Sunday, 11 December 2011

Flying through an ethereal letterbox near you : issue 10 of the goodenoughcaring Journal lands on December 15th



The new issue of the goodenoughcaring Journal goes online in mid-December. In our last issue John Stein wrote about the influence of mothers and so one of the themes of this next issue is the relatively less explored territory of fatherhood and aspects of this are examined in a poem by Jan Noble and in articles by Joyce Carol Oates, Alex Russon, Mark Smith and John Stein. Marion Bennathan writes about nurture groups in schools and Cynthia Cross recollects the nature of residential child care in the 1960s and compares it with current practice. Jeremy Millar makes a personal assessment of the work and thoughts of Chris Beedell while Moira Strachan discusses the relevance of a child observation placement toward her development as a social care worker. Noel Howard has written a moving review of Danny Ellis' CD 800 Voices : the heartache and the healing. John Molloy provides a review of Richard Webster's book The Secret of Bryn Estyn Bob Forrest has provided us with part two of The Kerelaw Papers and Pat Petrie writes about the Sing Up for Looked After Children project. News of further articles will appear here within the next few days.

This news item first appeared on November 25th, 2011 on the home page of the goodenoughcaring website at http://www.goodenoughcaring.com

Friday, 2 December 2011

Conference : Young People in Crisis? Exploring transitions to adulthood



The Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust and Kids Company are holding a joint conference on Friday, December 2nd, 2011 at the Tavistock Centre in London.
"Young People in Crisis? Exploring transitions to adulthood" is being held at a time when concerns about young people have spilled over once more into anxieties about the cohesion of society and social relatedness. The aim of this one day conference is to explore the key issues faced by young people with difficulties in making the transition to adulthood.
The conference will bring together the innovative practice developed by Kids Company, which effectively reaches out to many young people who find it difficult to access services, and the developmental approach of the Tavistock Clinic's Adolescent Department's to clinical practice, supervision, teaching and research. The conference will draw on recent understanding and developments of young people from a range of perspectives including neuroscience and psychosocial.
It is suitable for all practitioners working with young people (15-30 years) in CAMHS, adult services, social care, children, adult, leaving care, youth offending and criminal justice organisations. It will also be relevant for managers and policy makers.

The speakers include:
Camila Batmanghelidjh, Founder and Director, Kids Company,
Professor Sarah-Jayne Blakemore, Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London,
Professor Stephen Briggs, Associate Dean, Specialist and Adult Health Services (SAMHS), The Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust
The fee for the conference is £110 (£90 for Tavistock students and TSP members).
For more information or to book a place at the conference telephone 020 8938 2285 or Fax 020 7447 3837


This news item first appeared at http://www.goodenoughcaring.com on the goodenoughcaring website home page in October 2011.

Thursday, 1 December 2011

Flying through an ethereal letterbox near you : issue 10 of the goodenoughcaring Journal lands on December 15th


Flying through an ethereal letterbox near you : issue 10 of the goodenoughcaring Journal lands on December 15th

The new issue of the goodenoughcaring Journal goes online in mid-December.The new issue of the goodenoughcaring Journal goes online in mid-December. In our last issue John Stein wrote about the influence of mothers and so one of the themes of this next issue is the relatively less considered matter of fatherhood and aspects of this are explored in a poem by Jan Noble and in articles by Joyce Carol Oates, Alex Russon, Mark Smith and John Stein. Marion Bennathan writes about nurture groups in schools and Cynthia Cross recollects the nature of residential child care in the 1960s and compares it with current practice. Jeremy Millar makes a personal assessment of the work and thoughts of Chris Beedell while Moira Strachan discusses the relevance of a child observation placement toward her development as a social care worker. Noel Howard has written a moving review of Danny Ellis' CD 800 Voices : the heartache and the healing. John Molloy's remarkable review of Richard Webster's book The Secret of Bryn Estyn which is currently on this page in the section about Richard Webster will also be published. News of further articles will appear here within the next few days.


This notice first appeared on December 1st, 2011 on the goodenoughcaring homepage at
http://www.goodenoughcaring.com/


Monday, 28 November 2011

Separation and Reunion Forum annual conference, November 25th, 2011



Dr Elaine Arnold of the Separation and Reunion Forum informs us of its 12th Annual Conference, Imprisonment of parents and children: exploring attachment, separation and loss which will take place on Friday 25th of November at the Tower Block, London Metropolitan University,Holloway Road, London N7 8DB opposite Holloway Road Tube Station. Bus services to the venue are nos. 4, 17, 43, 91 and 271.
The conference fee is £60 for the standard delegate rate, £35 for students and retired persons and £50 for SRF members. Payment by cheque should be sent to The Administrator, Separation and Reunion Forum,c/o Room 003, 250 York Road, London SW11 3SJ or for further details visit

This news item first appeared on the home page at  http://www.goodenoughcaring.com/ on October 11th, 2011.

Tuesday, 11 October 2011

A new Ofsted report about outstanding work in children's homes



A new Ofsted report published on March 2nd, 2011, Outstanding Children's Homes analyses the high quality of residential child care provided by 12 English children's homes. It can be downloaded at http://www.ofsted.gov.uk/Ofsted-home/Publications-and-research/Browse-all-by/Documents-by-type/Thematic-reports/Outstanding-children-s-homes

This item was first posted in June, 2011, on  the home page of the goodenoughcaring website at http://www.goodenoughcaring.com/Home.aspx?cpid=1

Monday, 12 September 2011

International Seminar on the History of Child Care



Child Care:Learning from History

An International Seminar on the History of Child Care will be hosted by Scotland's New Centre for Excellence for Looked After Children and the Child Care History Network (CCHN) on Monday, 7th November, 2011 at Jury's Inn, Glasgow.
The aim of this international seminar is to consider issues concerning the history of child care, in particular focusing on lessons which have been learnt which can affect current and future practice.The seminar will be based partly on the experience of the host country, Scotland,while speakers and participants from other countries will also be involved. It will cover statutory, voluntary and private child care services, and both personal and organisational histories.
The seminar will present an exciting and varied range of speakers.
The content of the seminar will be of relevance to managers of child care services and practitioners, as well as regulators, academics and researchers. There will be additional activities before and after the Seminar, including the opportunity for study visits to local projects on Tuesday 8th November.
Confirmed Speakers,in programme order, include:

Professor David Divine (England): Formerly James Robinson Johnston Chair in Black Canadian Studies, Dalhousie University, Canada, 2004 - 2009, currently undertaking furtherpostgraduate study at Durham University.

Keith White (England): Director of Mill Grove Residential Community in East London.

Mark Smith (Scotland): Lecturer in Social Work at the University of Edinburgh and formerly lecturer at the Scottish Institute for Residential Child Care.

Moyra Hawthorn (Scotland): Lecturer at the New Centre.

Zachari Duncalf (Scotland): Research Fellow at the New Centre. Angela Davis (England): British Academy funded post-doctoral research fellow in the Department of History at the University of Warwick.

Beno Schraepen (Belgium): Graduate of the University of Ghent and founder of INCENA (the study centre for inclusion and enablement) in partnership with the University of Antwerp.

Delyth Edwards (Northern Ireland): Completing a PhD at the School of Sociology, Social Policy and Social Work, Queens University Belfast.

Christine Oliver (England): Senior Research Officer at the Thomas Coram Research Unit.

Renuka Jeyarajah-Dent (England): Director of Operations / Deputy CEO at Coram, the UK’s oldest children’s charity.

Ian Milligan (Scotland): Senior Lecturer at the New Centre.

Ann Kirson Swersky (United States): Independent scholar. Her current research was carried out on the records of the Monson State Primary School in the Massachusetts State Archives.

Shurlee Swain (Australia): Professor at the School of Arts and Sciences at the Australian Catholic University in Victoria.

Sue Owen (England): Director of the Well-being Department at the National Children’s Bureau and formerly Director of National Children’s Bureau’s Early Childhood Unit.

Kristian Bredby (Norway): Director of the Sanitetsforening Brusetkollen in Oslo.

Jim Goddard (England): Senior Lecturer in Social Policy at the University of Bradford and Secretary of the Care Leavers’ Association.
For further information :
General enquiries should be made to the Office for the New Centre:

Tel:             0141 950 3683

Email: "sirccevents@strath.ac.uk"

"www.sircc.org.uk/CCHN"

"www.thenewcentre.org.uk"

"www.cchn.org.uk"

This news item first appeared on the home page of the goodenoughcaring website at http://www.goodenoughcaring.com/ on September 11th 2011.

Tuesday, 26 July 2011

A new link : Serefo


Regular visitors to our home page may notice that we have a recent addition to our list of useful links. This is the website of Serefo. The full name of Serefo is the Separation and Reunion Forum and it was established in 1999 following a meeting between Dr. Elaine Arnold and a small group of women of African Caribbean origin. They had been interviewed about their separation from their parents during their early years and their subsequent reunion with them. The women recalled experiences of the pain of parental loss, as well as the loving care received from their grandmothers and other members of the extended families. They remembered the confusion they felt when on arriving in a strange new country, they were reunited with parents who were strangers to them and introduced to younger siblings who had been born in the UK.  They also discussed some of the difficulties they encountered at home, at school, and in the wider community; a familiar experience to many born and left with surrogate parents during their formative years.

The forum has evolved from these initial meetings and now organises, workshops, conferences and publishes papers online which have been presented at its annual conferences. Initially, the Separation and Reunion Forum worked mainly with people of African Caribbean origin who experienced broken attachment as a result of separation and loss but it soon became apparent the women's reactions to their experiences, the grieving and the mourning of loss are relevant to human beings regardless of ethnicity and so the Forum's aims are now inclusive of all who have suffered loss. Find out more about Serefo at www.serefo.org.uk/  

This item was first posted on 26th July, 2011, on  the home page of the goodenoughcaring website at http://www.goodenoughcaring.com/Home.aspx?cpid=1

Monday, 18 July 2011

Workshop Series for Professionals Working With Looked After and Adopted Children and Their Families


  
Date:               May - July 2011        
Fee:                 £95 per workshop (£245 for all 3)
Venue:            The Tavistock Centre, London
The Tavistock and Portman National Health Trust have written to us about their forthcoming series of workshops. These will provide an opportunity to develop a greater understanding of the effect of life experiences on the behaviours of looked after and adopted children and those in kinship care and would be suitable for professionals working in social services, education, health or other settings, including those who support or assess carers as well as those who work directly with the children.
The Workshops are:
Supporting Kinship Placements: How can professionals meet the needs of children in kinship care and their carers? on Thursday 12 May 2011, 9.30pm - 1.00pm
Managing Behaviour for Looked After and Adopted Children  on Thursday 9 June 2011, 9.30 - 1.00pm
Who Cares? Applying Attachment Theory to Looked After Children  on Friday 8 July 2011, 1.30pm - 5.00pm
For further information about the full programme and application form contact :
 The Conference, Events and Marketing Unit, The Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust
120 Belsize Lane, London      NW3 5BA
Telephone : 0208 938 2285
events@tavi-port.ac.uk
www.tavistockandportman.ac.uk/cpd51

This announcement first appeared on the goodenoughcaring website home page in May, 2011

Wednesday, 22 June 2011

The Care Leavers' Assocation : upcoming network meetings


The Care Leavers' Assocation : upcoming network meetings
The Care Leavers' Assocation is a network of care leavers run by care leavers for care leavers. If you have experienced a childhood in care this is an opportunity to be part of a groundbreaking network which offers opportunities to socialise, to meet other care leavers, to share experiences and to get involved with care leavers' issue in meetings that are for care leavers only.
To find out more about CLA  contact Darren Coyne at darren.coyne@careleavers.com or 'phone him on 0161 236 1980/0790 4485921
The Care leavers' Assocation is a charity supported by the Lloyds TSB Foundation.
Upcoming network meetings
South East Network Meeting, London, Thursday 23rd June, 2011 at Somers Town Community Association,
150 Ossulston Street, London NW1 1 EE  http://www.somerstown.org.uk/about.shtml
The time of the meeting will be from 6.30 pm to 9.30pm and refreshments will be provided between 6.30pm and 7.00pm.
South East Network Meeting, Brighton, Sussex, Wednesday 22nd June,2011 at Brighthelm Church and Community Centre, North Road, Brighton BN1 1YD    See the website at http://www.brighthelm.org.uk/ for a map. The time of the meeting will be from 6.30pm to 9.30pm. Refreshments will be provided between 6.30pm and 7pm, with the meeting proper starting at 7pm finishing just before 9.30pm.
Yorkshire & Humber Network Meeting, Leeds ,Monday 27th June,2011, at Central Leeds Friends Meeting House,188 Woodhouse Lane, Leeds LS2 9DX  See the website at http://www.leedsquakers.org.uk/meetings/central%20leeds The time of the meeting will be from 7pm to 9.30pm. Refreshments will be provided between 7pm and 7.30pm, with the meeting proper starting at 7.30pm finishing just before 9.30.
North West Network Meeting, Manchester, Thursday, 30th June, 2011, at the Mancheter Metropolitan University in Room E201, Second floor, John Dalton Building, which is on the Oxford Road opposite the BBC. The post code is M1 5GD For a map go to
http://www.mmu.ac.uk/ The time of the meeting will be from 6pm to 9pm.
Refreshments will be provided between 6pm and 6.30pm
All the meetings are for care leavers only.
Darren will also be getting his tent out and travelling the South West this summer in the week beginning 1st August 2011, working his way from Truro to Bristol. He will be in Truro on  1st August, in Plymouth on 2nd August, in Exeter on 3rd August, in Taunton on 4th August and Bristol  on 5th August. Further details will be up on the CLA website over the coming weeks at http://www.careleavers.com
If you require assistance to attend any of  these meetings please contact Darren.
Contact Darren Coyne at darren.coyne@careleavers.com or 'phone him on 0161 236 1980/0790 4485921
This item first appeared on the goodenoughcaring home page at  http://www.goodenoughcaring.com/                            on June 21st, 2011

Tuesday, 21 June 2011

Separation and Reunion Forum Seminar 25th June, 2011 : "The Challenge of Caring for Looked After Children"



On Saturday, 25th June the Separation and Reunion Forum are holding a seminar with the theme The Challenge of Caring for Looked After Children  at the Methodist International Centre, 81-103 Euston Street, London NW1 2EZ. The seminar is from 11am to 2pm. The AGM of the Separation and Reunion Forum will take place in the same venue between 10.00am and 11.00am prior to the seminar.
The seminar speakers are Phil Frampton, Robert Tapsfield, Andrew Carter and Jean Stogdon.
The Methodist International Centre is 5 minutes walk from Euston Station, 8 minutes from Euston Square, 12 mins from Kings Cross and is on the following bus routes from Victoria,74, and from Waterloo, 168, 68 and 59.

This news item first appeared on the goodenoughcaring home page at www.goodenoughcaring.com   on June 21st, 2011.

Monday, 6 June 2011

The launch of Social Care Ireland





The launching of Social Care Ireland takes place at 11.30 am on June 20th, 2011 at Buswells Hotel, Dublin.
The minister for Children and Youth Affairs, Ms Frances Fitzgerald will officially inaugurate the new organisation which is made up of three social care representative bodies, the Irish Association of Social Care Workers,the Irish Association of Social Care Educators and the Registered Managers' Association.
The aims of the new organisation are


  • to provide a consistent and cohesive voice both privately and publicly to key issues relevant to social care work and education;



  • to help bring elements of social care education, training and practice closer together to aid consultation for outside agencies on the development of the social care profession;



  • to follow some of the successes of other professions in providing a common voice for different branches of the same discipline.


Further information about Social Care Ireland and this event can be found at http://socialcareireland.ie/ or by telephone at +353-1-894 2765
This news item first appeared on June &th, 2011 on the home page of  the goodenoughcaring website at  http://www.goodenoughcaring.com/Home.aspx?cpid=1


Sunday, 5 June 2011

SIRCC National Conference, Glasgow, June 8th and 9th, 2011



The Scottish Institute of Residential Child Care will be holding its national conference at the Thistle Hotel in Glasgow on June 8th and 9th. The theme of the conference is "Changing Cultures : embracing and influencing the residential child care experience."  SIRCC's intention is that the conference will offer an opportunity to share good practice, to reflect on the joys and the challenges that face the sector and to hear the views of young people. The conference will challenge practice, motivate staff, help to break down barriers and encourage a culture based on fresh and innovative ideas.
It is a conference for everyone involved in residential child care, at any level and for those whose work impacts on the sector through associated professional interests.
The keynote speakers are Professor Jim Anglin University of Victoria, Canada, and Professor Lena Dominelli University of Durham, England.
Other invited speakers are, Stevie Brown, Sean Cameron,Tim Chapman,Hannah Dale,Lorraine Davidson,John Digney,Laila Dreyer,Jacqui Dunbar, Zachari Duncalf,Tine Egelund,Tony Ferrie, Julie Fisher,Elaine Georgeson,Noel Howard,Turf Jacobsen,Karen Japp,Jill Keegan,Professor Andrew Kendrick, Miriam Landor, Bill Lowell, Sheila MacDougall,Iain McLeod, Elena Masoero, Jacqui McAlpine, Nikki Milligan, Dev Muniah,Joe Nee, Kirsten Patience, Dora Pereria,Margaret Semple, Isabele Silva,Cheryl Smith,Laura Steckley,Mike Sutherland, Anne-Margaret Thompson, and Chris Walter.
More details about the conference can be found at :
http://www.sircc.org.uk/sites/default/files/National%20Conference%202011%20Flier.pdf

This news item first appeared on the goodenoughcaring website home page on June 5th, 2011
at  http://www.goodenoughcaring.com/Home.aspx?cpid=1

Monday, 30 May 2011

The Scottish government establishes the New Centre for Excellence for Looked After Children


This news article first appeared on April 20th, 2011 at   http://www.goodenoughcaring.com/Home.aspx?cpid=1 
on the home page of goodenoughcaring.


The Scottish Children's Minister Adam Ingram announced on April 19th, 2011 that Scotland is to get a new centre for excellence to improve the lives and futures of looked after children. The centre, which will incorporate the former Scottish Institute for Residential Child Care is to be based at the University of Strathclyde. Among the responsibilties of the new centre will be:
  • the provision of specialist training for those working with looked after children
  • support to colleges and universities so they can help looked after children make the transition into ongoing education
  • consultation  with looked after children so they can shape services
  • acting as a central point of contact for those seeking information/advice, including the provision of a web-based resource
  • running seminars and conferences to promote good practice and raise awareness of current thinking and developments in the area of looked after children, as well as helping to develop good practice through a research programme covering domestic and international practice working with the sector.
  • to reduce the stigma associated with being a looked after child
The announcement comes at a time when new statistics published on child care in Scotland show that more children are becoming engaged with the looked afterd children system in Scotland. new looked after children statistics were published today. In a statement about the new initiative Mr Ingram said that the new statistics
"show that while more children are becoming looked after, this is happening earlier in their lives This shows our policies to provide the earliest possible support to children and families are starting to have an impact. As looked after children are among the most vulnerable members of our society we must continue to do what we can to improve their lives and life opportunities. The creation of a new centre for excellence will help us drive forward improvements in care planning and corporate parenting with those who work with looked after children and the children themselves.
This centre builds on a range of other initiatives. Earlier this week, we announced new nutritional guidelines to improve the health of children in residential and, over the past year, we have put in place new measures to improve educational attainment through the Additional Support for Learning Act and taken action to improve training and employment opportunities through our 16+ Learning Choices initiative.
Finally, it's important to recognise that while the number of looked after children has risen, this appears to be due to more young people being looked after for longer. This can mean that they are continuing to be looked after without a clear path to a permanent placement. We have been exploring how best we tackle these issues and will be announcing action on this in the coming weeks."
Romy Langeland, the independent chair of the Scottish Institute for Residential Child Care which will be transformed into the new centre of excellence, said:
"We recognise that there is already a great deal of important work being undertaken to improve a child's experiences throughout their journey within the care system. We welcome this opportunity to come alongside partners and work together to ensure that we maximise the opportunities and outcomes for looked after children."

The new centre  will be created by changing the role and remit of the Scottish Institute for Residential Child Care (SIRCC), set up by the Scottish Government in 2000 to improve outcomes for children and young people in residential care. SIRCC is a partnership between the University of Strathclyde, Robert Gordon University, Langside College and Who Cares? Scotland. The focus of its activities during the last 10 years has been the development of the residential child care workforce.
During a planned phased transition,the new centre will take on an extended role to cover support and training for everyone working with looked after children and care leavers, regardless of where that care is provided, including teachers, healthcare workers and kinship carers. The change in role reflects the fact that that looked after children often move between care settings and that these services need to be better integrated and that there is also a long history of the adoption, fostering and residential care sectors working together.
For more information go to http://www.scotland.gov.uk/News/Releases/2011/02/23094433

Monday, 23 May 2011

Soon to land on a computer near you : issue 9 of the goodenoughcaring Journal flies in on June 15th, 2011


The goodenoughcaring Journal issue 9 will be online on June 15th, 2011.We are very excited about this issue. We have been able to collect a group of interesting, fascinating,informative and thoughtful articles.

Viki Bird and Gabriel Eichsteller write about the relevance of social pedagogy, Lorea Boneke thinks about the process of growing up, Simon Hammond finds out what young people in residential care,Kate Lawrence examines the consequences of broken attachments for children who are looked in the care system,
Linnet McMahon writes about play and the facilitiating environment, Dave Roberts advocates reflective training for child care workers , Hans Kornerup provides his thoughts on theory and practice in residential child care, John Stein reminds us of the importance of Mums, Jennie Thomas thinks about the merits of a liberal education for our children and Matt Vince writes about good practice with children who have been absent from care.
For  articles from previous journals go to  http://www.goodenoughcaring.com/JournalIndex.aspx



Saturday, 23 April 2011

East End Film Festival, London, April 27th to May 2nd, 2011



Alison Poltock, the Artistic Director of the East End Film Festival tells us that this year's festival programme has, as ever, a great deal to offer children and adults alike. A special day will be Bank Holiday Monday, May 2nd, when a variety of events, all of them free, including film shows, live performances, exhibitions and interactive opportunities to learn about film making will be taking place in many venues at Spitalfields Market and in Brick Lane. On the same day at the Barbican there is an opportunity to see the most recent productions of young film makers from Tower Hamlets. The films are continuing to look at the  influence of the coming Olympic Games on the Tower Hamlets community. 
There are also outstanding films being shown all through the week in the east end. Visitors to the goodenoughcaring site who are in London during the week of the festival may wish to take an opportunity to watch :
Udaan directed by Vikramaditya is about the experiences of Rohan a 17 years old who is expelled from his boarding school for watching an adult movie.
Pink Halo Halo  directed by Joselito Altarejos tells the story of Natoy, a young boy who along with his mother tries to cope and come to terms with the dramatic fate of his father, a soldier in the ongoing war in Mindanao in the southern Philippines.
The Cage directed by Adrian Sitaru explores the conflicts between father and son when a boy brings home a sick dove.
Ways to Live Forever directed by Gustavo Ron is the tale of two teenage friends both suffering from Leukaemia who meet in hospital and draw up a list of things they want to do before they die. This includes learning about UFOs, horror movies, airships, ghosts and scientists, answers to their questions about dying and finding out how it feels to kiss !
There is also a reprise showing of the Scottish thriller Red Road directed by Andrea Arnold in which Jackie a CCTV operator  observes the lives of people on a Glasgow housing scheme from a bank of television screens. The showing of Red Road is linked with the London premiere of the film Donkey is the second film of the Advanced Party Project trilogy of Scottish films using the same actors.  Donkey is directed by Morag Mckinnon and is a film about the disastrous relationships of Alfred, an inveterate liar.
There are many more films to be seen during the week. To read the full festival programme of films and events go to
http://www.eastendfilmfestival.com/index.php?/programme/C27/
The festival's partner is the London Borough of Tower Hamlets and its funding bodies are Film London, the UK Film Council and the Arts Council.


This news article first appeared on the goodenoughcaring home page at http://www.goodenoughcaring.com
on April 23rd, 2011.

Tuesday, 29 March 2011

Conference : Promoting Recovery in Looked After and Adopted Children : Theory into Practice


This was first posted on the home page of goodenoughcaring at http://www.goodenoughcaring.com in January, 2011

Stuart Hannah tells us that the next Northern School of Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy conference  Promoting Recovery in Looked-After and Adopted Children : Theory into Practice  is to be held on 21st March, 2011 at NSCAP, Bevan House, 34-36 Springwell Road, Leeds, LS12 1AW

The principal speakers will be : Graham Music, Associate Clinical Director, Child and Family Department at the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust, Richard Rose, Lead Clinical Consultant at SACCS, who will speak on ‘Life story work and the healing process’ and Nick Frost, Professor of Social Work, Childhood, Children and Families, at Leeds Metropolitan University
The event which is sponsored by Bryn Melyn Care will be of value to sector leaders, CAMHS clinicians, LAC nurses, residential staff/managers and others who are concerned with outcomes for this vulnerable group of  children and young people.
For an application form for this event go to

Tuesday, 22 March 2011

"Celebrating Success in Residential Child Care "

This news item first appeared in January, 2011 on the home page of  goodenoughcaring at http://www.goodenoughcaring.com

A day conference,‘Celebrating Success in Residential Child Care'  will be held at the
Glasgow Marriott Hotel on  Tuesday, 22 March, 2011.
 
The Children, Young People and Social Care Directorate of the Scottish government have informed us of this event which will provide an opportunity for the residential child care sector and social work professionals to consider progress made on implementing the NRCCI recommendations. One of the main difficulties in making residential care the first and best choice for those children who need it is that all too often a bleak picture is painted of the sector. An important way of challenging the negative perceptions of residential child care is to draw attention to the many positive experiences of young people, parents and practitioners by providing a forum to celebrate success. This event will focus on the positive role residential child care has played in young people’s lives and will celebrate what for them have been positive outcomes. 
This event is aimed at residential child care practitioners, social workers, managers, students and all those with an interest in the developments within residential child care. The format of the event will provide for short facilitated discussions and networking.
Speakers include:
· Adam Ingram, Minister for Children and early Years
· Mark Smith,  University of Edinburgh and author of Rethinking Residential Child Care
· Dr Donald Forrester,  University of Bedfordshire, Director of the Child and Family Welfare Research unit.
· Zachari Duncalf, Research Fellow at Glasgow School of Social Work and Care leaver.
Contact :
If you wish to propose a workshop for the event or require a space for a stall or display please contact wendy.milne@scotland.gsi.gov.uk
 If you wish to reserve a place, please contact Suzanne Allan on 0131 244 0407 or by e-mail at Suzanne.allan@scotland.gsi.gov.uk by Friday 18 February, indicating whether you have a special dietary or other special requirements. There is no charge for this event.
______________________________________________________________________

Tuesday, 8 March 2011

Social Care Ireland’s first National Conference : 'Bringing Back Innovation and Creativity to Social Care'

This year’s annual conference which will be held at the Sheraton hotel, Athlone on 9-10th March 2011,is the first conference presented by the new umbrella body of Social Care Ireland (consisting of the IASCW, RMA and IASCE). Building on last year’s theme, this combined conference  promotes the development and integration of social care practice, management and education. The theme of this conference focuses on the recognition of the current difficult economic climate and the need for new ideas and creativity in maintaining and achieving quality care services in Ireland. A range of topics will be presented at this year’s forum under the theme of creativity and innovation.
The principal speakers will be
Geraldine Ring, the director for the Matt Talbot Adolescent Services, which provides drug and alcohol treatment services to young people with serious drug problems : Dave Williams the acting Chairperson of Social Care Ireland who lectures in the Department of Social Sciences at the Dublin Institute of Technology ; Gaye Graham, lectures in the Department of Social Sciences at the Dublin Institute of Technology: Raymond Watson lectures at the Open Training College ; Aiden Carthy lectures at the Department of Humanities at the Institute of Technology, Blanchardstown ; Jim Cantwell, a lecturer at the Waterford Institute of Technology ; Clare Hopkins lectures at the Open Training College ; Roisin McGlone is a lecturer at the Department of Humanities, Institute of Technology, Sligo ; Laura Steckley is course director of MSc In Advanced Residential Care at the Glasgow School of Social Work, a joint school of the Universities of Glasgow and Strathclyde ; Dr. Brian McClean is the Principal Clinical Psychologist for the Brothers of Charity, Roscommon who was at the forefront of the move towards non aversive strategies and the use of behaviour support plans for people labelled as challenging in Ireland ; Ona McGrath lectures at the Department of Social and General Studies at Cork institute of Technology ; Dr. Carmel Gallagher is a lecturer in the Department of Social Sciences at the Dublin Institute of Technology; Dr. Martin Power is a University Fellow with the Discipline of Health Promotion, National University of Ireland, Galway who is co-ordinator on the BA Social Care ; Eric Valente does statistical research at the National Perinatal Epidemiology Centre (NPEC), Cork ; Tamsin Cavaliero lectures at the Institute of Technology, Sligo ; Dr. Kay Inckle lectures in the School of Social Work and Social Policy in Trinity College Dublin ; Susan Ni Chuileann  holds an MSc in Applied Forensic Psychology and lectures at Carlow College ; Brenda Kneafsey is a research officer with the Irish Association of Young People in Care ; Fiona Daly is a research officer with the Irish Association of Young People in Care ; Derek McDonnell is a community child care leader in the Social Work Department in Co. Laois and Mary Jennings  has a background in communications and marketing and works in the Community and Voluntary sector as well as the private sector.
For more information about the conference in the first instance contact Noel Howard at : nhcc2@eircom.net 

This item appeared first on the http://www.goodenoughcaring.com website homepage on February 1st, 2011 where you will find the latest news and opinion items.

Wednesday, 2 March 2011

"Community Care" Survey

Camilla Pemberton of Community Care has written to us about a survey the magazine is carrying out which is "looking at the effect of government spending cuts on adults and children’s social care providers." Camilla is particularly hoping for responses from children’s homes. The survey is completely anonymous and readers can link to it at  http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/FKC8YYM

This first appeared on the http://www.goodenoughcaring.com home page on February 10th, 2011

Sunday, 13 February 2011

The Autumn 2010 issue of the Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care is now online

Alan Macquarrie the Librarian of the Scottish Institute of Residential Child Care writes :

Visitors to the goodenoughcaring site may be interested to know that the Autumn 2010 issue of the Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care has recently appeared. This contains articles by the three main speakers at the CCHN Annual Conference held at Toddington in November 2009 (Mark Smith, Noel Howard, and June Junes) based on their presentations there. There are also articles on staff vetting in residential care in Ireland, health care research with young people in Scotland, and relational residential care in the United States. There are also student impressions of the SIRCC annual conference 2009, and a number of book reviews of new titles.

It is available online at: http://www.sircc.org.uk/node/1497

This is well worth a look. 

This item first appeared on the Home Page of  the goodenoughcaring website at http://www.goodenoughcaring.com in November, 2011

From Coalface to Facebook? Report of the CCHN Conference November 2010 conference

David Lane writes :
Under the title From Coalface to Facebook? - using the new social media and technology to record, remember and share child care experience , the Child Care History Network received a fascinating range of contributions at its most recent conference.
Posing the Questions
Introducing the theme Charles Sharpe indicated both the opportunities provided by new technology with its challenge to long-held values, and the fears abroad that these opportunities might spiral out of control. Up to now the means of recording the histories of children in care had all been in the hands of adults, but new means of communication such as Twitter, Skype and Facebook had given children and young people the chance to communicate and to record events. They could now tell their stories as they wanted them to be told. They could put themselves forward as celebrities, known around the world, with hundreds of ‘friends’.
Charles alluded to the potential danger of having, and sharing, too much information. The new media could also be destructive. Some fear it harbours the possibility of changing the nature of families; older generations might not  hold the knowledge and power any longer. Everyone could now be an active participant, and not just a passive recipient or listener to the wisdom of others.
Not all children have access to new technology, and there is a divide between the haves and the have-nots, and between the opportunities they have to communicate.There was too a fear that electronic social networking did not have the constraints built up over generations in other types of relationship, as bullying via  Facebook or mobile phones had shown. Children on the computer may be more solitary and less well protected. Internet relationships may also have an air of unreality about them, with participants putting forward the image they want to project.
The European Court of Justice had ruled that a child’s file was to be seen as the equivalent of his/her family memory. There was a danger that, in order to avoid being put at risk, social workers and other workers responsible for recording would defensively avoid problems by producing minimalist, bland, dead records. Charles argued that professionals should be trained and encouraged to use new media technology to engage with looked after children in writing their life narratives.
He closed his introduction with questions he hoped might be considered during the day. Are privacy and confidentiality things of the past?  Are child care staff resistant to making full use of new technology? Are they right to be resistant? What will be lost in switching from written records and letters to the new forms of electronic communication? What might all this mean ? While technology changes apace  what might the new media be by 2020 ?

How New Technology has Developed
John Moorhouse gave an expert overview of the ways in which new technology had developed over the last two decades. He noted that people were quite reasonably afraid of the scope of new technology, as they did not understand it and feared that it might be beyond their control.
Over recent years one technological development after another had been introduced.
At first web pages were static, but they had now become dynamic, with the separation of the text and the background. Systems now permitted greater control, such as colour changes. Users could now modify content on the web.
Blogs and social networking sites enabled everyone to participate and contribute comments on collaborative websites. Wikipedia had started as a website about weaving, and it now had three million entries. The question was posed: who owns the information?
John went on to discuss other systems where users were not controlled by servers. Using cloud computing information might be anywhere. Peer-to-peer contacts did not involve servers, such as mobile phones, Skype, email, iPlayer and SETI, using spare power.
He argued that electronic social networking mirrored traditional forms of social interaction. The electronic systems had developed from simple inexpensive geosite models to Friends Re-united in contact by email, and then to Facebook, Bebo and Myspace, which included profiles, blogs, photo galleries, instant messaging, fan clubs, geolocation, multimedia galleries, discussion forums, rakings, polls and much more. There was now scope for varying audiences for messages - individuals, friends, families, registered users or the whole internet. There was also the chance for professional networking offline.
The pace of development had been astounding; it remains to be seen whether it will continue, or whether this area of technology has now been thoroughly exploited.
A New Sort of Life Story Book
Simon Hammond from the University of East Anglia spoke about a research project in which new technology is used to create a new style of life story book for children looked after by local authorities. He started by acknowledging the concerns there were about the vulnerability of children in relation to new technology, and the fear that technology might take over.
However, in terms of the basic needs of children being looked after by local authorities, there were ways in which new technology could be of help. Some young people did not have basic family information, for example about their parents, and this could be provided privately and directly by phone.
Simon had focused on life story work, trying to see it from the perspective of the young people. The built environment was an important part of their memories, and so Simon accompanied young people round their home areas, filming the streets where they had lived and played, their schools, their children’s homes and so on. They were encouraged to speak on camera about the things that mattered to them and that they wanted to record. They used webcams, camera phones, blogs, pictures and clips.
Out of this, the life stories which emerged as the young people talked through their experiences became more coherent. Simon worked in several children’s homes over a period of nine months, and each life story book went through a process of planning, filming, editing, production and then a premier.
What was the impact of the project? It produced information which would otherwise have been concealed. The children could not get enough of the new technology. The staff were underconfident with the new technology but favoured the podcasting. The general atmosphere in the homes was also affected. For example, the process enabled a boy with Tourette’s to communicate, and he calmed down.
The research project was, however, only a starting point, but the use of new technology with all its risks and potential is here to stay. “It’s a way of life, isn’t it?”

The Views of the Subjects of Child Care Records
Dr Jim Goddard of the Care Leavers’ Association spoke from the perspective of people who had used the services. The CLA had 300 members from an estimated 350,000 people who had been through the care system in the UK. Members had a variety of concerns, such as access to their files, dealing with the stigma of having been in care, and having no family (or a dysfunctional family) to turn to.
Very often on leaving care, young people make a break with their foster carers or children’s homes, but later they may want to check out their past and make contact. Leaving care is rather like leaving siblings behind. Very few care leavers have much by way of oral family history or photographs of their families.
There is also Care Leavers Re-united, set up in 2002 and run by the CLA since 2003. It has 5510 people on its books, of whom about 90% are people formerly in care and 10% are care staff, foster carers or relatives of people who were in care.
Jim noted a number of issues they faced. Not everyone wants to make contact; some want to leave their care experiences behind a closed door. Some need support, which CLA tries to offer. Strikingly, less than 0.1% of the contacts make allegations of abuse.

Mapping Children’s Homes
Gudrun Limbrick described the recently completed project in Birmingham in which all the 150+ children’s homes in use between 1949 and 1990 were recorded. Two staff worked on the project, and when it began in 2000 the internet was not considered, but recently it had attracted a lot of participants, and 65% of the contacts had been made that way.#
The project is due to close shortly, and the next stage is not clear, as so much is changing. There were still difficulties with privacy laws. For example, many children’s homes (especially the smaller ones) were known by street and number, and where these had been sold to private owners it was felt inappropriate to publicise the addresses. It was not felt possible to share photographs where they included people who had not given permission. Birmingham was planning to go paperless, but this was not acceptable to the Courts.
A Contentious Subject
Finally Mark Twinberrow, Dr Craig Fees and Gemma Geldart spoke of the PETT-based research project designed to gather memories of therapeutic care, and Bodenham Manor was selected as the example. The project had held ‘archive weekends’, to which former staff and former pupils were invited to share and record their memories. Craig said that an archive is a holding place for memories, and that gaps in memories diminish people. For more information about the project see the website Therapeutic Living with Other People’s Children, which contains an internal Facebook.
Mark Twinberrow spoke of his two periods at Bodenham Manor. He mentioned the nasty regime and the bullying he experienced. Yet he got to know the other boys and they became his family. And the school became his home.
The day ended with some impassioned discussion, as Mark Twinberrow argued forcefully that he felt he had a right to see the Bodenham archives. It had been his home and the school community had been his family, and as such he argued that he should not be denied access by archivists whose interests were professional and who had not been in the ‘family’. He had assisted in safeguarding the Bodenham archives but now felt powerless to see what he wanted to see.
Craig Fees pointed out that under privacy laws people could see what related to themselves but not the documents and pictures relating to other people. Whether this should be the case was clearly a matter for debate, and possibly action by CCHN.
And in Conclusion
In summarising, Richard Rollinson pointed out that in 1465 Gutenberg produced the first printed book in western Europe, and in the following 75 years more books were printed than had been produced in the whole of previous history. The electronic age of communication is delivering a similar explosion of communication, but involving almost the whole of the population. He concluded that we need to get involved to maximise the positives and minimise the negative impacts.
Finally a halt had to be called as the conference overran its time. As with other CCHN conferences there was a fascinating mixture of participants. Sadly there were fewer attending than usual, and greater attention must be paid to advertising future events. The quality of inputs and debate merited a larger group.

This item first appeared on the goodenoughcaring website Home Page at http://www.goodenoughcaring.com  on January 10th 2011.A version of this article was first published in the January issue of the Children Webmag. Links to the Children Webmag and to the Child Care History Network can be found in the Useful Links section on the goodenoughcaring Home Page..

Exploring a role for new technologies in life story work with adolescents in residential care : Simon Hammond’s website

 Readers will be aware of the writing of Simon Hammond from his articles for the goodenoughcaring Journal about residential child care workers who were themselves in care as children and also about the use of new technology in residential child care and in particular its potential it offers for  life story work. You can keep up to date with Simon’s University of East Anglia doctoral research on his website at
http://www.uea.ac.uk/swp/people_old/shammond?mode=print