Improving education for incarcerated children and young people: policy recommendations from three transnational projects in Europe

Purpose – The purpose of this policy piece is to present headline evidence from the equivalent of a decade of research across three projects focused on improving the educational experiences of incarcerated or justice-involved children and young people across 14 countries. The projects demonstrated a...

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Main Author: Adeela ahmed Shafi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Emerald Publishing 2024-12-01
Series:Quality Education for All
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Online Access:https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/QEA-03-2024-0032/full/pdf
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author Adeela ahmed Shafi
author_facet Adeela ahmed Shafi
author_sort Adeela ahmed Shafi
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description Purpose – The purpose of this policy piece is to present headline evidence from the equivalent of a decade of research across three projects focused on improving the educational experiences of incarcerated or justice-involved children and young people across 14 countries. The projects demonstrated a positive impact when using the specially designed innovative methods even with disengaged justice-involved children and young people. Each project had a different focus based on the needs of the children and young people, including (re)engaging them with education and learning opportunities re-engaging young offenders with education and learning (RENYO), developing identified social and emotional competencies through sport active games 4 change (AG4C) and developing skills for when transitioning into communities (S4L). Design/methodology/approach – Each of the three projects designed bespoke interventions and materials based on the focus of the project. Combined, these were piloted across a total of 14 countries with 548 children and young people, 225 educators and 21 youth justice settings (custodial and non-custodial). Qualitative and quantitative data were gathered from educators, children and young people to better understand the effectiveness and limitations of the pedagogical approaches, the materials and experiences of the users. Findings – The findings from across the three projects demonstrated that when custodial settings or youth justice settings have greater access to specifically designed tools and resources, with appropriate training to use them, it is possible to re-engage even the most disengaged children and young people with education and learning (RENYO). It was also possible to show a statistically significant increase in social and emotional competencies (social awareness, responsible decision-making, self-awareness, self-management, relationship skills) in participating country settings (AG4C) and to engage children and young people with a Skills4Life Curriculum in preparation for moving back into the community. Research limitations/implications – Custodial and other youth justice settings vary widely in different jurisdictions with varying levels of resource. Whilst all programmes had success in implementation, this was to different degrees and extents in each of the country contexts. Much of this success will depend on the skills of educators and the willingness of the leadership. Practical implications – The programmes and interventions in this policy piece can be used in a range of contexts and settings as shown by the wide range of sites they were piloted in. From a practical perspective, these programmes and interventions have been designed to fit into existing structures and timetables with custodial and youth justice settings, making them easily integrated into business as usual. Originality/value – Planned and strategically delivered interventions by expert educators in a holistic way means there is real opportunity to better support justice involved children and young people to successful transitioning back into communities, thereby potentially reducing reoffending. This is done by (re)engaging them with education and learning on entry, using the authentic inquiry methodology, developing social and emotional competencies through the active games and sport programme, followed by a tailored Skils4Life Curriculum preparing them for transition back into communities.
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spelling doaj-art-067e89fb0a7e4f2388edab8fbb9935d62025-02-03T14:29:31ZengEmerald PublishingQuality Education for All2976-93102024-12-011118018610.1108/QEA-03-2024-0032Improving education for incarcerated children and young people: policy recommendations from three transnational projects in EuropeAdeela ahmed Shafi0School of Education and Applied Sciences, University of Gloucestershire, Cheltenham, UKPurpose – The purpose of this policy piece is to present headline evidence from the equivalent of a decade of research across three projects focused on improving the educational experiences of incarcerated or justice-involved children and young people across 14 countries. The projects demonstrated a positive impact when using the specially designed innovative methods even with disengaged justice-involved children and young people. Each project had a different focus based on the needs of the children and young people, including (re)engaging them with education and learning opportunities re-engaging young offenders with education and learning (RENYO), developing identified social and emotional competencies through sport active games 4 change (AG4C) and developing skills for when transitioning into communities (S4L). Design/methodology/approach – Each of the three projects designed bespoke interventions and materials based on the focus of the project. Combined, these were piloted across a total of 14 countries with 548 children and young people, 225 educators and 21 youth justice settings (custodial and non-custodial). Qualitative and quantitative data were gathered from educators, children and young people to better understand the effectiveness and limitations of the pedagogical approaches, the materials and experiences of the users. Findings – The findings from across the three projects demonstrated that when custodial settings or youth justice settings have greater access to specifically designed tools and resources, with appropriate training to use them, it is possible to re-engage even the most disengaged children and young people with education and learning (RENYO). It was also possible to show a statistically significant increase in social and emotional competencies (social awareness, responsible decision-making, self-awareness, self-management, relationship skills) in participating country settings (AG4C) and to engage children and young people with a Skills4Life Curriculum in preparation for moving back into the community. Research limitations/implications – Custodial and other youth justice settings vary widely in different jurisdictions with varying levels of resource. Whilst all programmes had success in implementation, this was to different degrees and extents in each of the country contexts. Much of this success will depend on the skills of educators and the willingness of the leadership. Practical implications – The programmes and interventions in this policy piece can be used in a range of contexts and settings as shown by the wide range of sites they were piloted in. From a practical perspective, these programmes and interventions have been designed to fit into existing structures and timetables with custodial and youth justice settings, making them easily integrated into business as usual. Originality/value – Planned and strategically delivered interventions by expert educators in a holistic way means there is real opportunity to better support justice involved children and young people to successful transitioning back into communities, thereby potentially reducing reoffending. This is done by (re)engaging them with education and learning on entry, using the authentic inquiry methodology, developing social and emotional competencies through the active games and sport programme, followed by a tailored Skils4Life Curriculum preparing them for transition back into communities.https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/QEA-03-2024-0032/full/pdfYouth justiceIncarcerated youthEducation in juvenile justiceEngagement in educationLife skills juvenile justiceSports in juvenile justice
spellingShingle Adeela ahmed Shafi
Improving education for incarcerated children and young people: policy recommendations from three transnational projects in Europe
Quality Education for All
Youth justice
Incarcerated youth
Education in juvenile justice
Engagement in education
Life skills juvenile justice
Sports in juvenile justice
title Improving education for incarcerated children and young people: policy recommendations from three transnational projects in Europe
title_full Improving education for incarcerated children and young people: policy recommendations from three transnational projects in Europe
title_fullStr Improving education for incarcerated children and young people: policy recommendations from three transnational projects in Europe
title_full_unstemmed Improving education for incarcerated children and young people: policy recommendations from three transnational projects in Europe
title_short Improving education for incarcerated children and young people: policy recommendations from three transnational projects in Europe
title_sort improving education for incarcerated children and young people policy recommendations from three transnational projects in europe
topic Youth justice
Incarcerated youth
Education in juvenile justice
Engagement in education
Life skills juvenile justice
Sports in juvenile justice
url https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/QEA-03-2024-0032/full/pdf
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