Title: Monthly Status Report
1Extended Schools Remodelling Programme
Dr Vince Stroud National remodelling Team
2Objectives
- Being clear about Extended Services in and around
schools - Identifying those working with us
- Celebrating the work childminders do
- Understanding the role of NRT
- Identify our joint roles
- Listening to your concerns and successes
3(No Transcript)
4Every Child Matters
Every Child Matters Change for Children sets out
an agenda for reform across children's services,
allowing providers to work more effectively both
together and with parents and carers
5Local authority timeline for extended schools
2005-2010
2005
2006
2008
2010
- 2005
- Development of Integrated Inspection Framework
- Mid-2006
- Children and Young Peoples Plans in all
authorities - Safeguarding Children
- 2006
- Most authorities have Childrens Trusts
arrangements in place - Most authorities have a Director of Childrens
Services - A lead member for Childrens Services in most
authorities
- 2008
- Wraparound affordable childcare in at least half
of all primary schools - One third of all secondary schools open 8am-6pm,
all year round and offering activities - All authorities have Childrens Trusts
arrangements - All authorities have a Director of Childrens
Services - A lead member for Childrens Services in all
authorities
- 2010
- Wraparound affordable childcare available for all
parents of primary aged children - All secondary schools open 8am-6pm, all year
round and offering activities - All 3-4 year olds receiving 15 hours of free
early years education, 38 weeks of the year
6To attain these outcomes all schools will offer
core extended services by 2010 50 schools by
2008
Extended schools are not expected to work alone
or deliver services in isolation, but work
together with the Local Authority and other
agencies to deliver this agenda together
Community access
Community access
7Question 1 core offer
Which features of the core offer are you already
providing, or helping to provide? What more
would you hope to provide?
8Why become an extended school? The benefits
- What do extended schools do?
- Build on the best existing practice in schools
- Place children at the centre of a network of
services which support their learning and
wellbeing - Promote greater parental involvement in their
childrens learning - Forge stronger links with the community
9Remodelling offers a platform for delivering
extended services
by creating capacity and capability
10Working together
National organisations and programmes
WAMG Governors Ofsted Sure Start NCMA
NHS, NCA 4Children NFPI Day Care Trusts Youth
Justice
Police NCSC TDA
Social Services SGA
DfES SWG CYPU
Communities
Director of Childrens Services
Families
National Remodelling Team
Children
ContinYou
Local authorities
National and Regional Support
ESRCs
ESRAs
DfES
GOs
CSIA(E)s
(LEA) RAs
NRT RAs
RCAs
NRT multiagency trainers
Local authority extended schools teams
Schools Headteachers School change team School
workforce Governing bodies, Parents, Pupils
The stakeholder base will further develop over
time
11Collaborative Support
4Children
ContinYou
NRT
Providing strategic advice and practical support
to childcare service providers and local
authorities to develop quality, sustainable
childcare solutions
Networking and sharing good practice enables
schools and local authorities to tap into
existing expertise from a wide variety of sources
and engage partners more readily
The remodelling change process allows schools to
develop extended services which meet the needs of
pupils, families and the wider community
Capacity and capability development
Childcare support and solutions
Networking and content support
12Multi-agency working and community involvement
are key to improving outcomes for all
OtherAgencies
School Improvement Plan
ExtendedSchool (core offer and beyond)
- Community
- Needs
- Demographics
- Skill Shortages
- Economic Opportunities
Community Voluntary Sector
Source ContinYou
13Question 2 - Stakeholders
Who do you need to work with most closely to help
play your part in effective extended services in
and around schools? 1 min on post-its
TICK those stakeholders you find it most
productive to work with? ? CROSS those
stakeholders you find it least productive to work
with? ?
14The remodelling process
- Remodelling is a structured change process which
empowers teams to tackle their key opportunities
and issues in a way that reflects their local
circumstances
15The role of remodelling
National Agreement
Workforce reform
Remodelling
Every Child Matters
Extended Services
Schools and the other agencies working with
children are the experts. Remodelling gives
schools a way of deciding what to do and ways to
achieve it
16Characteristics of extended schools remodelling
- The programme is flexible accommodating the
different starting points of different schools
and communities - There will be opportunities to work with other
schools, the local authority and a wide range of
other agencies delivering childrens services - There will be coherence with the wider Every
Child Matters agenda and other initiatives
affecting schools
Flexible
Collaborative
Coherent
17Extended services roll out cascade training model
NRT Core Training Team
Training
June
May / June
July Nov
Sept Jan
18Extended Schools Remodelling Advisers ESRAs
ESRA / Local Authority
Open inclusive leadership
Positive and ambitious culture
Inclusive change teams
Process for managing change
Rational, political and emotional
Constructive collaboration
Core Offer
19The Extended Schools Remodelling Programme
consists of four workshops held at key stages
during the remodelling process
Workshop1 Mobilise Discover
Workshop4 Deliver Sustain
Workshop2 Discover Deepen
Workshop3 Develop Deliver
Workshops run by the Local Authority
Community events run by schools / clusters
Event 1 Identify Opportunities
Event 3 DeliverServices
The process takes approximately two terms to
complete
20Expectations of the programme
Understand the context
- local plans and national context for extended
services in and around schools - for schools and communities , including support
from the Local Authority - tools available to prioritise and plan for
extended schools delivery - tools and techniques that can help schools and
other agencies in developing extended services - which encourage and benefit pupils, their
families and communities - through working together in your community
Understand the opportunities
Identify priorities
Learn practical tools
quick wins
Deliver extended services
21Expectations of participants
- That you will be committed to exploring the
benefits that extended services can bring to
schools and the community - That you are willing to take opportunities and
confront challenges on schools journeys towards
the offer of extended services - That you have energy and commitment to the events
and activities between the workshops
Commitment to the benefits
That you deliver access to the full core offer
Accept opportunities and challenges
Commitment to the programme
22Delivering extended services
Is about
Isnt about
Extended services in and around schools
Local, customised solutions
Supported autonomy
Systematic support from local authorities and
unions
23Question 3 - barriers
What further practical steps could you take to
engage with schools in your locality?
What is hindering progress?
24Potential barriers
Rational
Political
Emotional
25The NRT offer includes training in this
structured change process
Mobilise
and sustain!
Discover
Deepen
Develop
Deliver
Set up change team and engage key people
Open minds to whats possible
Design and plan the way forward
Deliver the plan and realize the benefits
Evaluate whats involved and what we can do
26Question 3 - barriers
What further practical steps could you take to
engage with schools in your locality? What is
hindering progress?
27Our work must maintain a strong focus on standards
28Is there another way?
Here is Edward Bear, coming downstairs now, bump,
bump, bump, on the back of his head, behind
Christopher Robin. It is, as far as he knows,
the only way of coming downstairs, but sometimes
he feels that there really is another way, if
only he could stop bumping for a moment and think
of it. Stories of Winnie-The-Pooh, AA Milne 1989
29We publish practical guidance that is developed
in a collaborative manner
- We work closely with those in Local Authorities
who are working with schools on the National
Agreement and the development of extended
services - We collaborate with school representatives and
then work together on practical guidance that can
be shared with others - We seek advice on how content is best accessed,
for example through the web or via brochures
30Extensive remodelling support is available
An active website www.remodelling.org - for
news, advice, case studies, numerous other
resources and a discussion forum