Oxfordshire toddlers' development is slightly above average in England

Oxfordshire toddlers' development is slightly above average in England, according to Public Health England data.
Oxfordshire toddlers' development is slightly above average in EnglandOxfordshire toddlers' development is slightly above average in England
Oxfordshire toddlers' development is slightly above average in England

Between July and September 2018, 86% of children aged between two and two-and-a-half years old passed key development assessments. The average for England is 84%.

Nurses assess the youngsters at home and submit data to the local authority.

Oxfordshire toddlers' development is slightly above average in EnglandOxfordshire toddlers' development is slightly above average in England
Oxfordshire toddlers' development is slightly above average in England
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The areas assessed are communication, problem solving, personal social skills, and different motor skills.

There are three possible questionnaires depending on whether the child is 24, 27 or 30 months old at the time of the assessment.

The subject in which most pupils met the minimum score in Oxfordshire was hand and finger movement - with 92% of pupils passing.

The lowest marks were in communication - where 89% of pupils met the minimum mark.

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A total of 1,688 pupils were evaluated in Oxfordshire in the three months to September 2018.

Rosamund McNeil, assistant general secretary at the National Education Union, said the assessment helps parents know more about their children's capabilities.

She said: "You also have to take into account that 20% of the kids may have some additional need and it really matters which month in the year children were born.

"Every child develops at a different pace from these ages to 18, and that is something that everybody has to understand."

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A Public Health England spokesman said: "This assessment provides an objective measure of development and allows comparisons to be made helping to identify children who are not developing as expected and supporting decisions on closer monitoring of progress.

"In terms of inequalities it was found that children living in the most deprived areas have a lower chance of achieving the overall expected level of development than those livingin the least deprived areas.

"In particular, children living in the most deprived areas are around 8 percentage pointsless likely to have the expected level of communication skills than children living in theleast deprived areas."

Essex had the highest record in England, with 99.96% hitting the minimum expected scores. Children in Rochdale, in the North West, registered the worst result, with only 26% making the minimum scores.