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Children raised by their birth families will have their lives recorded in the memories of those around them, by their family, by those who love them. A consistent caregiver not only provides a stable foundation for children to spread their roots and grow, they also provide a stable external narrative.
Children and young people in care will also have their lives recorded by those around them but the difference is that for many children in care, especially those on long term care orders, those around them are constantly changing and so that external narrative comes from a huge list of authors, all carrying different opinions and motives. This external narrative can paint an unfair and unbalanced picture of a child.
The lives of children and young people in care are narrated on paper and on electronic systems such as CHARMS. Although foster carers will record a child’s journey in their memory, when a child moves on from them, those memories stay in the minds of the foster carer, whilst their paper narrative sticks with them.
This course will explore how children are portrayed on paper with a focus on the power of blankets statements and labels, encouraging caregivers and professionals to narrate a child’s life positively rather than focussing on what a child has said or done wrong. Scott will also pull on his own life experiences, presenting some of his own files, reflecting on the way he was written about as a child.
Unlimited Duration
6 April 2022
Course Curriculum
- Introduction and Overview 00:00:00
- Safeguarding: The Systems Focus On The Negative 00:00:00
- Opinions, Facts and Labels – Part 1 00:00:00
- Opinions, Facts and Labels – Part 2 00:00:00
- The Child’s Narrative 00:00:00
- Capturing A Child’s Voice 00:00:00
- Accessing Care Files: A Care Leavers Perspective 00:00:00
- Summary 00:00:00
- Evaluation – Capturing The Journey Unlimited
Course Reviews
4.8
- 5 stars51
- 4 stars7
- 3 stars1
- 2 stars0
- 1 stars0
Amazing course!!
Very good
Really helpful and insightful 🙂
I am so glad I met Scott , great Trainer a good insight to the life of a young person in care.
Keep up the good work you are doing for theses young people.
Really thought provoking, hearing from a lived experience, could not recommend this enough to anyone working with children in care.