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2005 Needs Analysis workshop Bramall Lane Friday July 22nd

2005 Needs Analysis workshop Bramall Lane Friday July 22nd. Sheffield Children and Young People’s Plan. Welcome and introduction. Sheffield’s way forward with Every Child Matters getting the foundation of the CYPP right – the needs analysis

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2005 Needs Analysis workshop Bramall Lane Friday July 22nd

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  1. 2005 Needs AnalysisworkshopBramall LaneFriday July 22nd Sheffield Children and Young People’s Plan

  2. Welcome and introduction • Sheffield’s way forward with Every Child Matters • getting the foundation of the CYPP right – the needs analysis • the first workshop ~ identifying the high level indicators • looking at what a Service District might look like • the second workshop ~ how do we align all our various goals and priorities? Do we need some new data or systems to do this right?

  3. Sheffield’s way forward • involvement of a wide range of partners and stakeholders in a re-fashioned approach to delivering services to C&YP • very significant change programme • transformation – not amalgamation • August 1st 2005 • c£700m of activity • 7 Service Districts • 2005-6 start with 2 SDs • 2006-7 for remaining 5 SDs

  4. Building up from a good needs analysis • Key tasks in achieving a credible and effective plan are to: • simplify: have only a few priorities • align: line up the key goals of all section 10 partners and all service providers • communicate: ensure everyone knows what the priorities are and the direction is • monitor: make sure you can track impacts and outcomes • do something better as a result: always stay focussed on improved actions and delivery • this all starts with a good Needs Analysis…

  5. The 7 proposed Service Districts

  6. You are here The 7 proposed Service Districts

  7. Specialisms colour key Arts Engineering STOCKSBRIDGE Languages Sports ECCLESFIELD Sheffield: development of Specialist schools, Academies and post-16 provision July 2005 Technology Science Maths/ICT Business/Ent YEWLANDS CLC HINDE HOUSE FIRTH BRADFIELD PARK CHAUCER PARKWOOD FIR VALE WISEWOOD HIGH MYERS GROVE KING CLC ED VII WALTHEOF TAPTON NOTRE DAME ALL SAINTS Longley Park 6F College CLC HANDSWORTH MYRTLE SPRINGS Sheffield College: 4 sites GRANGE CITY HIGH Schools with sixth forms BENTS GREEN NEWFIELD CLC STORRS 14-19 area planning boundary Special CLC SILVERDALE ABBEYDALE Specialist schools BIRLEY GRANGE @ Sept 2005 TALBOT Special Programme to be expanded to become Specialist by 2006 WESTFIELD Secondary special schools KING MEADOWHEAD Specialist by 2006 ECGBERT Proposed Academies

  8. What might a Service District look like? • A district manager • local management arrangements – agencies, parents, children & young people • ‘offer’ of universal and additional services (built on 5 outcomes) • process for accessing City-wide services within the district • BUT… agreement about new ways of working will need to be developed

  9. Which services will Service Districts cover? • CYPD staff • FE/Sixth Form Colleges • Police • Youth service/ Connexions • Voluntary and community sector provision • Sure Start • Children’s Centres • Extended Schools • GP practices/ Health Centres • Leisure/play facilities • Disability support • School nurses • Health visiting and midwifery • Behaviour and attendance support • Family support • CAMHS • Drugs Team • Healthy Schools • and so on…

  10. How we will build these services over the next 5 years 2004-5 2005-6 2006-7 Stage 1 2007-8 Stage 2 2008-9 Stage 3 The child and the family • Revise medium term plans in light of progress • Pooled budgets • SD now driving design and delivery of services • Refine medium term action plans • Fully deploy integrated teams • Fully engaged with all partner agencies • Strong management capacity • Phase 2 - 7 Service Districts • Identify key medium-term goals • Build management capacity • Commence annual cycle • Build integrated teams • Phase 1 • 2 Service Districts • Trial processes • Model annual cycle • Construct integrated teams • Designing the model • Building the CYPD • Working with partners • Consulting on proposals

  11. The Children and Young People Plan 2006-9status and rationale • The plan must cover the services for which the local authority is directly responsible, including the arrangements for co-operative working. The Government’s intention is that the plan should be the single, strategic, overarching plan for all services for children and young people in the area, provided by the local authority and all relevant partners and that the local authority should prepare the plan jointly with those partners. This refers not just to those under the duty to co-operate, such as local health and certain youth justice bodies, but also others like schools, colleges and the voluntary and community sector. • Despite misconceptions, there will not be a local authority plan and a separate plan for partners, only a single CYPP. (DfES guidance para 2) …The CYPP will be prepared by the local authority with partners in the children’s trust (para 5).

  12. The Children and Young People Plan 2006-9section 10 partners • Primary Care Trusts (PCTs) • Strategic Health Authorities • Learning and Skills Council • Police • Probation • Youth Offending Team • the governor of a prison or secure training centre

  13. The Children and Young People Plan 2006-9structure • key improvements sought to improve outcomes • vision • needs assessment • priorities and key actions • how resources will be deployed • how performance management will work • how co-operative arrangements will work • how the CYPP links with the strategic plans of partners

  14. The Children and Young People Plan 2006-9links between plans 0-19+ Partnership Board Early Years/Child Care Education Lifelong Learning Youth and play Children’s social services Planning & regeneration Housing Leisure Locality – Citywide – Quality & Improvement – Resources - Performance Health: LDP; NSF Standards Police: Three Year Strategy; local policing plan; YOT: Youth Justice Plan Probation: Area Annual Plan LSC: Strategic Plan Health and CAMHS 14-19 Advice/Guidance Drugs/alcohol misuse Youth Justice VolCom Services Education otherwise Crime and Disorder & Misuse of Drugs and Alcohol strategies Schools: Development Plans CAMHS Strategy Healthy Schools The City Plan Children and Young People’s Plan CSA Operational Plans Partner Plans

  15. The Children and Young People Plan 2006-9processes 1-5 • look at the current pattern of outcomes for children and young people in their area, and recent trends, against national and relevant local comparators • look within the overall picture at outcomes for particular groups of young people • use all this data, and draw on the views of children, young people and their families, local communities, and front-line staff, to develop an overall, integrated needs assessment • agree on the nature and scale of the local challenge, identify the resources available, and set priorities for action • plan the pattern of service most likely to secure priority outcomes, considering carefully the ways in which resources can be increasingly focussed on prevention and early intervention

  16. The Children and Young People Plan 2006-9processes 6-9-2 • decide together how best to purchase or provide (commission) those services, including drawing in alternative providers to widen options and increase efficiency • develop and extend joint commissioning from pooled budgets and pooled resources • plan for the workforce development and other changes in local processes and ways of working necessary to support delivery • monitor and review to ensure services are working to deliver the ambitions set out for them. • look at the current pattern of outcomes for children and young people in their area, and recent trends, against national and relevant local comparators • look within the overall picture at outcomes for particular groups of young people

  17. The Needs Analysis Andrew Crompton and Clare Humberstone

  18. Needs Analysis – Starting Points • Every Child Matters JAR and APA Evidence documents • Need range of indicators to: • Understand position in Sheffield • Determine what main priorities are • Partnership provides good base

  19. Group Indicators into 5 outcome domains Sub-divide each domain using Inspection Judgements Needs Analysis - Structure

  20. Needs Analysis – Focusing Down • Important indicators in each document • Significance • External value • Collate for Domain • Select approximately 5 ‘Key’ indicators • List remainder as ‘Other’ • Totals • 30 Key Indicators (3 developmental) • 57 Other Indicators (8 developmental)

  21. Needs Analysis - Development • Identified already; • Drug and Substance misuse • Recreation and culture • Homes and communities • Still to work on • Obesity • CAMHS

  22. Needs Analysis – Future Intentions • Service review in relation to Inspection framework • Possible Document Structure: • Inspection Judgements • Key indicators • Evidence – data • Evidence – surveys • Bullet summary of recent review • Links – other relevant information

  23. Children’s Voices Clare Humberstone Children’s Voices Project Manager Sheffield Children’s Fund Plus

  24. Article 12 ‘All children and young people have the right to a say in any matter affecting them and for their views to be listened to and taken into account’ Article 12, United Convention on the Rights of the Child

  25. Children’s Voices Project • Children’s Fund - 5-13 years - 12 most deprived wards - City-wide - BME - Disabled children - Homeless children - Asylum seeker and refugees • Early Years

  26. Children’s Voices Project • Consultation with children • Support in participation and consultation activity • Training for delivery staff • Strategic development

  27. Multi Agency Participation (MAP) Group Our vision is: ‘to achieve the consultation, involvement and participation of children and young people in decision making processes of the city – the family, community, schools, colleges, youth councils and area panels’

  28. Key Messages • Come and Play, Have Your Say (Easter 2004) • Have Your Say about schools (Easter 2005) • Have Your Say about health (October 2005)

  29. Enjoying and Achieving • Play and activity • Schools and learning

  30. Staying Safe • Crime • Drugs • Anti-social behaviour • Feeling safe in local community • Police • Bullying

  31. Being Healthy • Healthy eating • Exercise and activity • School nurses

  32. Making a Positive Contribution • Participation and consultation • Techniques and mechanisms • Relevant issues

  33. Economic Well-being • Achievement at school • What and who aids achievement

  34. Workshop 1 Agreeing the high level indicators

  35. Workshop 1 Agreeing the high level indicators Do we need some new measures?

  36. Service Districts A case study

  37. Workshop 2 How do we align Service District priorities and those of the partner agencies? What information do we need to underpin Service District level working?

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