Features

EYFS Best Practice - All about… family breakdown

When parents split up, practitioners can be pivotal in helping children feel secure and understand the situation. Annette Rawstrone explains what staff can do to help both children and parents

It can feel like a child’s world has been ripped apart when their parents decide that they want to separate, regardless of whether it’s amicable or fraught with tension. How seriously affected the child is can depend on a number of factors, ranging from the age of the child and how much they understand, to what support they receive from their parents and other people they are close to, including childcare practitioners.

Just under half of the 114,720 couples that divorced in the UK in 2013 had at least one child under the age of 16, according to the Office for National Statistics. More than 20 per cent of these children were aged under five years. However, many more children will have experienced the breakdown of their family unit but not be included in these figures because their parents were unmarried. As the statistics only partly show, family breakdown is a very real issue that, as an early years practitioner, you will doubtless be confronted with.

Register now to continue reading

Thank you for visiting Nursery World and making use of our archive of more than 35,000 expert features, subject guides, case studies and policy updates. Why not register today and enjoy the following great benefits:

What's included

  • Free access to 4 subscriber-only articles per month

  • Unlimited access to news and opinion

  • Email newsletter providing activity ideas, best practice and breaking news

Register

Already have an account? Sign in here