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30 Mar 2026

Maintaining effective communication with parents

Strong communication between nurseries and parents is essential for supporting children’s well-being, development and sense of security. When families feel informed, listened to and valued, it builds trust and creates a consistent approach between home and nursery. Clear communication helps practitioners share important information, celebrate achievements and work together to support each child’s individual needs. 

Top tips for supporting new staff

  1. Build warm daily connections 
    Greet parents personally at drop-off and collection times, sharing brief but meaningful updates about their child’s day 
  1. Use a variety of communication methods 
    Combine face-to-face conversations with apps, emails, newsletters and notice boards to ensure information is accessible to all parents  
  1. Be inclusive and accessible 
    Consider language needs, cultural differences and varying work schedules when communicating 
  1. Share the positives 
    Celebrate achievements, milestones and happy moments - not just concerns 
  1. Keep information clear and timely 
    Provide advance notice of events, policy updates and changes to routines 
  1. Listen and value parent voice 
    Welcome updates from home and acknowledge parents as experts on their child 
  1. Ensure staff understand the value of strong parent partnerships 

Support your team to recognise the importance of positive relationships with families and equip them with the confidence and skills to communicate with parents clearly, warmly and professionally 

  1. Maintain confidentiality and professionalism 
    Discuss sensitive matters privately  
  1. Create meaningful opportunities for partnership 

Provide regular meetings, stay-and-play sessions and workshops to build strong, collaborative relationships with families 

  1. Agree setting-wide expectations for daily communications 

Use a staff meeting to discuss what different staff do which they have found to be successful and have received positive feedback from parents. Pool the ideas and create a setting-wide agreement for the number, type, length, tone, etc. of daily communications, whether in person or online. 

NDNA products to support you with this tip

Positive Relationships with Parents – England factsheet

 

Disclaimer: Activities with children must always be risk assessed, including for allergies or choking. Children must always have adequate supervision. Resources and materials must always be appropriate for children’s age and stage of development.