'A different way to look at things': the development of consultancy in a residential service for children and young people

The support of consultancy and the tasks associated with consultation are considered to play a vital role in the development of good practice in residential care and in safeguarding children and young people. Back in the 1970s, Berry (1975) recommended that all residential workers should have opport...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Andrew Kendrick
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: CELCIS 2005-03-01
Series:Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832591165423091712
author Andrew Kendrick
author_facet Andrew Kendrick
author_sort Andrew Kendrick
collection DOAJ
description The support of consultancy and the tasks associated with consultation are considered to play a vital role in the development of good practice in residential care and in safeguarding children and young people. Back in the 1970s, Berry (1975) recommended that all residential workers should have opportunities for support and consultation and 'every residential unit requires a special senior supporter who devotes himself (sic) to the staff without being directly responsible for the children... a consultant, counsellor, supervisor or therapist (but not an inspector)' (Berry, 1975, p. 134). More recently, however, Warner(1992) highlighted that too often staff in children's homes are left to cope with abused, disturbed and violent young people without access to the specialist psychiatric and psychological services that are needed (Warner, 1992, p. 144). He stressed the need for support from specialists in other agencies such as child psychiatrists and educational psychologists and for staff care schemes such asstress counselling (Warner, 1992, pp. 154-155). Over half the heads of units in the survey of residential establishments in Scotland felt they needed additionalsupport such as a specialist adviser, consultant or psychologist, and 'often such a specialist was required to provide a service both to residents and/or staff, suchas an independent counsellor' (Harvey, 1992, pp. 27-28).
format Article
id doaj-art-63597fceb1c24303821f708cb9e3e213
institution Kabale University
issn 2976-9353
language English
publishDate 2005-03-01
publisher CELCIS
record_format Article
series Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care
spelling doaj-art-63597fceb1c24303821f708cb9e3e2132025-01-22T16:11:14ZengCELCISScottish Journal of Residential Child Care2976-93532005-03-014110.17868/strath.0007898'A different way to look at things': the development of consultancy in a residential service for children and young peopleAndrew Kendrick0University of StrathclydeThe support of consultancy and the tasks associated with consultation are considered to play a vital role in the development of good practice in residential care and in safeguarding children and young people. Back in the 1970s, Berry (1975) recommended that all residential workers should have opportunities for support and consultation and 'every residential unit requires a special senior supporter who devotes himself (sic) to the staff without being directly responsible for the children... a consultant, counsellor, supervisor or therapist (but not an inspector)' (Berry, 1975, p. 134). More recently, however, Warner(1992) highlighted that too often staff in children's homes are left to cope with abused, disturbed and violent young people without access to the specialist psychiatric and psychological services that are needed (Warner, 1992, p. 144). He stressed the need for support from specialists in other agencies such as child psychiatrists and educational psychologists and for staff care schemes such asstress counselling (Warner, 1992, pp. 154-155). Over half the heads of units in the survey of residential establishments in Scotland felt they needed additionalsupport such as a specialist adviser, consultant or psychologist, and 'often such a specialist was required to provide a service both to residents and/or staff, suchas an independent counsellor' (Harvey, 1992, pp. 27-28).child care workersconsultancyconsultantsmanagerspsychotherapyresidential child careresidential social workersteamstrainingresearchscotland
spellingShingle Andrew Kendrick
'A different way to look at things': the development of consultancy in a residential service for children and young people
Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care
child care workers
consultancy
consultants
managers
psychotherapy
residential child care
residential social workers
teams
training
research
scotland
title 'A different way to look at things': the development of consultancy in a residential service for children and young people
title_full 'A different way to look at things': the development of consultancy in a residential service for children and young people
title_fullStr 'A different way to look at things': the development of consultancy in a residential service for children and young people
title_full_unstemmed 'A different way to look at things': the development of consultancy in a residential service for children and young people
title_short 'A different way to look at things': the development of consultancy in a residential service for children and young people
title_sort a different way to look at things the development of consultancy in a residential service for children and young people
topic child care workers
consultancy
consultants
managers
psychotherapy
residential child care
residential social workers
teams
training
research
scotland
work_keys_str_mv AT andrewkendrick adifferentwaytolookatthingsthedevelopmentofconsultancyinaresidentialserviceforchildrenandyoungpeople