Title: Outcomes Based Accountability Regional Network Event
1Outcomes Based AccountabilityRegional Network
Event
2 3OBA overview
- Outcomes based practice is a disciplined way of
thinking and taking action that can be used to
improve the quality of life in communities and to
improve the performance of services and
agencies. - Outcomes based accountability starts with results
and works back to determine a means to achieving
the results. It is a process that gets
practitioners, agencies, communities and their
partners from talk to action quickly through a
series of exercises and use of common language.
4Benefits of OBA
- OBA can
- Integrate local data linked to outcomes and
support service planning - Identify data gaps and help to prioritise
outcomes and performance indicators - Help to get from talk to action quickly
- Encourages joint ownership for the agreement of
desired outcomes and the actions necessary to
achieve them, either within a community or within
a service area
5Outcome Based Accountabilityis made up of two
parts
- Population Accountabilityabout the well-being
ofWHOLE POPULATIONS - For Communities Cities Counties States
Nations - Performance Accountabilityabout the well-being
ofCUSTOMER POPULATIONS - For Programmes Agencies and Service Systems
6Leaking Roof(Results thinking in everyday life)
Experience
Inches of Water
Not OK
Measure
Story behind the baseline (causes)
Partners
What Works
Action Plan
7OBA overview continued
- Common language Everyone understands
- Common Sense Starts with the ends and work
backwards - Common Ground collective decision on what needs
to be achieved
8Common ground
9Common GroundExercise 1
- Part 1
- Each representative in your group states
- which agency they are from, what service area
- they are from, what the agency wants to achieve.
- Part 2
- Any partners that you would work with, and what
- specific area you would work with them on.
10Outcomes Indicators
11Outcomes Indicators Exercise 2
- Part A Outcomes 20mins
- Start with ends
- What is the Outcome that the Regional Network
wants to achieve - E.g. To develop an outcomes focused approach to
affect change regionally and nationally - Achieving outcomes
- Positive contribution
- Ownership
- Populations
- Performance
- Joint working
-
- We should all agree upon one
- outcome from your discussions
-
- Part B Indicators 20mins
- What would measure the success of your chosen
Outcome - You should have 2/3
- Indicators agreed by the
- group.
- NB. You must not include any
- service or program in your indicator as
- you are focusing on population
- accountability -
12Story behind the baseline Exercise 3
13Story behind the baseline
- Story- deliberately chosen word
- Oldest form of communication
- Oldest form of retained knowledge
- Oldest way in which we transform life experience
into useful lessons - Is a way of sharing different perspectives
- Is not necessary for partners to reach an
agreement on a single story - Diversity of opinion is a healthy process
- You want to gain as much information on causes as
you can - This allows you to have choices about your
actions
14Story behind the baseline Exercise 3
- Plotted baseline.
- What does it look like?
- Part B Story behind the
- baseline 15mins
- In your groups discuss the
- reason as to why the
- baseline is plotted the
- way it is. What is the story
- or the reasoning behind
- what the baseline shows?
- Look at the story behind from
- other perspectives not just your
- own. This could be the
- perspective of the community,
- partners, staff, etc.
15Lunch
16What works
- Case Studies
- Coventry,
- Dudley,
- Shropshire Telford and Wrekin
17Coventry Children and Young Peoples Strategic
Partnership
- Outcomes
- Based
- Accountability
- Andy Walmsley / Marc Harder
- March 2008
healthy
safe
enjoying achieving
positive contribution
economic well-being
supported
integrated
18Outcomes based presentation
- What will success look like?
- By 2010 Outcomes will be improved for
children and young people - April 2008 Priorities embedded in Sustainable
Communities Plan - May/June Priorities will be included in CYP
Plan - May/June Our CYPP will be more streamlined and
focused on outcomes - By Mar 09 Each workstream will have completed,
established and owned a Turning the
Curve action plan - Ongoing Our partnership structures will become
increasingly more outcomes focused
19Key messages
- By no means experts
- OBA Programme beginning to take shape
- Zeal
- Still many curves to turn
- Green shoots
- Linking to LSP is key alcohol, obesity
20Coventry CYPSP Annual Data Day
healthy
safe
enjoying achieving
positive contribution
economic well-being
supported
integrated
21Scorecard
- Population All Coventry Children Young People
- Measure improved outcomes for CYP
- Story behind the baseline Data Book
- Partners Council, PCT, Connexions, Fire Service,
Schools, Parents, Children, Voluntary sector,
Ethnic Minorities Partnership, Youth Offending
Service, LSC, Chamber and others - What works focusing on what really makes a
difference - 92 rated event helped to identify the issues
that really matter
22Data Book
23Data Day Programme
- CYPs DVD Young People
- Link to sustainable community strategy / LAA
Chief Exec - National perspective - IDeA
- Telling the story - strategic Leads
- 2007 Performance Programme Board Chair
- Emerging Issues Director
- Group discussions re emerging issues
- CYP views
- Voting exercise
- Turning the Curve exercise
- Plenary next steps
24Coventry Children Young Peoples Strategic
Partnership March 2008
25Top Tips before the event
- You cannot over-prepare for this!
- Have information available well before the event
- OBA Champions or at least advocates
- Pull in every favour you possibly can
- Prepare A3 laminated voting sheets / action plans
- Workshop facilitator briefing
26Top Tips on the day
- Young peoples views are a priority!
- Be as representative as possible
- External facilitator / expert brings a fresh
approach - Be realistic about expectations
- Help delegates realise how it fits in with the
big picture - - Sustainable Communities / Narrowing the Gap
/ National indicator set regional and
national initiatives
27scores on the doors
- 70 attendees
- Facilitated by IdEA
- Data book used in recent DCSF meeting
- 93 rated good or excellent
- 77 rated good or excellent value to their
service - 92 rated event helped to identify the issues
that really matter - Most useful aspect focusing on what really
makes a difference
28Many curves to be turned
29Not all curves in Coventry are going in the right
direction and some will take longer than others
to turn!
30But theyre in good company and some are just
impossible to turn!
31Proposed priorities for 2008/09 based on data day
voting exercise
32Being Healthy 2008/09 priorities
- Fewer Teenage pregnancies
- Reduce Alcohol consumption among young people
- Mental Health services for children.
- Reduce Childhood Obesity
- Reduce Infant Deaths
- Reduce Sexually Transmitted Infections
healthy
33Staying Safe 2008/09 priorities
- Early intervention and identification of need
- Involving families and CYP in all stages across
agencies - Offending and Re-offending
- Fewer children are victims of repeat abuse
- Fewer children are affected by domestic Violence
- Less harm is caused by illegal drugs to CYP
safe
34Enjoying Achieving 2008/09 priorities
- Children are more ready for school
- The educational achievement of Looked After
Children and other under achieving groups will
improve - Play, sport, enterprise and culture
- Provision for CYP not attending school
- School attendance improves for LAC
- Fewer children are excluded from school
Enjoying and achieving
35Positive Contribution 2008/09 priorities
- More young people engage in voluntary and
community activities, including inter-
generational work - More CYP develop social and emotional skills to
successfully deal with significant life changes
and chances - CYP influences on service design are recognised
- Celebrate and recognise CYP's involvement
- CYP influence the design and delivery of
services
Making a positive contribution
36Economic Well-being 2008/09 priorities
- Fewer school leavers become NEETs
- Better preparation for CYP for a life of
economic success - Fewer children live in low income households
- More CYP live in decent homes and sustainable
communities - Fewer children live in workless households
- More childcare places are available and the take
up increases
Economic Well-being
37Supportive families, friends communities
2008/09 priorities
- Identifying and supporting isolated and
vulnerable families in their communities - Recognising and celebrating children's positive
roles in their communities - Incidents of bullying fall
- Partners support the parenting strategy
supported
38For more info please contact
- Marc Harder, CYPSP Co-ordinator
- 024 7683 4337
- marc.harder_at_coventry.gov.uk
- Andy Walmsley, Head of Strategy
- 024 7683 1500
- andy.walmsley_at_coventry.gov.uk
39OBA in Dudley
- Presentation for the West Midlands Regional
Network, Telford Wrekin, 20th March 2008
40OBA - My experience to date
- The plus side
- General interest and some champions within CSS
Division - Applied and developed in a number of areas
internally and within strategic partnership
- The minus side
- Competing with existing frameworks of dubious
value - Lack of clear leadership for any framework, not
just OBA - OBA has been found to be useful, but remains
unproven locally
41In particular
- It can support the delivery of strategy and
should inform the development of strategy - The emphasis on accountability, as distinct from
responsibility, should be emphasised - Its focus on contributions, what each of us
bring to the party, sits well with the salad
rather than the soup approach to integrated
working - Indicator-driven performance management continues
to distract senior managers and Members from an
Outcomes focus and real performance measures
42Contd
- We continue to demand a disciplined and
researched approach of our staff more so than of
our managers and leaders - OBA is itself means to an end, a framework and
tools amongst many competing frameworks and
tools, it requires an understanding of its fit
and relative value - OBA supports the theoretically dominant AT (not
TT/command and control) approach
43Contd
- Action (in Talk to Action) is deeper than just
initiatives, What Works, Action Plans and Budgets - Performance changes when individual behaviours
change - Delivery happens at the front-line requiring
behavioural change from the bottom-up - Direction (not necessarily leadership) occurs
top-down and is essential to achieve performance
focussed behavioural and cultural change across
the board
44OBA next steps
- Incorporating it into its rightful place in the
organisations management and practice tools - Incremental implementation building on its proven
value - Using it to support operational staff in the
delivery of services - Using it to assist strategic managers and leaders
to develop informed strategy
45Some of my examples
- CSS Division Business Plan (developing first
draft) - Care Management Service Plan (first draft
developed) - PIs, PMs and Accountancy Data (now in a baseline
chart form) - LCF Improvement Plan (proposed)
- EDT (developing performance measures)
- Reducing LAC numbers (TtC applied and actions
being implemented) - PEP Improvement Plan (first draft developed and
identifying significant improvement where
applied) - Supervision PRD (proposed)
- HS Board (proposed)
- Walsall Fostering Panel (On offer!)
46What Works?
47What Works? Exercise 4
- In your groups discuss what has worked to
- achieve outcomes and change the trends.
- For each point raised think about
- What data is available
- What Information is already available,
- Who has what information, and
- What do they do with it.
Information Flow
48Coffee Break
49Action Planning
50Action Plan/Strategy
- To set priorities for the action plan the
- following criteria should be followed
- Is the idea specific enough to be implemented?
- How much difference will the proposed action make
on results, indicators and the outcome? - Is it consistent with your agencies values?
- Is it affordable and achievable?
51Two natural pointersfor Action planning
- First, from each part of the story behind the
baseline points to an action - E.g. fear of crime is poor lighting pointer is
to improve lighting - Second, Each partner and potential partner has
something to contribute to turning the curve.
52OBA Regional Network Action plan and Timescales
Exercise 5
- In your groups discuss actions to move
- forward, keeping in mind the criteria set in
- the previous slide.
- You must include low cost actions,
- no cost actions, and off the wall actions.
- Also state start and completion dates for
- actions
53(No Transcript)
54Summary
55Thank you
- Shropshire Strategic Lead
- Laura Johnston
- Head of Service Multi Agency Teams
- Email laura.johnston_at_shropshire.gov.uk
- Telford Wrekin Strategic Lead
- Sara Tough
- Senior Manager Change for Children
- Sara.tough_at_telford.gov.uk
- Parvinder Chana
- Outcomes Based Accountability Officer
- Email
- parvinder.chana_at_telford.gov.uk
- Tel Office 01952 385521
- Work Mobile 07807966161
- Sharonlee Young
- Outcomes Based Accountability
- Support Officer
- Email Sharonlee.young_at_telford.gov.uk
- Tel Office 01952 385517