Early years support

Nesta has published a new report looking at support for families and children in the early years. The report analyses the Fairer Start Local programme which ran in partnership with three local authorities in England to test and scale new ideas to support early childhood development. The programme aimed to break the link between family background and life chances and help children have happy and healthy childhoods. The report presents six learning points on how to innovate effectively in the early years sector, including: adopting a ‘test and learn’ approach, testing ideas on a small scale and using feedback and data to guide adaptations; and co-designing with parents and practitioners to ensure that solutions are based on lived and professional experience, as well as the latest evidence.   

Read the report: Innovation in the early years  

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Responding to child sexual abuse concerns

The Centre of Expertise on Child Sexual Abuse (CSA Centre) has updated its guidance on communicating with children who have or may have been sexually abused. The guide has been designed to help professionals to listen, understand and provide support to children and young people when there are concerns about sexual abuse.

Access the guide: Communicating with children : a guide for those working with children who have or may have been sexually abused

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Child sexual abuse inquiry

The BBC has published a news story exploring the 20 recommendations that were set out by the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) in October 2022. The Inquiry investigated abuse in churches, schools, custodial institutions and other settings. The news story looks at what progress has been made. Proposals included: a mandatory duty for people working with children to report child abuse; improvements to data collection, analysis and use; the creation of Child Protection Authorities for England and Wales; and calls for platform providers to pre-screen material for child sexual abuse images. The Government says it is committed to all the recommendations.

Read the news story: The 20 child abuse inquiry proposals – what has happened so far?

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Child sexual abuse and exploitation

The Home Office has published a statement made by the Home Secretary to Parliament outlining the Government’s commitment to tackling grooming and child sexual abuse. The statement discusses recommendations from the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) and commits to setting up a victims and survivors panel to help shape new proposals and plans on child sexual abuse and exploitation. It confirms that the Government will act on three key IICSA recommendations: making it an offence to fail to report or to cover up child sexual abuse, with professional and criminal sanctions; legislating to make grooming an aggravating factor in the sentencing of child sexual offences; and making reforms related to the information and evidence gathered on child sexual abuse and exploitation, including a new performance framework for policing.

Read the statement: Tackling child sexual abuse

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Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill

The Department for Education (DfE) has published a press release on the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill being debated in Parliament. The press release outlines how the new measures in the Bill will help protect children and young people from exploitation, grooming and abuse. The Children’s Charities Coalition, made up of five charities including the NSPCC, has published a response to the Bill. The response outlines the need for the Bill and welcomes the child protection measures it sets out. 

Read the DfE press release: Children’s bill to keep children safe from exploitation 
Read the Children’s Charities Coalition response: 
CEOs from the Children’s Charities Coalition respond to The Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill

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KCSIE Translations – London Grid for Learning

The London Grid for Learning is aiming to make official documentation easier for a wider array of people. Their hard work has resulted in the translation of KCSIE 2024 Part I into: Arabic, Bengali, Chinese, Gujarati, Polish, Portuguese, Punjabi, Romanian, Somali, Spanish, Ukrainian and Urdu. You can see the results of this excellent project, by following the link below: 

https://lgfl.net/safeguarding/kcsietranslate

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Single headline Ofsted grades scrapped in landmark school reform

Government pushes ahead with reform agenda by scrapping single headline Ofsted judgements for schools with immediate effect.

Single headline grades for schools will be scrapped with immediate effect to boost school standards and increase transparency for parents, the government has announced today.

Reductive single headline grades fail to provide a fair and accurate assessment of overall school performance across a range of areas and are supported by a minority of parents and teachers. 

The change delivers on the government’s mission to break down barriers to opportunity and demonstrates the Prime Minister’s commitment to improve the life chances of young people across the country.

full details

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Fines for parents for taking children out of school: What you need to know

Every moment in school counts and days missed add up quickly. Evidence shows that pupils who have good attendance enjoy better wellbeing and school performance than those who don’t. 

The school day is split into two sessions – one session counts as a morning or afternoon spent in school. There are only a few occasions where a child is allowed to miss school, such as illness or where the school has given permission because of an exceptional circumstance. 

However, if your child misses school without a good reason, local councils and schools can intervene and you may be issued a fine. 

full story

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