Say the word “supervision” in some staff rooms and you can watch shoulders tighten. It lands as a summons: a meeting where you find out what you’ve done wrong, squeezed between lunch cover and a rota that won’t write itself.
It shouldn’t feel like that. Done well, supervision is the most useful hour a manager spends all month. And mid-September, with the new year’s rhythm just about settling, is the natural moment to reset how yours works.
Statutory, yes, but that’s the floor rather than the point
The EYFS makes supervision a statutory requirement, so there’s no debate about whether to do it. The more interesting question is whether your version achieves anything beyond satisfying the requirement.
Weak supervision is a diary entry. Fifteen rushed minutes, a form filled in the same way as last time, both people relieved when it’s over. Strong supervision is a protected conversation with a shape: how are the children in your key group doing, what’s worrying you, what’s going well, what do you need from me. The difference isn’t the paperwork. It’s whether anyone would notice if the meetings stopped.
Safeguarding sits at the heart of this. Supervision is where a practitioner says the thing they haven’t written down anywhere: a niggle about a child’s behaviour, a parent interaction that felt off, a doorstep comment that’s been bothering them since Tuesday. Those disclosures only surface when meetings are regular, private and safe. A setting where supervision has quietly lapsed is a setting where worries stay in people’s heads.
Supervision and appraisal are different animals
The two get blurred, usually because both involve a manager, a quiet room and a form. But they do different jobs. Supervision is frequent and operational: children, workload, practice, wellbeing. Appraisal takes the longer view: performance across the year, objectives, development and where someone’s career is heading.
Blur them and both suffer. Nobody raises a worry in a meeting they suspect is secretly judging their performance, and nobody plans a career in fifteen snatched minutes about this week’s biting incident. Keep them distinct and each gets room to do its work.
There’s craft in the difficult bits, too. Giving feedback that changes practice without flattening the person. Holding a conversation about lateness or tone that stays kind and still lands. Setting objectives someone can actually influence. None of this is instinct; it’s technique, and it can be learned. Our Effective Supervision and Appraisal for Early Years Managers course gives you a practical framework for the whole cycle, from structuring meetings to handling the conversations you’d rather avoid.
Records that help rather than haunt
A word on frequency before we get to paperwork. The settings where supervision works have it in the diary for the whole term, at a rhythm everyone knows, in a room with a door. The settings where it doesn’t have it “when things calm down”, which in a nursery is a date that never arrives. Protect the time first; everything else follows from that.
Keep the record simple: what was discussed, what was agreed, who does what by when. Store it confidentially and follow up next time, because nothing kills trust in supervision faster than agreed actions that evaporate. A good test is whether both people would be comfortable rereading the note in six months.
Those records earn their keep twice over. They give staff evidence that concerns were raised and acted on, and they show an inspector a cycle that genuinely runs rather than one resurrected the week before an inspection.
One last observation, because we hear it from managers a lot: retention improves when supervision improves. That tracks. People rarely leave a job where someone regularly asks how they’re doing and then does something about the answer.
Run supervision your team actually values
The course covers the EYFS requirement, structuring supervision and appraisal meetings, safeguarding supervision, feedback and record keeping, with an NFAQ-accredited certificate on completion.
September is a fresh page. Book the term’s supervision dates now, protect them properly, and by summer you’ll have a team that walks into that quiet room without the shoulders going up.

