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Making a case for common assessment framework responses to concerns about children

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Making a case for common assessment framework responses to concerns about children. / Thorpe, David; Regan, S; Mason, Claire et al.
In: Social Work and Social Sciences Review, Vol. 12, No. 3, 2007, p. 40-56.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Thorpe D, Regan S, Mason C, May-Chahal C. Making a case for common assessment framework responses to concerns about children. Social Work and Social Sciences Review. 2007;12(3):40-56.

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Thorpe, David ; Regan, S ; Mason, Claire et al. / Making a case for common assessment framework responses to concerns about children. In: Social Work and Social Sciences Review. 2007 ; Vol. 12, No. 3. pp. 40-56.

Bibtex

@article{50abb75f216a46748d3ed17c0bf69267,
title = "Making a case for common assessment framework responses to concerns about children",
abstract = "The past 11 years (1995-2006) have seen several major government initiatives in child welfare programmes culminating in the Children Act 2004 which places a duty on Children's Services and their relevant partners to 'cooperate to improve the well-being' of children. One of the most important vehicles of delivery is the establishment of a common assessment framework (CAF) (DfES, 2003) as a key recommendation of the Green Paper Every Child Matters (2003). It is believed that the implementation of the Framework will lead to a significant re-shaping of intervention practices and to a measurable improvement in the lives of children and families facing adversity of different kinds.The research presented in this article aims to address a fundamental problem which stands in the way of this initiative designed to standardize approaches to the assessment of need. The problem concerns the identification and categorization of matters which are currently being referred by different agents and agencies to children's services social care 'front-doors' as child protection matters. In the context of the findings of the first evaluation of the CAF and Lead Professional Guidance (DfEs, 2006) and the issues it raised over how 'thresholds' for services are being defined between partner agencies, the findings of research from the study being reported on this paper have implications for the reform of children's services in the UK and in other places where polices to improve the well being of children and young people are paramount.",
keywords = "COMMON ASSESSMENT FRAMEWORK , CHILDREN ACT, 2004 , FRAMEWORK FOR THE ASSESSMENT OF CHILDREN IN NEED A",
author = "David Thorpe and S Regan and Claire Mason and Corinne May-Chahal",
year = "2007",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
pages = "40--56",
journal = "Social Work and Social Sciences Review",
issn = "0953-5225",
publisher = "Whiting and Birch",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Making a case for common assessment framework responses to concerns about children

AU - Thorpe, David

AU - Regan, S

AU - Mason, Claire

AU - May-Chahal, Corinne

PY - 2007

Y1 - 2007

N2 - The past 11 years (1995-2006) have seen several major government initiatives in child welfare programmes culminating in the Children Act 2004 which places a duty on Children's Services and their relevant partners to 'cooperate to improve the well-being' of children. One of the most important vehicles of delivery is the establishment of a common assessment framework (CAF) (DfES, 2003) as a key recommendation of the Green Paper Every Child Matters (2003). It is believed that the implementation of the Framework will lead to a significant re-shaping of intervention practices and to a measurable improvement in the lives of children and families facing adversity of different kinds.The research presented in this article aims to address a fundamental problem which stands in the way of this initiative designed to standardize approaches to the assessment of need. The problem concerns the identification and categorization of matters which are currently being referred by different agents and agencies to children's services social care 'front-doors' as child protection matters. In the context of the findings of the first evaluation of the CAF and Lead Professional Guidance (DfEs, 2006) and the issues it raised over how 'thresholds' for services are being defined between partner agencies, the findings of research from the study being reported on this paper have implications for the reform of children's services in the UK and in other places where polices to improve the well being of children and young people are paramount.

AB - The past 11 years (1995-2006) have seen several major government initiatives in child welfare programmes culminating in the Children Act 2004 which places a duty on Children's Services and their relevant partners to 'cooperate to improve the well-being' of children. One of the most important vehicles of delivery is the establishment of a common assessment framework (CAF) (DfES, 2003) as a key recommendation of the Green Paper Every Child Matters (2003). It is believed that the implementation of the Framework will lead to a significant re-shaping of intervention practices and to a measurable improvement in the lives of children and families facing adversity of different kinds.The research presented in this article aims to address a fundamental problem which stands in the way of this initiative designed to standardize approaches to the assessment of need. The problem concerns the identification and categorization of matters which are currently being referred by different agents and agencies to children's services social care 'front-doors' as child protection matters. In the context of the findings of the first evaluation of the CAF and Lead Professional Guidance (DfEs, 2006) and the issues it raised over how 'thresholds' for services are being defined between partner agencies, the findings of research from the study being reported on this paper have implications for the reform of children's services in the UK and in other places where polices to improve the well being of children and young people are paramount.

KW - COMMON ASSESSMENT FRAMEWORK

KW - CHILDREN ACT, 2004

KW - FRAMEWORK FOR THE ASSESSMENT OF CHILDREN IN NEED A

M3 - Journal article

VL - 12

SP - 40

EP - 56

JO - Social Work and Social Sciences Review

JF - Social Work and Social Sciences Review

SN - 0953-5225

IS - 3

ER -