Apprentice Insight: Supporting Individual Approaches to Settling In

Early Years Skills & Employment
Apprentice Insight: Supporting Individual Approaches to Settling In
Published May 1, 2026
Following the completion of her Level 3 apprenticeship, Madalyn Holmes offers a thoughtful practitioner’s perspective on one of the most fundamental aspects of early years care: helping children settle in. Her observations cut to the heart of quality provision, emphasising that successful transitions cannot be achieved through rigid protocols but instead require patient, individualised approaches that recognise each child’s unique temperament and needs. The article serves as a timely reminder of the value that emerging professionals bring to the sector. As local authorities grapple with recruitment and retention challenges in early years settings, voices like Holmes’s demonstrate how apprenticeship pathways create reflective practitioners who combine fresh training with frontline experience. Her insights underscore the importance of giving early years professionals the time and flexibility to build genuine relationships with children during those critical first weeks. For Lead Members with portfolio responsibility for Early Years, this account reinforces the need to scrutinise settling-in policies within local provision. It raises pertinent questions about whether contracted hours and staffing ratios allow for the bespoke, child-centred approaches that research consistently shows are essential for positive outcomes. Holmes’s experience illustrates that when we invest in skilled practitioners and trust their professional judgement, children benefit from the secure foundations that support lifelong learning and wellbeing.
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