More nursery classrooms on the way?

Monday 18th August 2008, 3:00PM BST.

0561566_cropped.jpgCREATING more nursery classes or creating a private and public partnership are Islanders’ two favoured options for sorting out Jersey’s unfair nursery system.

At present around half of Jersey’s three- and four-year-olds have access to free States nursery education, while the parents of half are being made to pay for it.

In an attempt to try to remove the ‘postcode lottery’ system that is currently in place in the Island, the Education department funded a consultation exercise earlier this year, highlighting four possible ways to move forward.

Following an independently chaired consultation evening attended by 68 Islanders, a further 51 people submitted their written responses to the department on the subject.

The option most strongly favoured by written respondents was to continue building nursery classrooms at primary schools. Currently there are 17 primary schools in Jersey with a nursery attached and five without.


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  1. 1
    Emma

    Good news for those people having children / have children.
    My sister who does not have a mortgage is giving up work and will receive a lot of benefits. Myself a working person with a mortgage gets nothing. I would have to sell my house in order to put my child in nursery, I dont know how that seems fair. To earn a good wage and have your own house and pay nearly £1,200 a month nursery fees, those people who do not pay must be laughing all the way to the bank…!
    Is this just the States again putting proposals forward or will something actually happen in the next 2-3 months.? This is something the States should be spending money on, the Islands future..

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