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paM MANAGER AT DARTMOUTH PRE-SCHOOL


nder fives have been finding their feet at the newly refurbished Dartmouth Pre-School in South Ford Road. The facility’s just reopened


after a major transformation. Our reporter Steph Woolvin went to meet manager Pam Reeves. I can’t have been in the building more than two minutes and a happy little band of three and four year olds come running up to inspect the new addition to their class. Pam and I thought we had found a quiet spot to have our chat but nothing gets past these curious toddlers. “They have taken to their new surroundings like ducks to water,” says Pam who’s been in charge here for the past four years. However, she tells me her involvement with the pre-school started long before that; “I used to come with my little boy when he was just a few months old, now he is 19! A friend said to me ‘you must get out the house’ so I came here and loved it.” It wasn’t long after that Pam started to run the pre-school’s toddler group and moved up through the ranks to the top job. We soon drift outside,


partly so I can be shown the beautiful new play space, partly because the toddlers were asking me more questions than I was asking Pam! The children have a veranda where they can play with paint and water. Lower down there’s a pirate play frame and new garden where they hope to plant sunflowers, runner beans, strawberries and mint. The


pre-school has been in this building, which is owned by the Church of england, since 1961 but it used to be upstairs meaning the children had to come down to the garden each day. Now they are downstairs and the garden has become an extension of the classroom. The refurbishment was part of a £600,000 project


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to create a new pre-school and two apartments; one for an assistant priest, the other to be rented out as an affordable home. Pam says she and her team were consulted throughout the process. “Father Will had monthly meetings with us. He really listened to our needs whether it was for a separate office space or low sinks for the little ones.” As well as the church, lots of other groups have supported


the project with manpower or money; “People wanted to help because the building has such a rich history connected to it.” Over the past hundred years it’s served as a Sunday school, sorting office, a school for evacuees and a costume storeroom/ rehearsal area for the Dartmouth Players. As she perches on the edge of a large recycled tractor tyre, Pam says the pre-school itself has a special place in many hearts. “People who used to come here when they were toddlers themselves are now bringing their children. We’ve kept some of the old cupboards to make them feel at home.” By the front door there’s an old rocking horse which Pam’s son used to ride back


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