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The Centre Quality Improvement Initiative

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Title: The Centre Quality Improvement Initiative


1
The Centre Quality Improvement Initiative
Presentation to Secretarys Partnership
Forum June 2006 Michael WhiteTraining Manager
2
Overview
  • This presentation will explore
  • the concepts of quality assurance and quality
    improvement
  • advantages and challenges of various approaches
  • emerging government policy development relating
    to quality at federal and state level
  • evaluating the outcomes for organisations who
    have engaged in the strategy
  • and how we are developing strategies to
    facilitate sectoral improvement through
    cooperative learning, collaboration and
    integration of assurance and improvement
    strategies

3
Centre for Excellence in Child and Family Welfare
  • Established 1912
  • 15 EFT
  • 90 current members ranging from gt5 EFT to 500
    EFT
  • Engaged in Quality Initiative for over 5 years

4
What we are doing -
  • Supporting a sector wide aspirational quality
    improvement initiative by ddeveloping integrated
    learning based quality assurance and improvement
    strategy by
  • Training senior staff to become the internal
    experts in quality assurance and improvement in
    their organisation
  • Learning outcomes and credentialisation are tied
    to completion of organisational audits and self
    assessments using the ABEF and Foundations
    First as the preferred tools
  • using to enable organisations to undertake audits
    that meet registration requirements and support
    external audits

5
Why focus on quality?
  • all members are committed to improving the lives
    of children, young people and their families and
  • recognise that do so requires continuous
    improvement to the services offered
  • we already do it but call it different things
    e.g. best practice
  • community has a reasonable expectation of
    visible and transparent processed
  • 95 of members receive funding from more than one
    department/program/source (up to 50 programs in
    larger organisations)
  • organisations need to manage the foundational/
    aspirational quality tension
  • funders are responsible for managing the risk of
    the programs they fund (foundational quality)
  • organisations are responsible for their
    organisational quality (aspirational quality)

6
What are the different models of quality
7
Links to emerging government policies
  • In a context of perceptions of higher risk
    government is focusing on accreditation and
    organisational registration
  • Move to establish audit systems particularly in
    relation to services with vulnerable clients
  • Growing focus on service integration, cross
    government programs (eg community based intake,
    place based services, one stop service centres)
  • Development of government internal improvement
    and assurance systems

8
Why focus initially on aspirational quality?
  • Aim is to enhance the client experience of
    interaction with the whole organisation

9
About the ABEF
  • The ABEF describes what an organisation should be
    doing, but not how to do it thats up to the
    organization
  • The framework poses a number of questions which
    illuminate the issues facing organisations.
  • The framework provides an evaluation mechanism
    which leads to a gap analysis - a measure of
    where the organisation is, against where it wants
    to be in the future.
  • Evaluation requires the development of skills to
    define and measure present performance.

10
The ABEF approach offers
  • A way of building organisational coherence
  • Integrates all aspects of management in a single
    unified framework
  • we can work on foundational standards at the same
    time
  • Culture rather than conformance driven
  • No single formula or template - each organisation
    creates its own
  • internally driven, values centred approach
  • Internationally tested
  • When used with the awards process it tests
    achievement through evaluation, independent of
    the sector and of government

11
Cycle of continuous improvement
Your Organisation as a System
Australian Business Excellence Framework
Assess the Current State
Assessment Report
Achieve Improvements Outcomes
Identify Strengths and Opportunities for
Improvement
Hold Strengths and Implement Improvement Projects
Prioritise Opportunities for Improvement
12
Level of engagement
  • Over 300 participants in the Certificate III in
    Business Excellence
  • Over 70 progressing to the Certificate IV in
    Organisational Self-assessment.
  • Over 30 CSOs are now actively engaged in planning
    and implementing organisational self-assessments
  • Accrediation of Graduate Certificate in Community
    Service Excellence commenced to replace previous
    qualifications
  • Up to a further 20 CSOs are actively using
    formalised models including QICSA, EQUIP and ISO.

13
Sector learning strategies
  • Participants share both the challenges and
    successes of implementing quality improvement.
  • quarterly Learning Circles enable people with
    carriage of quality improvement to meet and learn
    from each other.
  • Yahoo internet group
  • Quality Newsletter
  • Fora
  • Working groups

14
What participants say
  • Its (the ABEFs) ability to help us articulate
    our aspirations is a major strength of this
    approach. The standards that we are required to
    comply with are often articulated as baseline or
    minimum standards of service delivery, in other
    words good enough service. The ABEF framework
    challenges us to articulate a vision that
    reflects an aspiration for service excellence, in
    other words to be the best we can be.
    Excellence has the potential to go beyond quality
    assurance.
  • Doug Dalton, CEO Connections, Former President,
    Centre for Child and Family Welfare Board
  • The ABEF is an ideal tool to measure and
    demonstrate the aspirational goals and
    achievements of any organisation.
  • Phil Back, Executive Assistant Goulburn Valley
    Family Care

15
Adding the assurance tier
  • Centre in response to members needs is developing
    a solution to the adoption of multiple audit and
    accreditation systems by government. Critical
    components of such a solution include
  • build on existing engagement with organisations
    aspirational quality
  • That standards are auditable and share consistent
    frameworks
  • that standards can be managed on an
    organisational rather than programmatic level
  • that standards developed are auditable

16
What is Foundations First?
  • A way of designing standards and creating a
    quality audit process for human services
  • Links to systems thinking within an organisation
    in which
  • All systems and processes required for compliance
    (internally or externally) are identified
  • Criteria for compliance are set
  • Evidence for compliance is measured

17
Foundations First Evidence Matrix
18
Combining Quality Improvement and Assurance
Implementation
Organisations engage in sector learning
strategies and share implementation processes
Standards promulgated
CSO engages in QI - identifies appropriate staff
to train
Staff achieve Dip Business (Auditing)
Staff achieve Grad Cert CSE
Standards mapped to Foundations First
CSO staff undertake Training
Improvements from Self assessment and internal
and external audits identified, prioritised and
implemented
Staff undertake internal audits (ABEF Cat 6
Process Control and Improvement activity)
Staff undertake organisational self-assessment
(supported by Centre/CLA/software)
External audits carried out
Commence annual cycle of continuous quality
improvement and seek BEA external evaluation (by
evaluators drawn from industry)
Business Excellence recognition from SAI Global
Organisation registered by Secretary
19
Centre Goals -
  • By implementing quality improvement and assurance
    strategies in partnership with DHS assist
    community service organisations to
  • Develop a values centred approach to quality
  • Be efficient by investing in internal capacity
    and expertise
  • Manage the foundational/aspirational dynamic
    effectively
  • Develop and support CSOs using the model to work
    together to create a culture of quality across
    the sector
  • resource the sector by training individuals who
    are skilled to implement quality improvement
  • Improve services to clients and be able to
    demonstrate that improvement

20
Conclusion
  • Quality is for the people using services
  • CSOs involved are building a sustainable,
    independent, flexible pathway to improvement
  • Supports partnership with government, within
    which compliance with required standards can be
    achieved
  • Based on embedding skills in organisation
  • Enables collaboration and sector improvement
  • Moving beyond the learning organisation to the
    development of a learning sector

21
Contact details
  • Michael White, Training Manager
  • Centre for Excellence in Child and Family Welfare
  • www.cwav.asn.au
  • 03 96141577
  • michael.white_at_cwav.asn.au
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