excellence for all learners. Judgements are made in relation to the Outcomes Indicators, Learning and Organisational Conditions. The Evaluation Judgement Rubric derived from the indicators, is used to inform ERO’s judgements about this service’s performance in promoting equity and excellence. 

ERO’s judgements for Our Kids Early Learning Centre - Onehunga are as follows:

Outcome Indicators

(What the service knows about outcomes for learners)

Whakatō Emerging

Ngā Akatoro Domains

 
Learning Conditions
Organisational Conditions

Whakatō Emerging

Whakatō Emerging

2 Context of the Service

Our Kids Early Learning Centre - Onehunga is one of four services under the same ownership. The owner, business manager and newly appointed area manager support a centre manager. They lead a team of six qualified and three unqualified teachers, an administrator and a cook. Several children enrolled are Māori or of Pacific heritages.

3 Summary of findings

Children benefit from a play-based curriculum that empowers them to make choices about their learning. This is supported by teachers who use appropriate strategies to encourage children to take the lead and co-create activities with their peers.

Infants and toddlers experience a calm, unhurried environment. Intentional teaching practices foster flexible routines. As a result, warm, reciprocal relationships between teachers and children are evident. Transitions into, within and from the service are considered and aim to meet the individual needs of children and whānau.

Planning and assessment documentation aims to make visible children’s learning against the strands and goals of Te Whāriki, the early childhood curriculum. The team is in the early stages of implementing individual development plans to better reflect each child’s own learning journey. Leaders have identified a need to develop teachers’ shared understanding of Te Whāriki, the early childhood curriculum, to enable them to document children’s learning progress in relation to the learning outcomes.

Teachers provide opportunities for children, parents and whānau to celebrate different cultures though service-wide cultural events. Children's home languages are respected. Basic te reo Māori and some aspects of tikanga Māori are integrated in daily teaching practices. Leaders and teachers participate in regular professional learning opportunities to support them to increase capability within the team. They are yet to evaluate the impact of this professional learning.

Systems and practices for internal evaluation have been developed. Increasing the capability of all teachers to undertake service-wide evaluation for improvement is now a priority. Leaders have begun to develop the relational trust needed to support team collaboration. Those responsible for governance allocate time and resources for managers across the organisation to meet regularly to share information, knowledge and build the capability of staff.

4 Improvement actions

Our Kids Early Learning Centre - Onehunga will include the following actions in its Quality Improvement Planning:

  • Strengthening assessment information to clearly show children’s learning in relation to the learning outcomes of Te Whāriki.
  • Implement deliberate and systematic evaluation processes that focus on identifying how the curriculum and teaching practices contribute to improved outcomes for learners.

5 Management Assurance on Legal Requirements

Before the review, the staff and management of Our Kids Early Learning Centre - Onehunga completed an ERO Assurance Statement and Self-Audit Checklist. In these documents they attested that they have taken all reasonable steps to meet their legal obligations related to:

  • curriculum
  • premises and facilities
  • health and safety practices
  • governance, management and administration.

During the review, ERO looked at the service’s systems for managing the following areas that have a potentially high impact on children's wellbeing:

  • emotional safety (including positive guidance and child protection)
  • physical safety (including supervision; sleep procedures; accidents; medication; hygiene; excursion policies and procedures)
  • suitable staffing (including qualification levels; safety checking; teacher registration; ratios)
  • relevant evacuation procedures and practices.

All early childhood services are required to promote children's health and safety and to regularly review their compliance with legal requirements.

Patricia Davey
Director of Early Childhood Education (ECE)

5 July 2024

6 About the Early Childhood Service 

Early Childhood Service NameOur Kids Early Learning Centre - Onehunga
Profile Number47274
LocationOnehunga, Auckland
Service type Education and care service
Number licensed for 70 children, including up to 18 aged under 2
Percentage of qualified teachers 80-99%
Service roll55
Review team on siteApril 2024
Date of this report5 July 2024
Most recent ERO report(s)Akanuku | Assurance Review, October 2019

Dynamic Kids Onehunga - 25/10/2019

ERO’s Judgement

Regulatory standards
ERO’s judgement
CurriculumMeeting
Premises and facilitiesMeeting
Health and safetyMeeting
Governance, management and administrationMeeting

At the time of the review, ERO found the service was taking reasonable steps to meet regulatory standards.

Background

Dynamic Kids serves a diverse community in Onehunga. Children are grouped according to age in three spacious rooms. This is the first ERO review on its new site.

The manager leads a teaching team that includes a lead teacher in each room and a team of qualified teachers. Programmes for children reflect Reggio Emilia and Magda Gerber philosophies.

Summary of Review Findings

Governance, management and administrative practices ensure that all requirements are met. All practical steps are taken to ensure children’s health and safety.

Philosophical approaches respect children as capable learners. The curriculum is informed by assessment, planning and evaluation that demonstrate teachers’ understanding of children’s learning. The design of the centre supports the provision of different types of play, including quiet spaces, physically active play, and individual and group experiences. Regular opportunities are provided for whānau/parents to share information about children’s progress, and to be involved in decision-making concerning their child’s learning. The curriculum is inclusive, language-rich and includes practices that affirm Māori as tangata whenua.

Key Next Steps

Next steps include continuing to:

  • strengthen internal evaluation to promote ongoing improvement
  • strengthen teachers’ focus on integrating te reo and tikanga Māori throughout the programme and making this learning visible in documentation.

Next ERO Review

The next ERO review is likely to be an Education Review.

Steve Tanner

Director Review and Improvement Services (Northern)

Northern Region | Te Tai Raki

25 October 2019

Information About the Service

Early Childhood Service NameDynamic Kids Onehunga
Profile Number47274
LocationOnehunga, Auckland
Service typeEducation and care service
Number licensed for70 children, including up to 18 aged under 2 years
Percentage of qualified teachers80%+
Reported ratio of staff to children under 21:3 - Better than regulatory standards
Reported ratio of staff to children over 21:8 - Better than regulatory standards
Service roll45
Gender compositionBoys 25 Girls 20
Ethnic compositionMāori 4 
NZ European/Pākehā 16 
Chinese 6 
other ethnic groups 19
Review team on siteAugust 2019
Date of this report25 October 2019

Most recent ERO report(s)

 

First ERO review of the service.

General Information about Assurance Reviews

All services are licensed under the Education (Early Childhood Services) Regulations 2008. The legal requirements for early childhood services also include the Licensing Criteria for Education and Care Services 2008.

Services must meet the standards in the regulations and the requirements of the licensing criteria to gain and maintain a licence to operate.

ERO undertakes an Assurance Review process in any centre-based service:

  • having its first ERO review – including if it is part of a governing organisation
  • previously identified as ‘not well placed’ or ‘requiring further development’
  • that has moved from a provisional to a full licence
  • that have been re-licenced due to a change of ownership
  • where an Assurance Review process is determined to be appropriate.

Management Assurance on Legal Requirements

All early childhood services are required to promote children’s health and safety and to regularly review their compliance with legal requirements. Before the review, the staff and management of a service completed an ERO Centre Assurance Statement and Self-Audit Checklist. In these documents they attested that they have taken all reasonable steps to meet their legal obligations related to:

  • curriculum
  • premises and facilities
  • health and safety practices
  • governance, management and administration.

As part of an Assurance Review ERO assesses whether the regulated standards are being met. In particular, ERO looks at a service’s systems for managing the following areas that have a potentially high impact on children's wellbeing:

  • emotional safety (including positive guidance and child protection)
  • physical safety (including supervision; sleep procedures; accidents; medication; hygiene; excursion policies and procedures)
  • suitable staffing (including qualification levels; police vetting; teacher certification; ratios)
  • evacuation procedures and practices for fire and earthquake.

As part of an Assurance Review ERO also gathers and records evidence through:

  • discussions with those involved in the service
  • consideration of relevant documentation, including the implementation of health and safety systems
  • observations of the environment/premises, curriculum implementation and teaching practice.