Staff to gain new intervention skills

Wednesday 22 November 2006 11:23

Practitioners working in deprived areas will receive training on dealing with antisocial families, the government announced this week.

The Department for Education and Skills will spend up to £1m training an anticipated 1,000 practitioners working on family intervention projects, which involve intensive packages of support and enforcement for problem families led by key workers.

The government’s Respect Task Force is working with 50 councils to set up projects in each area by the end of the year.

A further £4m from the Respect programme is to be used to fund the appointment of “parenting experts”, described as a “clinical psychologist type role”, to provide parenting programmes in 77 local authorities.

Recruitment guidance is to be provided to the relevant councils.

 

What do you think? Have your say on CareSpace.

Keep up to date with the latest developments in social care by signing up to our daily and weekly newsletters.

Social care link
paperwork

Liberating adult social work

How do you free practitioners from bureaucracy, rationing and risk aversion, asks Mithran Samuel