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Donna Molloy

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Effective parenting can protect against the risks of growing up poor or in a ... Almost halved the number of parents who classified their children as having ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Donna Molloy


1
Supporting parenting and families
Donna Molloy Families At Risk Division DCSF
2
Effective parenting improves outcomes for
children
  • Effective parenting can protect against the risks
    of growing up poor or in a deprived
    neighbourhood, and reduce the likelihood of
    anti-social behaviour and crime
  • Impacts on educational attainment are
    particularly well documented
  • Parental interest in education is four times more
    important than SES factors in influencing
    attainment at 16
  • Parental involvement has a bigger impact on
    attainment at 7 11 than the quality of the
    school
  • Strong rationale for government intervention to
    support those parents who are struggling
  • And to challenge parents who are unable or
    unwilling to meet these responsibilities

3
Family can also be a source of risk
Parental drug misuse
  • Parental problem drug use associated with
    neglect, poverty, physical or emotional abuse,
    separation and exposure to criminal behaviour
  • 2-3 of children have a parent misusing Class A
    drugs
  • Alcohol misuse identified as a factor in 50 of
    all child protection cases
  • 1.3m children live with parents who misuse
    alcohol

Alcohol misuse
  • 25 children witnessing domestic violence have
    serious social and behavioural problems
  • Estimates suggest at least 240,000 children
    exposed to DV

Domestic violence
  • 63 of boys with convicted fathers go on to be
    convicted themselves
  • children of prisoners have 3 times the risk for
    mental health problems or delinquent behaviour
    compared to their peers
  • 162,000 children had a parent in prison (2005),
    55 of female offenders have a child under
    16hildr

Parental offending
4
A small minority of families experience multiple
disadvantages
Percentage of families with children experiencing
5 or more disadvantages
2.2
2.1
2
2
1.9

2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
  • Basket of indicators of disadvantages includes
  • No parent in the family is in work
  • Family lives in poor quality or overcrowded
    housing
  • No parent has any qualifications
  • Mother has mental health problems
  • At least one parent has a long-standing limiting
    illness, disability or infirmity
  • Family has low income (below 60 median)
  • Family cannot afford a number of food and
    clothing items

5
...With lasting consequences for the life chances
of their children
6
Significant investment in parenting and family
support
  • Providing a ring fenced grant (2009-2011) for all
    authorities to
  • Implement Think Family reforms to local
    authority and health service systems and
    services
  • Offer Parenting Early Intervention Programmes
    (PEIPs) to help mothers and fathers of children
    (aged 8-13) at risk of poor outcomes improve
    their parenting skills
  • Continue to fund Parenting Experts and
    Practitioners in all authorities and
  • Set up Youth Crime Family Intervention Projects
    (FIPs) to provide intensive support to families
    in the greatest difficulty.

7
Funding for parenting support
Parenting
  • Parenting Early Intervention Programme
  • 18 pilots 2006-2008 shown to be a success
  • All LAs to receive PEIP funding in 2009
  • Increasing focus on risk factors associated with
    youth crime
  • Parenting Experts and Practitioners
  • 77 areas targeting the parents of children and
    young people involved in or at risk of ASB
  • 34m Childrens plan commitment to build on this
    with 2 Parenting advisers in every local
    authority
  • Impact of 18 PEIP pilots
  • Almost halved the number of parents who
    classified their children as having significant
    behavioural difficulties
  • Parents reported included being calmer with their
    children, more confident in parenting, and giving
    more time to talking and listening to their
    children.

8
What is think family ?
Think Family
  • a series of changes to LA services and systems
    to
  • ensure that all services working with vulnerable
    children, young people and adults consider the
    family context and
  • Identify families which are at risk and provide
    support at the earliest opportunity
  • Meet the full-range of needs within each family
    they are supporting
  • Developing services which can respond effectively
    to the most challenging families
  • Strengthen the ability of family members to
    provide care and support to each other

9
Think family builds on all of the levels of
reform set out in the Every Child Matters onion
Think Family
10
And for the most risky families we need the
family intervention project model
Family Intervention Projects
  • A dedicated key worker with low caseloads who
    works intensively with the whole family
  • Taking a whole family perspective to assessment
    and the development of support packages
  • Use of a contract setting out the changes that
    are expected, the support that will be provided
    and possible consequences if changes are not made
  • The use of persistent and assertive working
    methods
  • Effective multi agency arrangements (referrals
    panel, information sharing, agreeing the
    objectives of intervention etc)

11
Recent evaluation shows the effectiveness of the
model in tackling risk factors in families
Family Intervention Projects
12
Expansion of Family Intervention Projects to all
local authorities
Family Intervention Projects
  • 65 Projects aimed at families involved in
    persistent ASB
  • New projects - tackling child poverty and inter
    generational worklessness
  • Youth Crime Action Plan announced projects in
    every area as part of efforts to tackle youth
    crime

Number of Family Intervention Projects 2006-11
13
Where do we need to get to?
A integrated and appropriate service response to
all families at risk
  • Joined up FIP type provision sufficient to meet
    the needs of the most extreme families (whatever
    their combinations of problems)

High
Medium
  • Wider availability of evidence based parenting
    programmes to support families when risks emerge

Low
  • Early parenting and family support
  • Underpinning all this changes in attitudes,
    culture and behaviour at local level and on the
    front line to identify and intervene early with
    all families at risk
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