
Collaborative working
One of the key aims of the Mayor’s Early Years Hubs Programme was to improve the quality of local early years provision.
Collaborative working was a crucial tool in doing this. In fact, each of the hubs cited their biggest success as building effective, collaborative relationships with a range of early years providers, as well as the local authority.
Read on for more information and resources.
Collaborative working
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11
Mini hubs were set up, allowing the hubs to work at a manageable local level
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4
Local authorities acted as core partners to the hubs
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253
Hub members registered for the Healthy Early Years London (HEYL) award
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97%
Hub members that registered for HEYL achieved their First Steps or higher
Top tips
- The hub model is a great way of bringing local partners together - particularly early years providers, who often work in isolation.
- Establishing effective collaborative working requires time and coordination.
- Explaining the benefits of hub membership helps to encourage participation.
- Collaborative working between a hub and the respective local authority is essential to maximise the benefits of the hub approach.
- Delivering a programme of Continuing Professional Development (CPD) improves the quality of early education locally and brings people together.
- Online delivery of meetings, training and programmes for families can increase participation and support greater collaborative relationships.
- Bringing providers together through networking events, visits, CPD etc, creates trusting relationships.
Activities to boost collaboration
The Mayor's early years hubs ran a range of activities to help improve the quality of local early years provision through collaborative working. This included:
- offering a range of Continuing Professional Development (CPD) opportunities, which were delivered free of charge to local providers
- running activities for parents and children, including family learning activities and structured courses to improve the home learning environment, support parental engagement with learning and facilitate transition
- encouraging hub members to participate in the Mayor's Healthy Early Years London (HEYL) award scheme. Read this example case study from a nursery hoping to achieve its HEYL silver award
- offering networking opportunities, conferences, visits to outstanding settings, and provision of specialist mentors to hub members as ways of sharing good practice. Read DDA's case study about early years mentors offered through the Working Together Hub
- creating local 'mini hubs' or clusters in order to collaborate more effectively. For example, the Working Together Hub set up four local networks, one in each of Newham's ‘quadrants’, which was more manageable than working across the borough as a whole. Find out more about this approach in the set up and manage a hub section of the toolkit
Benefits of collaborative working
Click on the headings below to find out more about the benefits of collaborative working.
You can also:
- hear direct from hub leads about what worked locally in this series of videos
- read this case study on improving quality through collaboration written by the Working Together Hub. It takes a more in-depth look at the their approach to quality improvement in Newham and the impact that it has had
“The early years hub helps to keep early years on the agenda – it’s a constant reminder and we need people who are selling and promoting [early years].”
- Children's centre manager
Local authority representatives acted as core partners in each of the Mayor's early years hubs.
The strong relationships built between the three hubs and their respective local authority partners has been key to their success. They have resulted in:
- improved data systems, which in turn facilitated better targeting of children eligible for funded two-year-old early education places
- joint campaigns to promote the funded two-year-old offer, including through birthday cards, leaflets, banners, videos and social media
- improved brokerage and outreach to identify eligible children and support their parents to choose a suitable early years provider
"Early years hubs cannot exist without the support of the local authority."
- Hub lead
By encouraging providers to work collaboratively, hubs were able to improve the transition process for children moving between nurseries, or from nursery to school.
For the Working Together Hub, supporting the transition process was part of its early years mentor programme, which you can read more about in this DDA case study. The hub encouraged PVIs and schools to develop good working relationships, enabling them to have constructive discussions about children’s development and progress.
All three hubs were also involved in collaborative work (as part of a task and finish group) to improve transitions for children with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND). They produced two key documents, which you can download and use:
- A collection of best practice principles for transition reports in the early years - the group recommends that all London boroughs review the format, content and use of their current transition reports against these principles.
- A transition report template - this can be downloaded and used by all London boroughs, to support successful transition of children moving between early years settings, or from an early years setting to school.
You can find out more about the work of the SEND task and finish group, as well as other Mayoral projects to support children with SEND in the early years.
Managing an early years setting can be difficult and lonely. Many nursery owners and managers reported feeling isolated prior to the hubs' existence, whereas hub network meetings gave them an opportunity to share their concerns and provide practical and emotional support to each other.
This was particularly important during the COVID-19 pandemic, when many hub meetings were moved online to allow this local support to continue.
"The personal relationships that have been built between school early years leads and managers of PVIs through the network mean that people now pick up the phone, ask for advice and share information more readily than they ever used to."
- Early years mentor
The Wandle Early Years Hub benefited from building partnerships around the existing structure of the Wandle Teaching School Alliance. This meant that there was an existing understanding of how partnerships need to work and the appropriate structure. From there, the hub could work on building relationships with new partners, such as a local PVIs, with whom no existing connections existed. Wandle reported that being clear about shared priorities and having in place an agreed theory of change was central to a successful approach.
Find out more about this in the set up and manage a hub section of the toolkit.
Hear from hub members
Watch the videos below, produced by the BEYA hub, to find out how two local PVI managers benefited from becoming hub members.
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