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CSV Volunteers Supporting Families-measuring the impact of volunteering Jill Williams Business Development Manager

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Page 1: Community Service Volunteers (CSV)

CSV Volunteers Supporting Families-measuring the impact of volunteering

Jill Williams

Business Development Manager

Page 2: Community Service Volunteers (CSV)

CSV Volunteers Supporting Families

Background

The Volunteers in Child Protection project was initiated following the death of

Victoria Climbié

CSV believed there was a role for community volunteers in safeguarding children

We also believed that Social Workers alone should not be responsible forkeeping children safe

CSV convinced a large trust to fund two pilot projects to develop the model

The parents of Victoria Climbié backed the project right from the beginning.

Page 3: Community Service Volunteers (CSV)

CSV Volunteers Supporting Families

The VSF model

●Developed from CSV’s ground breaking ViCP Project

●Project staff co-located within Social Care Teams

●1 Project Manager - 25 volunteer/family relationships

●Volunteers commit for a minimum of 6 months

●Volunteer Involvement Plan provides framework for support

●Supervision and support and ongoing training

●Now in 12 areas-5 commissioned by Local Authorities and 7 funded by DfE

Page 4: Community Service Volunteers (CSV)

CSV Volunteers Supporting Families

Early Objectives

In 2007, the ViCP project had 2 objectives:●to support families under stress and to help protect children from abuse and neglect●to test out the role volunteers could play alongside local authority staff

By 2009, we needed to know:●much more about the actual impact volunteers had on families●value for money●what the experience was like for our volunteers

In 2011 we introduced the Family Star tool.

Larissa Fischer
Page 5: Community Service Volunteers (CSV)

CSV Volunteers Supporting Families

Evaluation

Initial pilot project research by Professor Jane Tunstill concluded that: ● volunteers were regarded as ‘making an important contribution to the

well being of the children and families’ ● ‘being co-located in the children’s services departments is crucial to

the credibility and viability of the project and maximises its chances of eliciting referrals from social workers’

● ‘there is considerable value in prioritising the needs of the family over the needs/preferences of the volunteer in order to create a ‘positive match’

Jane Tunstill’s research Executive Summary (1997): www.csv.org.uk/childprotection

Page 6: Community Service Volunteers (CSV)

CSV Volunteers Supporting Families

EvaluationAnglia Ruskin University research (September 2011) found that:

● There was “compelling evidence” that ViCP delivers positive outcomes for: ● Children and families, enabling parents:

to improve their parenting skills and family functioning, with children often coming off child protections plans (CP)

to engage with universal services, access health checks and improve children’s school attendance

● That volunteers have a positive experience, are well managed and supported by CSV and are valued by professional stakeholders throughout

● And other stakeholders, including social workers, welcome the extra resource and the different approach

● That the project delivers undoubted value for money

Page 7: Community Service Volunteers (CSV)

CSV Volunteers Supporting Families

Outcomes and Impact

Our research has shown that:

● Children’s emotional and behavioural difficulties improve

● Family functioning improves and the families are better engaged with external services

● Mothers’ well-being improves

Page 8: Community Service Volunteers (CSV)

CSV Volunteers Supporting Families

Service Aims

Families get regular individual support in the family home to enable them to meet their Child Protection Plan

Improve family functioning

Improve children’s wellbeing

Reduce social isolation

Improve parents and children’s confidence and parenting skills

Help families to successfully come off their plans, to come out of Child Protection altogether or step down and have continued support

Providing high quality training and a positive experience for volunteers

Page 9: Community Service Volunteers (CSV)

CSV Volunteers Supporting Families

What we measure and how

●Family Star tool-beginning and end

scores

●Children’s attendance at school

●Children coming off CP plans to

CIN and/or CIN to CAF and CAF to

universal services (reduced risk)

●Family and referrer evaluation form

●Number of family visits, number of hours spent with the family

●Number of volunteers, number of volunteers trained, training satisfaction

 Family Star scores from across CSV’s VSF projects           Scale Initial Final Change  Physical health 7.1 8.7 1.6  Emotional well-being 5.8 7.2 1.4  Keeping your children safe 7.2 8.7 1.5  Social networks 5.8 7.2 1.4  Education and learning 6.4 8.4 2.0  Boundaries and behaviour 5.4 7.5 2.0  Family routine 7.0 8.2 1.2  Home and money 6.5 7.9 1.4  Average 6.4 8.0 1.6  

 

 

 

Page 10: Community Service Volunteers (CSV)

CSV Volunteers Supporting Families

Summary

●External evaluation has been vital to give credibility to the service

●The project has clear aims and objectives that have been developed over time

●Continual review and learning ensures the project remains current

●Having data from tools such as the Family Star as well as case studies enables us to measure the impact on families

Going forward

In response to requests from local authorities we will get:

●Quotes from children

●Information on training and employment in Social Care and related fields for volunteers

Page 11: Community Service Volunteers (CSV)

CSV Volunteers Supporting Families

Page 12: Community Service Volunteers (CSV)

CSV Volunteers Supporting Families

“Being a volunteer helped to improve my communication skills and also helped to increase my confidence. I also had a sense of achievement from having beenable to support the family.”

‘I felt that I was able to provide support to these parents at this difficult time, and I was very touched that Mum and Dad both wanted me to continue to visit. Attending the children’s centre, vaccination appointments, the library and job

centre all felt like useful, practical activities, but as they said in their evaluation, what they actually valued most was having someone to talk to’.

Most of our volunteers are aged 25-44.

313 are female and 37 are men

This year we have had 287 applications and trained 130 volunteers (Q1-3)

Page 13: Community Service Volunteers (CSV)

Thank youJill Williams

[email protected]

Tel 0207 643 1396Mob 07950060117 www.csv.org.uk