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Unlocking the power of children’s social care in the UK


Putting relationships first by empowering social workers and prioritising the needs of children and families

The challenge for children's social care in the UK


Social workers play a crucial role for many children in laying the foundations for a better future. The quality of the relationships that social workers build and their skill in navigating these relationships can really make a difference in children's and families' lives. Department for Education research evidences this, and it is also experienced firsthand by social workers across the country. However, too many things stop social workers from doing their best work.


Research found that social workers only spend ~20% of their time with children and families, while ~80% is spent on paperwork and navigating bureaucracy (BASW, 2020)

77% of practitioners felt they could not help people as much as they wanted to, with 56% reporting that a focus on targets rather than resolving issues for people was a cause of job-related stress (Social Work England)

The most cited reason for leaving the social work profession was local authority culture, while 28% cited the amount of paperwork and 20% reported that it was because they could not make the best use of their skills and experience (Department for Education’s longitudinal study)

In response, local authorities are trying new ways to deliver social care services better, and many have pioneered innovative approaches. But there is consensus that this is not enough.

The broader social work system needs to change so that social workers can do their best work with children and families, spending time with them building relationships.

Without this, they will never be able to positively affect outcomes to the best of their ability, and we will continue to lose good social workers who cannot do the job they came into the profession to do.

A new vision for children's social care in the UK


The Centre for Public Impact (CPI) has been exploring a new model for public services. One where power is shared, relationships are put first, and continuous learning is valued. 

Inspired by these ideas – and after seeing Buurtzorg in action in the summer of 2019 – a group of children’s social workers and system leaders came together with CPI and started asking questions. How might we apply this relationship-first approach to children’s social care in England? What would a local authority look like if it were to change its structures to better enable and empower social workers to support children and families?

CPI, Frontline and Buurtzorg UK and Ireland teamed up to explore the answers to these questions. Working with over 80 professionals from the social work sector, we developed a different approach to delivering children’s social care, that prioritises relationships and time spent with children and families.

Download the blueprint for children's social care

We found that by doing so, local authorities could see the following benefits:

Five key benefits for local authorities


Relationships

More consistent social care allowing social workers to develop stronger relationships with families.

Time

Greater time with children and families, increasing from 16% to 25% of social worker time.

Caseload

Reduce average social worker caseload by 21% from 15.5 cases to 12.2 cases.

Quality Assurance

Increase time spent in team meetings/supervision by 46%.

Experience

Increase average years of experience of case-holding social workers by 21%.

Supporting local authorities and social workers to make change


To support change in children’s social care, we have formed a long-term partnership with Frontline and Crescendo; a social worker-led team dedicated to reimagining the social care system.

Together, we launched the Small Changes inspiration programme, which enables practitioners to make the small changes that can make a big difference to the amount of time they spend with children and families.

Small changes occupy the space between making no change and complete system change. They are experiments, based on ideas from the ground up, on how to do things differently. They are changes within the local authority's scope of influence that could change now and do not require any changes to national regulation or legislation.

The impact on local authorities


We are building on the success of the Small Changes programme. In partnership with Frontline and Crescendo, we are supporting three local authorities - Tower Hamlets, Wandsworth, and Warrington - to make the systemic change needed to enable social workers to do their best work.

Working alongside social workers in each area, we've developed local blueprints which outline a different approach for how they could work. Read 'A blueprint for Wandsworth' to explore this in practice, and dive into the impact report for key insights.

Read the impact report

Stories of change in children's social care


We are building on the success of the Small Changes programme, and the multiple changes we saw practitioners make. In partnership with Frontline and Crescendo, we are supporting three local authorities - Tower Hamlets, Wandsworth, and Warrington - to make the systemic change needed to enable social workers to do their best work.

Read the stories of five practitioners who have been on this journey to learn about what they think of the process of making small changes, what they have been doing in their local authority, and what they hope to achieve.

It’s been an opportunity for managers and colleagues to come together and think about how we could make things easier for our children’s teams. I think it’s already having an impact because it encourages us to think differently.

Kim Quigley, ASYE Coordinator at Warrington Borough Council Read Kim's full interview

At the start we were asked ‘honestly speaking, how much of your time is spent face-to-face with a young person?’ and no one was able to say more than 50% of the time. This isn’t great when the sole purpose of our work is engagement with young people.

George Parnavelas, Evolve Practitioner at Richmond and Wandsworth Councils Read George's full interview

On World Social Work Day one of my social workers was involved in organising ways to celebrate. We had a tree and wrote celebratory notes about team members which we then placed on it. We then had a meeting where the Director read out the names and stories on them, which was really motivating.

Bolanle Oyenuga, Team Manager at Tower Hamlets Council Read Bolanle's full interview

In our field, you never have enough time - it’s so fast paced and you’re always rushing. So it’s nice to reflect, share your views, articulate it and actually make it into a plan. In order to make a big change we need to start from the beginning, no matter how small that is.

Mariam Mohamed, Exploitation Team at Richmond and Wandsworth Councils Read Mariam's full interview

I think there is a lot to gain from this process, and I like the approach taken by the team; it’s easy, clear and straightforward. I hope we see good outcomes that are sustainable, long lasting, and have a positive impact.

Sharon Dixon, Independent Review Officer at Warrington Borough Council Read Sharon's full interview

Join the conversation

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If you’re looking for inspiration and examples of government innovation, or interested to learn how the current models of government are evolving to shape a new future, that embraces complexity, values relationships and prioritises learning, then we want to hear from you.

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