A lot of people need convincing that education working together with social services will work, Carole Bell warned at Community Care Live Children and Families today, writes Natalie Valios.
Questioning whether it was possible to work in the context of standards versus inclusion and targeted versus universal, Bell said: "We have a lot of people to convince that working together will work."
The head of commissioning, quality assurance and review at Hammersmith and Fulham children's trust added: "If we don't, we won't be able to fulfil the five outcomes in the green paper and the Children Act."
Julie Jones, the director of social and community services at Westminster Council, who was also speaking at the session, agreed that the challenge would not go away.
"The best outcome for all children is to achieve well in school," she added. "The complexity of what we are being asked to do is overwhelming."
She explained that Westminster has between 320 and 350 looked-after children in the borough.
Of these, two-thirds are in out-of-borough placements, attending schools in over 40 Local Education Authorities.
Twenty per cent of the looked-after population has special education needs and a quarter are unaccompanied asylum seeking children.
This provided challenges for its multi-disciplinary specialist team EPIC - education of children in care - such as dealing with numerous other LEAs, lack of school places and placement moves, said Jones.
"I asked my social work managers what was the most important thing to deal with and they said it was the lack of school places. I don't think a couple of years ago they would have said that."
"The director of education and I have stayed joined at the hip on all occasions. We expect our managers to do the same and then that to run right down to front line staff but it's very complicated," she added.
But working together on the ground can be hampered by several issues including the high turnover of staff in both social services and teaching. "Building relationships and doing common assessments work much better when you know each other," said Jones.
"This isn't an either/or, we share the same ambitions for children."
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