Quote:
Originally Posted by joshie
How often do you honestly do them? I want to no if i do them too often!!!
Do you do them yourselvs from scratch of do you buy 'log books' specifically for childminders?
thanks guys
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Risk assessments are done the moment you turn up for work at the setting or everytime you wake up and start your day at home if you are a childminder.
We arrive and check and clean/make safe our outside area, then it goes on as you go into the building, all rooms, go through your procedures etc and all through the morning/day until the children go home.
They are not hard to do, but very natural and we honestly do then all the time.
What we do not do is keep ticking sheeting or signing things - but when we do a fire drill them I fill out forms and record it in various places for parents to see when we carry them out and in my record book etc.
All I have done is write up policies and then I have written out and laminated cards/forms/checklists for the procedures to remind everyone what needs to be done. Ofsted have always been very happy with them, there is no need to buy or have long lengthy ones.
Start typing up a Risk assessment say for your outdoor area i.e. check for foreign bodies glass, needles etc
On your procedure form say how you are going to do it - On arrival use gloves and litter stick to collect foreign bodies etc.
Review them annually or everytime you've thought of something else, add it - you'll soon have then as you want. You could look at one or two on the net type in whatever you are thinking of - you can use a bit, adapt or decide it doesn't apply to you.
I don't use log books, I just have policies and procedures in place - but we do carry out risk assessemnt all the time as we go along - after all before a child uses a swing, you'd check that it was safe or putting together a wooden climbing frame, you'd make sure that it wasn't broken, you'd wash your hands before preparing food and you wouldn't leave cleaning materials around - it's just common sense but having it all written done makes sure everyone knows what is expected of them and it also shows Ofsted and other bodies that you know what you are doing.