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Step Up Stay Safe Local Context Overall behaviour in LBBD - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Step Up Stay Safe Local Context Overall behaviour in LBBD secondary schools is good, with Ofsted rating over 90% of schools as good or better. Exclusion rates in both primary and secondary schools are below national and London rates .


  1. Step Up Stay Safe

  2. Local Context • Overall behaviour in LBBD secondary schools is good, with Ofsted rating over 90% of schools as good or better. Exclusion rates in both primary and secondary schools are below national and London rates . • As with most secondary schools across the country, issues of gangs, youth violence and peer on peer abuse is being seen more in our schools and in the hours after school. The ‘lost’ hours is a vulnerable time within the local community as highlighted by recent events and the rise in permanent exclusions. The figures have doubled in comparison to last year. Some exclusions have been issued for ‘out of school’ incidents that brought disrepute. There has also been a rise in young people bringing weapons into school. This problem has not just affected secondary aged pupils. • Highest proportion of 0-19 year olds in country, high levels of deprivation, low educational attainment, crime, and poor parental attachment act as the perfect storm for a low resilience to exploitation amongst young people in the borough. • There has been a significant rise in serious youth violence and the number of young people that carry weapons. • An identified cohort of adolescents in the borough who are exploited through county lines activity • Some of these interventions are already offered to schools and families. For those young people more at risk, the council is leading a number of innovative multi-agency approaches to reducing risks of violence, criminal and sexual exploitation faced by some young people: • Multi agency team to address missing and all forms of child exploitation/contextual safeguarding bid, Integrated Gangs unit, At risk matrix work, and Trauma Informed model are some examples of this . • The council is proactively working together with its key partners to combat this national and local concern

  3. Tiered Intervention offer Ste Step up p up! ! Awareness-Diversion-Protection Young voices Council and Partners Not just the loudest. All Stay Stay Community Safety Partnership voices are heard and LSCB saf safe! validated. Co-production Police Community Partners Parental & 5 key 5 k ey Community Schools themes themes Engagement Head teachers and SLT supported by key partners. ‘Lost Hours’ campaign Training offer and network “Step Up , Stay Safe !” meetings

  4. Ste Step up p up! ! Stay sa Stay safe! Theme 5 heme 5 UNIVERSAL – TAR UNIVERSAL ARGETED GETED – INTENSI INTENSIVE VE – SPECIAL SPECIALIST IST • Universal offer to schools and families including assemblies and staff training • Targeted approach involving group work in schools and sustained long term intervention • Intensive programmes of support are elevated up to YARM workers* • Specialist offer to rehabilitate and offer positive alternatives Tiered Intervention approach Awareness-Diversion-Protection

  5. (Pr (Proposed) Tier oposed) Tiered ed sc school hool and f and families a amilies appr pproac oach h – Primar Primary U y Upper KS2 to Secondar pper KS2 to Secondary K y KS4 S4 SPECIALIST Ben Kinsella Trust/Old Bailey Bart’s Trauma visits Box Up Crime YARM workers Searching, screening and confiscation Exploitation assessment tool Family work SPECIALIST 4-12 week intensive programme INTENSIVE Triage Box Up Crime LifeLine mentoring 1:1 with families Trauma workshops INTENSIVE 4-12 week rehabilitation programme Community Resolution Health – CAMHS e.g. More than Mentors YARM workers TARGETED Whole school assemblies LifeLine group intervention TARGETED Aspirational work experience opportunities Fearless workshops Bespoke staff training Targeted parents offer - Triple P/ComSol Community Partnerships UNIVERSAL Whole school assemblies UNIVERSAL LifeLine workshops Aspirational speakers Fearless resources Staff Awareness training Universal parents offer Triple P online Community Partnerships Youthzone open access Junior Citizens Key to interventions: Existing New To be enhanced or increased

  6. Conte Context xtual ual Saf Safegu guar arding ding • Coined by Dr Carlene Firmin 2015 - an approach to child protection intended to assess, support, and where necessary intervene with, peer relationships, educational and public contexts where young people were at risk of significant harm. • seeks to create a response to extra-familial forms of abuse that can: - Target the contexts in which that abuse occurs, from assessment through to intervention - Frame work to address extra-familial risk through the lens of child welfare, as opposed to crime reduction or community safety - Utilise partnerships between children’s services and agencies who have a reach into extra -familial contexts (such as transport providers, retailers, youth workers, residents associations, parks and recreation services, schools ) - Measure success with reference to the nature of the context in which harm has been occurring, rather than solely focusing on any behaviour changes displayed by young people who were at risk in those contexts. • LBBD one of 4 London Borough’s to win bid for University of Bedfordshire Scale up project

  7. Conte Contextual xtual Saf Safeguar guarding ding • An approach to understanding, and responding to, young people’s experiences of significant harm beyond their families. • As children grow they spend increasing amounts of time socialising with peers, at school and in public environments independently of parental/carer supervision. • In these extra-familial contexts they may encounter harmful norms that are conducive to abusive and exploitative relationships. • Therefore a need to identify, assess, and intervene in all of the social environments where the abuse and exploitation of young people occurs – in essence to take a ‘contextual’ approach to safeguarding • Need to engage with individuals and sectors who do have influence over/within extrafamilial contexts

  8. Specialist Exploitation Team, statutory social care intervention, rescue and response, London Gangs Exit, Abianda, Spark2life, TAITH, YOS, Minerva, ACES PPP Parenting offer Intensive Channel/Prevent processes Contextual safeguarding Exploitation team, rescue and response, YOS, ACES and PPP parenting offer, Abianda, Spark2life, YOS, TAITH. Minerva Targeted YARM, Nia, Minerva YOS pre court disposals. Parenting educational groups focusing on gangs and weapons Universal Studio 3 Arts, Box Up Crime, Future MOLDS, Spark2life, Lifeline, Arc Theatre

  9. Governance Framework A time- limited ‘Contextual Safeguarding and Exploitation Strategic Group’ to co -ordinate the Strategic development of the multi-agency exploitation Partners strategy and oversee the implementation. An Exploitation Strategy will provide a single, strategic articulation of our partnership approach to tackling exploitation (and by extension embedding BDSCB Contextual Safeguarding). (and successor post WT 2018) The reporting line of MACE would remain directly to the BDSCB – , MACE reframed to MACE (Child, rather than Sexual) to reflect the focus on wider contextual risk of exploitation and missing children. Contextual Safeguarding and MACE Exploitation The PQA Working Group would develop a Strategic Group Performance and QA Framework to monitor progress.

  10. Any qu Any questions? estions?

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