Highly trained professionals who play a key role in ensuring that young children learn and develop well and are kept healthy and safe.
Apprentices learn to plan and deliver activities that support children's learning and development from birth to age five, in line with the Early Years Foundation Stage framework. The training covers child development theory, safeguarding, health and safety, and how to observe and assess children's progress. Apprentices also develop skills in supporting children's communication, physical development, and emotional wellbeing, and learn how to work with parents, carers, and other professionals to meet individual children's needs.
On a typical day, an apprentice might carry out observations and written assessments of children, plan and lead activities such as sensory play or story sessions, and support children with routines like mealtimes and transitions. They work alongside senior practitioners, contribute to key person responsibilities, and help maintain records in line with EYFS requirements. Settings often use digital learning journals such as Tapestry or Evidence Me, so apprentices are likely to log observations and share updates with parents through these platforms.
Completing this standard at Level 3 qualifies practitioners to work as a lead practitioner within an early years setting. Common job titles include Room Leader, Senior Nursery Nurse, and Key Person. Many go on to pursue Level 5 qualifications such as the Early Childhood Studies degree apprenticeship, or move into Special Educational Needs coordination, management, or childminding. Employers include private day nurseries, maintained nurseries, Children's Centres, independent schools with early years provision, and local authority early years settings across the UK.
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Completing this apprenticeship typically leads to roles such as Early Years Educator, Nursery Nurse, Room Leader, or Keyworker within a childcare setting. Some completers take up positions as Preschool Practitioner or Reception Class Teaching Assistant, working directly with children from birth to five. These roles carry full responsibility for planning and delivering activities in line with the EYFS, observing and assessing individual children's development, and maintaining safeguarding standards day to day.
With three to five years of practice, educators commonly move into Senior Practitioner or Room Leader positions, taking on responsibility for a team within a nursery or preschool. Beyond that, two distinct tracks open up. The leadership route leads to Deputy Manager and Nursery Manager roles, with some moving into area management across multi-site providers. The specialist route can take practitioners into SEN support, Forest School leadership, or early years advisory work, sometimes alongside further qualifications at Level 4 or 5.
Private day nurseries and nursery chains are the largest employers, ranging from single-site independents to large national operators. Local authority children's centres, maintained nursery schools, and primary school reception classes also hire at this level, as do childminder networks and holiday playschemes. Demand is consistent across urban and rural areas, and roles exist in both full day care and sessional settings, giving completers a broad choice of working environment.
Learning takes place in a real early years setting throughout the apprenticeship, with the apprentice building competence in caring for and educating children from birth to five while working alongside qualified colleagues. Before moving to final assessment, the apprentice and their employer and training provider must confirm readiness, often called a gateway, demonstrating that the required knowledge, skills and behaviours have been met. Final assessment then confirms the apprentice can perform the role to the standard expected of a qualified Early Years Educator. Assessment models for many standards are currently being updated, so check the standard's gov.uk page for the current specification.
Evidence should be gathered consistently throughout the programme rather than all at once near the end. This means keeping records of practice across different areas of the Early Years Foundation Stage, documenting observations of children, and collecting examples of planning, safeguarding decisions, and interactions with families. Working closely with the employer and training provider to review progress regularly will make the gateway process more straightforward. Leaving evidence-gathering late is one of the most common causes of delays, so building that habit early matters.
Look for providers with an achievement rate above 75% on their FATP profile: completion matters here because the endpoint assessment includes a professional discussion and observation of practice, both of which require sustained, well-supported preparation. Employer satisfaction scores above 80% are a useful signal that the provider is giving you practical support rather than just administrative sign-posting. Check that tutors or assessors have direct early years experience, ideally recent settings-based work, and that the provider has clear links to the EYFS framework and Ofsted inspection standards in how they structure the programme.
Be cautious about providers running very large cohorts where learner satisfaction scores are noticeably lower than employer scores: this often signals that apprentices are getting less individual attention than the setting-based nature of this role demands. If a provider cannot tell you how they prepare apprentices for the observation-based endpoint assessment, or if their assessors have no recent practice experience in early years settings, that is a concern. Vague answers about how they support apprentices who work as sole practitioners, such as childminders, suggest limited adaptability.
Employers set their own entry criteria, but most look for a good standard of English and maths, typically at GCSE grade 4 or equivalent. Apprentices must be employed in a role working directly with children from birth to five years. A Disclosure and Barring Service (DBS) check is mandatory before starting, given the nature of working with young children. Some providers may require a Level 2 childcare qualification, though this varies.
The typical duration is 18 months, though this can vary depending on prior experience and the employer's programme. Apprentices are employed throughout, applying their learning directly in their nursery, pre-school, or childcare setting. A portion of working hours must be dedicated to off-the-job training, though the exact requirement is subject to revision under current Skills England reforms. Check the current specification on gov.uk for up-to-date details.
Before taking the end-point assessment, apprentices must pass through gateway, demonstrating that they have met all the knowledge, skills, and behaviour requirements of the standard. Assessment models for many apprenticeship standards are currently being reviewed under Skills England reforms, so the specific components may change. For the most current assessment arrangements, including any practical observation or professional discussion elements, refer to the standard's detail page on gov.uk.
The funding band for this standard is £7,000, which is the maximum that can be drawn from the apprenticeship levy or co-investment fund. Larger employers with a levy account use those funds directly. SMEs contribute 5% of the training cost and the government covers the remaining 95%. Employers with fewer than 50 staff taking on an apprentice aged 16 to 18 pay nothing. Speak to your chosen training provider about how funding applies to your specific situation.
Day-to-day work centres on delivering the Early Years Foundation Stage curriculum for children from birth to five. This includes planning and leading learning activities, observing and tracking children's development, supporting their physical and emotional wellbeing, and communicating with parents and carers. Depending on the setting, an apprentice may work in a full day care nursery, a pre-school, a children's centre, or a reception class, and may be responsible for supervising junior staff or volunteers.
Holding a Level 3 Early Years Educator qualification counts towards the staff-to-child ratio requirements for early years settings in England, making completers more valuable to employers. From here, practitioners can progress into senior practitioner or room leader roles, move into special educational needs support, or study further towards an Early Years Teacher Status or a degree-level qualification in education or childhood studies. Some go on to become childminders or manage their own settings.
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Curated by Alex Lockey, FATP founder and editor. Last reviewed: .
Sources include the apprenticeship's official specification on apprenticeships.gov.uk, Skills England guidance, IfATE archive records, DWP funding bands, and provider data sourced directly from the public Apprenticeship Provider and Assessment Register (APAR). Standard reference: 430.
Some sections on this page were drafted with AI assistance from published source data and reviewed by a human editor before publication. See our editorial methodology for how we maintain this content. Spotted something out of date? Tell us.