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Schools crucial to children's services

Posted: 17 April 2003 | Subscribe Online


Schools and education have a key role to play in delivering children's services, a leading member of the Association of Chief Education Officers claimed last week.

Christine Davies, a past president of the ACEO and the association's spokesperson on children's services, said schools would only be able to deliver the best results through working with social workers, health visitors and the police.

She told the conference that there were opportunities available now that had not been there before. She pointed to the Education Act 2002 which allows schools to provide community services through the concept of "extended schools".
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All local authorities are to receive £200,000 to develop extended schools in their area, she explained.

She pleaded with social workers to remind schools which said they were "not about social work stuff" and were under pressure to deliver on improvements that joint working would also make a difference to those children "most resistant to learning".

Davies said ignorance about each others' roles was one of the biggest barriers to overcome.

She added that children's services would not be helped if the inspection regimes failed to talk the "same common language".

Ofsted, the Social Services Inspectorate and the comprehensive performance assessment should engage in "joint" inspection with shared targets, she said.


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