Our guide to the BBC social work documentary series
A three-part documentary series following social workers from Bristol City Council's children's services department was screened on Monday nights on BBC2 from January 30 to February 13.
For more than two years, their every move was captured by cameras. The result, Protecting Our Children, has been described as “powerful”, “sensitive” and “enlightening”.
Community Care has compiled all the latest news, views and behind-the-scenes commentary on the series, and offered readers the chance to take part in a live debate with our panel of experts on all three Mondays.
Louise: Social worker
Louise has been a child protection social worker for eight years. Viewers will see her trying to assess whether a couple – who both have drug problems and had their baby removed at birth and placed in temporary care – are capable of caring for their child.
Ben: Senior social worker
Ben is a senior social worker on a duty and assessment team and has been working in child protection for the last 12 years. Viewers will see him dealing with reports that a child is at risk of being sexually abused by his mother’s boyfriend – a known paedophile.
Ellen: Senior social worker
Ellen is a senior social worker with seven years’ experience. For the past year she has also been working on a duty and assessment team. Viewers will see her trying to help a single mother make her flat safe and hygienic enough for her seven-year-old to return home.
Annie: Social worker
Annie, 48, is a social worker with eight years’ experience based at St Michael’s hospital in Bristol. Viewers will see her working with Shaun and partner Marva during Marva’s fourth pregnancy. The couple have already had three children removed after social workers decided they were not fit to care for them and, due to their previous behaviour, Annie has to be accompanied by two security guards during meetings. But the case has an outcome that no one could have predicted.
Arthur: Team manager
Arthur, Annie’s team manager, currently looks after hospital teams at Southmead and St Michaels. He began his social work career in 1993, with Avon County Council, and became a team manager in 1998. He knows Shaun and Marva well, having worked with them before, and supervises Annie as she looks for new opportunities for Marva and her baby.
Susanne: Newly qualified social worker
Susanne, 26, is just six weeks into her first case. She is helping to support parents Mike and Tiffany with the care of their three-year-old son Toby, who has learning difficulties. The case has been classified as ‘low risk’ neglect, but the situation begins to change.
Louise: Qualified social worker
Louise has worked in child protection for eight years and helps train newly qualified social workers. She supports Susanne by accompanying her on visits to the family’s home and discussing the case with her.
Sallyanne: team manager
Sallyanne, Susanne’s manager, becomes concerned by the increasing level of risk in the case and supports Susanne by accompanying her on visits to Mike and Tiffany’s home. After months of working with Susanne and the family, Sallyanne faces a tough decision.
Our panel of experts (see below) will be discussing Protecting Our Children live as the documentary is screened and immediately afterwards. You can get involved by simply typing your comments into the box above. You can also get involved via Twitter by using the hashtag #protectingourchildren. And you can get involved via our CareSpace discussion forum.
We've gathered some social work experts to offer their comments on the documentary as it is screened. They will be commenting using the live chat box above and you can get involved too, by simply typing your comments in the box. Our panel will include:
Naintara Khosla
Head of service at family courts body Cafcass.
Natalie Wyatt
A childcare social worker with experience of both safeguarding and children with disabilities
Rebeca Pop
A consultant social worker in a children and families team at Worcestershire County Council.
Professor David Shemmings
Chair of social work at the University of Kent and director of the Assessment of Disorganised Attachment and Maltreatment (Adam) project in London.
Yvalia Febrer
A senior social worker on the children and families team at Richmond council.
Hope Daniels
A former care leaver and the author of ‘Hackney Child’.
Protecting Our Children social worker Annie Semphill discusses security guards and emotional turmoil as she responds to comments and questions from viewers
Unlike one national newspaper, Community Care does not think it is right to criticise social work practice based on one hour of programming
Lucy Rai, of series co-producers the Open University, sets out key learning points from episode 2
Protecting Our Children director Sacha Mirzoeff explains how the series avoided sensationalism and the bandwagon of poor social work media coverage
Producers have promised that the second episode of Protecting Our Children will be even better than the first and will tackle issues such as homelessness, violence and alcohol
The newly qualified social worker from the first episode of Protecting Our Children talks caseloads and interventions as she responds to comments made about the programme
Lucy Rai, senior social work lecturer at the Open University, which co-produced Protecting Our Children, discusses some of the important issues arising from the first episode
Bristol director Annie Hudson says despite the risks involved in taking part in a TV documentary, the profession has a duty to improve public understanding of what it does
Bristol social worker Sallyanne Jones explains how it felt to be filmed and why she has no regrets about appearing in Protecting Our Children.
An advance screening of Protecting Our Children revealed a sensitively made documentary that should help the public understand more about the reality of social work, says Ruth Smith
The social workers in Protecting Our Children have opened their practice up to public criticism and it should make the profession proud, argues Ray Jones
Our series of comprehensive Inform guides to alcohol misuse, hospital social work and supervision can help ensure you keep the children on your caseload safe
Guides
Guide to the assessment and support of non-abusing carers in circumstances of reported sexual abuse committed by an adult in the family
Guide to the impact of parental substance misuse on child development
Guide to substance misuse related disorders and the impact on parenting
Reference manual
Parental substance misuse
Looked-after children - kinship care
Not an Inform user?
Visit www.ccinform.co.uk or call Kim Poupart on 0208 652 4848 to find out more about Inform
To mark the screening of Protecting Our Children, Community Care Inform is offering free copies of an expert-written, in depth guide to care planning, placement choice and review in relation to looked-after children (©AAPix/Alamy)
26 May 2012
25 May 2012
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We round up some of the best comments from last week’s Protecting Our Children live chat. Plus, you can read all the comments by replaying the whole discussion.
How social workers reacted to issues such as security guards accompanying social workers on visits and the wider role of adult services