
OFSTED Quality of Care/Support Reviews
16 April @ 10:00 am – 1:00 pm
This practical seminar explores the regulatory requirements and best practices for conducting effective quality of care/support reviews in both Children’s Homes (Regulation 45) and Supported Accommodation (Regulation 32). Designed for Responsible/Nominated Individuals, Registered (Service) Managers, and senior leaders, the session provides a step-by-step guide to producing meaningful, evidence-based reports that support continuous improvement, compliance, and better outcomes for young people.
📅 Date & Time: 16th April, 10:00 AM – 1:00 PM
📍 Live Online via Teams
📢 Early Bird Price: £40.5 + VAT (Register 2+ weeks before)
🎟️ Standard Price: £54 + VAT (Group Discount available for groups of 5+)
The course covers data analysis, impact evaluation, stakeholder feedback, and the link between review findings and strategic planning.
Why It Matters
Quality reviews are a powerful tool for reflection, accountability, and growth. When completed with rigour and purpose, Reg 45 (Children’s Homes) and Reg 32 (Supported Accommodation) reports can demonstrate the impact of your service, identify areas for development, and provide clear evidence of how leadership is driving improvement. This session helps leaders move beyond compliance to create reviews that tell the story of their service, and shape its future.
Course Highlights
– Understanding the regulatory expectations of Reg 45 (Children’s Homes) and Reg 32 (Supported Accommodation)
– Structuring your review for clarity, coherence, and inspection-readiness
– Gathering, analysing, and triangulating evidence (KPIs, case tracking, incident data, feedback)
– Linking review findings to your Statement of Purpose, workforce plan, and improvement strategies
– Turning insight into action: how to evidence the “so what?” and demonstrate meaningful change
Meet the Trainer
Miguel Valerio is a social worker is more than 20 years of experience. His journey has taken him from research and university lecturing to hands-on work in the sector where he worked as a Responsible Individual (Children’s Homes) and Registered Service Manager (Supported Accommodation). On these roles, he was responsible for developing and overseeing services for young people, ensuring regulatory compliance, and supporting staff training and service improvement. His extensive experience in quality assurance, governance, and leadership has equipped him with the knowledge and skills to guide professionals in navigating the complexities of residential children’s social care.



