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National Childrens Bureau

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National Centre for Excellence in Residential Child Care (NCERCC) ... unwilling and anxiously obedient, and unconcerned about the troubles of others ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: National Childrens Bureau


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National Centre for Excellence in Residential
Child Care (NCERCC)
  • Desire - the link between intention and
    achievement Commissioning is a parenting and
    child care activity.  

3
Desire as distinct from vision or motivation
  • Vision - external, drawing onwards, imagination
    of the future
  • Motivation - the need or reason to do something
  • Desire - internal, seeking external communication
    and actualisation

4
Premise
  • Significant development - administration and
    financing of placements
  • Insufficient discourse of parenting and child
    care thinking.
  • Unintended consequences - inadvertently separated
    from the task of looking after children.
  • By placing the child at the centre of what we do
    in our commissioning activity we keep the voice
    in the child central.

5
Purpose
  • Start discussion regarding the purpose and aims
    of commissioning in child care terms around the
    following question
  • What is the definition of quality we are using in
    planning placements for children and is it
    related to the task of caring for /parenting them

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Safety, trust, dependency and relationships/enviro
nments for learning
  • Understanding proceeds by a series of additive
    steps.. By changes of positionin the whole
    perspective from which things are viewed.
  • Learning is promoted in environment of emotional
    safety/trust.
  • For effective learning we need to feel safe,
    accepted, secure, able to explore, and to have an
    individual sense of identity.
  • Dependence is a pre-condition for independence

7
  • Rogers - Personality as a process of becoming
  • Maslow - Pyramid of needs
  • Erikson - Ages and stages
  • Winnicott - Potential space
  • Bowlby
  • Loving care leads on to confidence and
    cooperation
  • Anxious children apprehensive, become
    reluctant, unwilling and anxiously obedient, and
    unconcerned about the troubles of others

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What is Commissioning?
  • The process by which local authorities decide how
    to spend their money to get the best possible
    services for local people.

9
Core Elements of Commissioning
  • www.regionalcommissioning.com
  • common values understanding needs/preferences
    map existing services vision how needs may be
    better met strategic framework for procuring
    bring together all data dialogue effective
    systems for service changes evidence-based
    approach evaluate for measurably better
    outcomes improving alignment

10
Other terms used to describe commissioning but
which are not commissioning
  • Procurement sourcing, selection, securing
    services.
  • Purchasing buying services
  • Contracting one specific part of the wider
    commissioning process the selection,
    negotiation and agreement with the provider of
    the exact legally binding terms on which the
    service is to be supplied.
  • Commissioning the process of specifying,
    securing and monitoring services to meet
    individuals' needs

11
  • Compulsory competitive tendering (1980s)
  • 3 Es - economy, efficiency, effectiveness
  • Best value (2002)
  • 4 Cs challenge, comparison, consultation and
    competition.
  • Gershon report - HM Treasury - Releasing
    resources for the frontline Independent Review
    of Public Sector Efficiency
  • Commissioners - best value for money - quality
    and price.
  • 3 Es being described in terms of the 4 Cs.
  • In Gershon terms commissioners are successful -
    primary task savings.

12
National Occupational Standard for commissioners
  • creating and maintaining effective working
    relationships
  • identifying and responding to the needs
  • promoting effective communication and information
    sharing
  • But not required to have a knowledge of the
    Common Core
  • Consequence - not equally appreciate needs of
    young people and provision
  • Stability emotional/psychological or
    geographical/financial?
  • Occupancy dynamic/relational or mathematical?
    85 or 100?

13
Standards agenda, quality and care
  • Measurable - but mechanistic? Away from
    caring/parenting?
  • 5 types of approach to defining quality (Pfeffer
    and Coote)
  • The Traditional Approach quality grade, 5 star
    better than BB.
  • The Scientific/ Expert Approach - conformance to
    specification
  • The Managerial. Excellence Approach
    satisfaction, excellence
  • The Consumeristic Approach - satisfaction, price,
    gift offers
  • The Democratic Approach - morally doing things
    right.

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  • Other services - provider is doing something for
    the consumer
  • Care services - provider is doing something for
    and to the consumer.
  • A process of transformation - unique, negotiated

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What works in Residential Child Care
  • Culture
  • Theories for practice
  • Clarity of purpose
  • Leadership
  • Relationships
  • Relationships between children
  • Relationships with family members
  • Countering institutionalisation
  • Therapeutic support
  • Staff involvement

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8 Pillars of Parenting
  • www.pillarsofparenting.co.uk
  • Primary care and protection
  • Secure attachments, making close relationships.
  • Positive self-perception
  • Emotional compliance
  • Self management skills
  • Resilience
  • A sense of belonging
  • Personal and social responsibilities with the
    help of others and developing personal views of
    fairness and reciprocity.

17
  • Watson 2003 Defining quality care for looked
    after children frontline workers perspectives
    on standards and all that? Child and family
    social work 2003, 8, pp 67-77.
  • Standards about the task of enhancing quality
    in the life of children.
  • If not they lead away from meeting need and
    towards meeting
  • competencies, a displacement from task. Caring
    task is left undone
  • So standards must not be too abstract,
    operational in daily life.
  • 2 prerequisites for care are listening and
    communication.

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  • What will enhance quality care?
  • Consistency, teamwork, committed staff,
  • Good environment
  • Good manager
  • Small units.
  • What will restrict quality care?
  • Lack of resources and this related mainly to
    money for activities.
  • Lack of training leading to an inconsistency and
    lack of shared understanding of the task.

19
Berridge and Brodie - 13 Quality-of-care
variables
  • Quality of relationships between staff and young
    people
  • Degree of staff involvement with young people
  • Child-centred or institution-oriented
  • Adequacy of educational environment
  • Care for minority ethnic groups
  • Young peoples involvement
  • Control problems
  • Staff morale
  • Focus of staff concerns on narrow or wider issues
  • Emphasis on family contact
  • Community links
  • Relationships with social workers
  • Relationships with external professionals

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  • Traditional organisational development processes
    focus on
  • defining a problem
  • seeking to fix it
  • measure or assess whether the solution had
    actually worked
  • Appreciative Enquiry processes focus on
  • encourages people search for what already works
    well
  • amplify this by focusing on positive throughout
    an organisation

21
Relational commissioning commissioning as a
parenting and child care activity
  • IDeA Debates and dilemmas
  • The transition to joint planning and
    commissioning is a step change that requires
    clear leadership. Effective joint planning and
    commissioning necessitates new partnerships,
    redistribution of power strategic understanding
    of how all outcomes are met, and a more
    commercially minded approach to procurement all
    focused on the child and young person.

22
Joint Planning and Commissioning Framework for
children, young people and families
  • Commissioning is not just a technical activity
    that is about procurement and purchasing
    services. Rather it is a way of thinking and
    approaching services design and deliveryit
    requires a fundamental shift in thinking.

23
Petrie and Wilson define relational commissioning
as
  • A shared identity and common value system mutual
    dependence and trust risk-sharing a presumption
    of the incompleteness of the contract a
    commitment to managing contractual arrangements
    and to extensive communication.

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Relational contracting requires
  • an appreciation that personal, professional and
    social values influence the nature and process of
    the working relationship
  • the importance of building relationships over
    time, trust has to be established or anticipated
    - there has to be a history and a future.
  • mutual trust is greater than individual
    self-interest

25
4 connected features for effective contractual
relationships
  • pivotal, respectful relationships between key
    senior staff members
  • collaborative relationships at lower levels of
    staff
  • success with difficult to meet needs cases
  • mutual advantage

26
Commissioning needs itself to be transformed and
requires
  • shifting from product to learning
  • developing explicit skills, attitudes, and
    abilities as well as knowledge
  • developing appropriate assessment procedures
  • rewarding transformative practice
  • encouraging discussion of practice of both
    commissioner and provider
  • providing transformative learning for all
    commissioners and providers
  • fostering new collegiality
  • linking quality improvement to learning
  • auditing improvement.

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Defining quality (Harvey Green, 1993)
  • The transformative view of quality is rooted in
    the notion of qualitative change, a fundamental
    change of form. Ice is transformed into water and
    eventually steam if it experiences an increase in
    temperature. While the increase in temperature
    can be measured the transformation involves a
    qualitative change. Ice has different qualities
    to that of steam or water. Transformation is not
    restricted to apparent or physical transformation
    but also includes cognitive transcendence.

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  • National Centre for Excellence in Residential
    Child Care (NCERCC)
  • National Childrens Bureau
  • 8 Wakley Street
  • London EC1V 7QE
  • www.ncb.org.uk/ncercc
  • E-mail jstanley_at_ ncb.org.uk
  • Tel 020 7843 1168 Fax 020 7278 8340

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