Title: The Childrens Plan
1The Childrens Plan
Building Brighter Futures
2What is the Childrens Plan?
- the government wants to make England the best
place in the world to grow up - the Childrens Plan sets out how it wants to
achieve that over the next ten years
What are the challenges the Childrens Plan
addresses?
- Children have more opportunities than ever
before, but they also face new risks from e.g.
new media and from anxiety about safety playing
outside - Some, particularly disadvantaged, children do not
have as many opportunities as their peers and are
at risk of falling further behind - While many of those who work in services for
children and many of those services are
excellent, there is still too much variation in
quality between and within places
3How was the Childrens Plan put together?
Time to talk
National consultation Focus groups with
children Day of deliberative events in four
locations
Parents who are less well-informed and lack
confidence should be offered support themselves
delivered in a way which does not patronise them,
or make them feel inadequate as parents
Parents responding to Online Survey
We need parks with park-keepers, leisure and
adventure sports facilities, places where young,
old, teenagers and families can all mingle and
have fun Parents responding to Online Survey
We need workers involved with children and
families who are both linked into communities but
who are also well trained and skilled
Respondent to Online Survey
Secondary schools should teach all children
life skills which will help them to obtain
worthwhile jobs when they leave. - Female from
Reading
4Expert groups looked at cross-cutting issues
0-7 Expert Group
Three groups covering different ages, considering
issues crossing institutional boundaries
Made up of professionals such as teachers,
doctors, police, people from local authorities,
the voluntary sector, commentators
8-13 Expert Group
14-19 Expert Group
Expert Group reports are available online at
www.dcsf.gov.uk/timetotalk
5The Childrens Plan is built on five key
principles
Parents Government does not bring up children
parents do
Enjoyment Children and young people need to enjoy
their childhood
Potential All children have the potential to
succeed
Prevention It is always better to prevent failure
than tackle a crisis later
Responsive services Services need to be shaped by
and responsive to children, young people and
their families
6Supporting parents
The Childrens Plan sets out an ambitious new
programme to support parents in doing the best
for their children
- Better support and advice for parents everywhere
through 2 parenting expert advisers in every
local authority - Exploring a parent-held progress record for every
child with information about child development
beyond 5 based on the red book - More involvement for parents in secondary schools
through Parent Councils, information sessions on
transition to secondary school and more regular
information on childrens progress
7Children enjoying childhood
Children deserve happy childhoods as well as one
which prepare them for the future
- 225m investment in better playgrounds in
communities providing safe places for children
aged 0-13 to play - Faster growth in youth facilities to ensure young
people have places to go and things to do in
their spare time - 5 hours of cultural activities a week to be on
offer - Review of impact of commercial activity on
children and the Byron review on new media to
ensure children experience the benefits and not
the risks
8All children have the potential to succeed
A more consistently high quality system which
supports all children to make progress in their
learning from early years onwards
- More free places in early education for two year
olds - Enabling more training for early years workers
and faster progress towards graduate leadership - Better links between early years and primary
schools through 0-7 partnerships - A primary curriculum review to ensure enough time
to focus on literacy and numeracy and more
flexibility in the way for younger children to
learn - Support for children falling behind in writing to
go alongside existing help in reading and maths - A package for children with disabilities and
special needs including better facilities for
short breaks and better training for teachers - New tests to be taken when children are ready to
replace end of Key Stage tests at 11 as long as
trials are successful - Extra training for teachers to become a Masters
level profession - Raising leaving age to 18
9Always better to prevent failure
It can be difficult to step in early but it is
essential if problems are to be avoided later on
- Better outreach from Sure Start and other
services to make sure that the people who need
them get them - A review of child mental health services to
ensure that they can step in earlier - Help with home safety equipment for disadvantaged
families, to prevent accidents in the home - Swift action on schools which are not improving
- Better alternative provision to ensure those not
in mainstream schools do not fall behind - New programme to re-engage 16-19 year olds not in
learning to ensure they do not leave for good - Intervention earlier to prevent antisocial
behaviour through acceptable Behaviour Contracts - Focus on education and resettlement for young
offenders to prevent reoffending
10Services for children and families built around
their needs
Childrens Trusts and Every Child Matters have
begun the process of joint working which the
Childrens Plan takes a step further
- Childrens Trusts expected to have consistent,
effective arrangements to deliver improvements
and to identify problems early - Schools contribution to all ECM outcomes to be
recognised through new school-level indicators of
wider outcomes - Building Schools for the Future actively to
encourage co-location of services, e.g. schools
with child health
11The Childrens Plan sets out some ambitious goals
for 2020
- all young people participating in positive
activities to develop personal and social skills,
promote wellbeing and reduce behaviour that puts
them at risk - employers satisfied with young peoples readiness
for work - child health improved, with the proportion of
obese and overweight children reduced to 2000
levels - child poverty halved by 2010 and eradicated by
2020 and - significantly reduce by 2020 the number of young
offenders receiving a conviction, reprimand, or
final warning for a recordable offence for the
first time, with a goal to be set in the Youth
Crime Action Plan.
- enhance children and young peoples wellbeing,
particularly at key transition points in their
lives - every child ready for success in school, with at
least 90 per cent developing well across all
areas of the Early Years Foundation Stage Profile
by age 5 - every child ready for secondary school, with at
least 90 per cent achieving at or above the
expected level in both English and mathematics by
age 11 - every young person with the skills for adult life
and further study, with at least 90 per cent
achieving the equivalent of five higher level
GCSEs by age 19 and at least 70 per cent
achieving the equivalent of two A levels by age
19 - parents satisfied with the information and
support they receive
12More on implementing the Plan
- An implementation pack will be published at the
beginning of April containing - Revised PSA delivery agreements showing how we
will deliver targets for improvement - New ECM outcomes framework showing how new PSAs
and Departmental objectives plus Childrens Plan
commitments and 2020 goals all fit together - Notes setting out what the Childrens Plan means
in practice for those working with children and
their families - A timeline showing what will happen when over the
next 12-18 months
13Further consultation to inform implementation
The Childrens Plan marked the beginning of a new
relationships with children, parents and experts
of more active communication and involvement in
policy
- This will include the new Parents Panel to
comment on policy affecting parents - A continuing role for the Expert Groups in
assessing our progress on the Childrens Plan - Further deliberative events looking at how
policies on Play, Youth, Parents and Health
should develop - Expectation of local consultation on new play and
youth facilities - A report on progress on the Childrens Plan this
December