Transcript Document

‘PRIORITIES FOR YOUTH’
CONSULTATION
KEY FINDINGS &
RECOMMENDATIONS
FROM RESPONSES
SUBMITTED TO DENI
Independent analysis carried out by Deena Haydon & Siobhán McAlister
May 2009
CHILDREN AND YOUNG
PEOPLE’S CONSULTATION
RESPONSES
Siobhán McAlister
SAMPLE OVERVIEW
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679 questionnaires representing the views of 1728
children & young people.
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Majority aged 11-18.
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Individuals represented in sectors: statutory
n=887, voluntary n=767.
INVOLVEMENT IN ORGANISED
YOUTH ACTIVITIES
 Organised youth activities – “any activity
organised by either an adult or young person for
young people”.
 Dependent on age:
 4-15: youth clubs, sports clubs, uniformed groups;
 16+: programme based projects, decision- making
roles, leadership roles.
 Recommendation: greater efforts are needed to
make participative structures more accessible to
those under the age of 16.
THE VALUE OF YOUTH
PROVISION
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Involvement in youth provision:
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Primarily - social, activity & fun aspects of provision
Secondary - develop life & social skills, gain
qualifications & have a voice (16+ years).
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‘Marginalised groups’: important social outlet;
provides feelings of inclusion.
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Recommendation: Assessment and outcome
indicators should reflect an understanding of the
value of youth provision for catering to the
personal and social development needs of children
and young people.
IMPROVING INVOLVMENT &
MEETING NEED
Recommendations:
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Better advertising & more direct recruitment encouragement & information needed.
Recruitment strategy - friendship groups.
More ‘activities’; extended opening; age & gender
appropriate; transport provided (younger children,
those with disabilities, those living in rural areas);
needs led & young people centred.
IMPROVING INVOLVMENT &
MEETING NEED
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Retaining young people:
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Needs assessments
Promote and preserve the identity of the youth service
as different to formal education.
Greater progression & more training opportunities for
young leaders.
Greater efforts to include some ‘marginalised
groups’, particularly children & young people
with disabilities, experiences of care and the
juvenile justice system.
AVAILABLE HELP, INFORMATION
& SUPPORT
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Main sources of help: through education; through
families; through youth provision.
Youth workers provide an invaluable means of
support for some ‘marginalised groups’
Recommendation: greater recognition of the
support role youth workers provide. Need for
more space and time to concentrate on the quality
of provision (and relationships), rather than
quantity of young people involved.
LISTENING TO CHILDREN &
YOUNG PEOPLE
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50% feel (some) adults listen.
Sometimes/no: no value placed on children &
young people’s views; ‘pretend listening’ (tokenistic
- views are not taken on board)
Recommendations: ask, listen, act/report back;
more opportunities for young people to be involved
in decision-making at the community level; all
youth groups etc. should be encouraged to have
youth committees.
THE IMAGE OF CHILDREN &
YOUNG PEOPLE
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83% feel adults view children & young people
negatively; as ‘vandals’, ‘hoodies’, ‘ASBOs’, ‘always
up to no good’ and/or inferior, unimportant.
‘Marginalised groups’ feel doubly discriminated
against (e.g. because young and in care).
Recommendations: positive representations in the
community & the media; more intergenerational
work and adult support. Additional funding and
more partnership work will be necessary for this.
MANAGERS’ AND YOUTH
WORKERS’
CONSULTATION
RESPONSES
Deena Haydon
SAMPLE OVERVIEW: MANAGERS
AND YOUTH WORKERS
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Managers: 64 questionnaires (regional bodies (9);
district councils (5); uniformed groups (8); ELB
area officers (10); voluntary/ community
organisations (20); youth clubs/ centres (12)
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Youth Workers: 135 questionnaires (detached
projects (4); outdoor education/ sport (5);
training, personal/ community development (19);
uniformed groups (27); statutory sector youth
services (39); voluntary sector youth services (41)
THE YOUTH SERVICE: AGE RANGE
AND AGE-SPECIFIC PROGRAMMES
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Age range 4-25:
29 agreed, 20 did not – too broad, should include
0-3s, should prioritise 11-18s
Age specific programmes:
4-11: multi-agency, community-based play & family
support
11-14: preventive, responding to vulnerabilities of
teenagers, in schools (but not necessarily accredited)
14-16: issues-based to inform decision making, based on
referrals (schools, other agencies, self) to meet individual
needs
THE YOUTH SERVICE:
AGE-SPECIFC PROGRAMMES
16-18: issue-based, focused on those leaving
AEPs/ mainstream schools without a transition
programme; known to social services; involved in
risky/ anti-social behaviour; without a place in
FE/ HE/ employment
18+: signposting, developing leadership,
improving employability, peer mentoring and
volunteering with vulnerable young people,
provision for those who are marginalised/ without
qualifications or work experience
YOUTH SERVICE: FOCUS
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Personal and social development of all
Targeted services within universal provision – inclusion
for all may require targeting of marginalised groups and
those not currently accessing services
Range of provision – direct work in schools, informal
education in community-based activities, specialist
projects/ programmes to meet needs of those not
accessing, or excluded from, mainstream education and
youth services
Challenging negative representations of young people,
reinforcing commitment to personal and social
development, participation, inclusion
YOUTH SERVICE: ISSUES TO BE
ADDRESSED THROUGH YOUTH
WORK
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Based on ranking of issues in list provided, issues
prioritised by both managers and youth workers:
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Providing young people with skills and knowledge that
will assist them with training, education or
employability
Giving young people an active involvement in decisions
which affect them
Emotional well-being and promoting healthy lifestyles
Alcohol/ drug abuse
Suicide and mental health
YOUTH SERVICE: ISSUES TO BE
ADDRESSED THROUGH YOUTH
WORK
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Decisions about the issues should be informed by
young people, OFMDFM Strategy for Children
and Young People, UNCRC, local area/
community planning
While the strategy might indicate a broad range of
issues affecting contemporary children & young
people in NI, youth workers should retain the
flexibility to respond to local needs and priorities
(based on consultation with young people and
other stakeholders)
CROSS-CUTTING ISSUES FOR
MANAGERS AND YOUTH
WORKERS
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Funding
Staffing
Involving young people
Partnership working
Training and personal/ professional development
(for paid staff and volunteers)
Cross-cutting issues, and perceived impacts of
youth work, reflect the values in the current
strategy; themes and priorities still relevant
ENSURING IMPLEMENTATION OF
CURRENT STRATEGY THEMES
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Delivering effective and inclusive youth work
 Focusing on personal and social development
 Providing positive activities in a safe environment
 Complementing formal education
 Delivering universal and targeted provision
 Promoting participation and inclusion
 Flexible range of provision – accessible and available
 Based on assessed local need – identified by young
people, local partnerships, needs analysis/ research
 Building on existing strategies, plans, processes
 Developing partnerships at regional and local levels
ENSURING IMPLEMENTATION OF
CURRENT STRATEGY THEMES
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Participation
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Ensuring meaningful involvement of children & young
people – clear expectations, accessible information &
support, creative & inclusive methods to involve all,
recognising implications for agencies, hearing and
acting on what is said, providing feedback
Facilitating participation in DE consultations, youth
service development, youth work provision, local
community planning, regional networks/ forums/
councils/ events, leadership training and volunteering,
presentations to media/ politicians/ policy makers/
other young people/ adults working with young people
ENSURING IMPLEMENTATION OF
CURRENT STRATEGY THEMES
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Funding and resources
 Acknowledging difficulties – inadequate, short term,
not responsive to urgent/emerging need, bureaucracy
 Funding to – promote young people and their
achievements/ the youth service/ youth work; compile
and disseminate information to identify needs, inform
local priorities, evaluate interventions, evidence
impacts; develop & deliver appropriate services with
realistic lead-in times; ensure availability of adequate
equipment, resources, venues; involve young people;
recruit & retain appropriately skilled staff (paid &
volunteers), with on-going training and support
 Effectively using existing resources – sharing facilities,
using buildings when not being used, ‘hubs’
ENSURING IMPLEMENTATION OF
CURRENT STRATEGY THEMES
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Implementation of the strategy
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Clarifying roles and responsibilities for delivery and
review
Developing action plans with clear outcomes, outputs,
time-bound targets, monitoring and review procedures,
accountability
Outlining the infrastructure that will support
implementation
Evaluating the implementation and impacts of the
current strategy, to inform future plans
Clarifying the review process and factors influencing
planned changes
ENSURING IMPLEMENTATION OF
CURRENT STRATEGY THEMES
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The youth service, youth work, and young people
will be demonstrably valued, recognised and wellpromoted through:
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Raising awareness about the strategy and themes
within it
Providing the funding to enable the themes to be
implemented
Identifying, acknowledging and consolidating existing
good practice
Ensuring provision of appropriate training and support
(to paid staff and volunteers)