Peer Support for Children and Young People s Mental Health Programme : Facts and Frequently Asked Questions

Similar documents
Project Manager Mental Health Job Description and Application Pack

Stockport Dementia Care Training. Stockport Dementia Care Training Information Sheet Dementia Training from January 2016

Job Description ST4-ST6 Sussex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust

CASY Counselling Services for Schools

Welcome to the Recovery Education Centre

An employer of choice

CASY Counselling Services for Schools

DfE Children and Young People s Mental Health: Peer Support March 2016

Certificate IV in Mental Health Peer Work (CHC43515) Program - Elsternwick

Cambridgeshire Training, Education and Development Older People (CAMTED-OP)

Project Manager. ROTA Job Description. Purpose:

Contraception and Sexual Health (CaSH) Action Team Volunteering Programme Brighton. Drop in Volunteer Pack + Campaign team Volunteer Pack

SENCO good practice news Winter 2012

Digitally including the socially excluded: perspectives from mental health

Your Voices Amplified

Group Work Programme

Five Ways to Wellbeing Time to Change Filmed Workshop Supporting Notes

Supporting staff wellbeing in schools

Training Programme. Updated January 2018

National Grid Case Study. Its Time to Change isn't it? Don t ignore the elephant in the room Working well at National Grid

Palliative and End of Life Care Learning and Development Opportunities 2016/2017

SPECIALIST TEACHING AND LEARNING SERVICE

Cancer Health & Wellbeing Programme. Practical advice, information and support to help you move forward with your life after treatment

Training and consultancy services Preventing bullying, protecting children

MENTAL HEALTH SERVICE USER INVOLVEMENT Service User Involvement Project Worker The job description does not form part of the contract of employment

School of Improvement Supporting trainees from Students to Consultants

Simply, participation means individual s involvement in decisions that affect them.

Volunteering in NHSScotland Developing and Sustaining Volunteering in NHSScotland

January to July Training and Support. for Clubs, Coaches, Volunteers, Teachers, Instructors and Activators. Supported by

Multilingual Manchester Volunteer Handbook

ENRICH Peer Support Worker

THE CARDIFF COMMITMENT TO YOUTH ENGAGEMENT AND PROGRESSION: REPORT OF DIRECTOR OF EDUCATION & LIFELONG LEARNING

Recruitment Pack West Midlands Project Officer for the Anne Frank Trust UK. Salary: 21,000 to 23,000 per annum, pro rata (Term time only)

Action Together CIO - Membership Form

WRAP Level 2 Facilitator Training 5 Day Training Course

Leeds Mind Peer Support Group work programme January to March 2018

Counselling & Disability Services. Group Program Semester 2, 2016 STAFF

Volunteering with Lincolnshire Rape Crisis

EMOTIONAL WELLBEING DROP IN FOR CHILDREN AND YOUNG PEOPLE UNDER 25, PARENTS, CARERS & PROFESSIONALS

CONTENTS ABOUT CMHA CALGARY

Prospectus September Education, Innovation & Research (EIR) Department. Caring, Building, Shaping, Valuing, Inspiring, Encouraging, Developing,

INTERIM PARTICIPATION MANAGER

Mental Health and Wellbeing Award Level 4 & 5 Whitehill Secondary School

Office base Positively UK in Islington, outreach to centres across London

AUDIT OUTLINE INFORMATION SUMMARY

Ending Gang and Youth Violence. Programme for Young Women who are Involved in or at Risk of Involvement in Gangs and Violent Crime.

VOLUNTEER REGIONAL / NATIONAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE MEMBERS

The National Practitioner Support Service

PATH. Introducing the PATH training programme. Who is the training for? What is a Psychologically Informed Environment (PIE)?

The ESRC Centre for Research on Socio-Cultural Change, University of Manchester: A Study of the Academy Programme Pilot in Bradford

Raising the aspirations and awareness for young carers towards higher education

Children and Young People s events 2019

Opportunities to become involved

JOB DESCRIPTION. Sessional Youth Worker (Lothian) April 2018

JOB DESCRIPTION. Youth & Community Development Officer (Lothian) Supporting our Transgender Work. April 2018

NAMI California Peer-to-Peer Mentor Training Application

Pupil voice gaining the views and feelings of children with autism

Briefing paper Horizon 2020 call SC1-PM Promoting mental health and well-being in the young

Evaluation of Satellite Clubs: FINAL REPORT

Scotch Whisky Action Fund 2017 Awardees

Bexley Voice Annual General Meeting. 19 th September 2018

Derbyshire Trusted Befriending Network Tackling Isolation & Loneliness in Derbyshire

Limpsfield Grange School

Exhibition Curator Brief

Edwardsville Primary School Cardiff Road Treharris Merthyr Tydfil CF465NE Headteacher: - Mr C.Davies. Required from September Permanent Contract

APPLICATION Athlete Preparation Program Term 1, 2019

Position Description: Peer Navigator

Counselling & Disability Services. Group Program Semester 1, 2018 STAFF

Medical Psychotherapy Advanced Training Programme Guide Health Education South West, Severn

Peer Support Association. Strategic Plan and Development Strategy

How wonderful it is that nobody need wait a single moment before starting to improve the world. Anne Frank

for life training calendar July 2016

Summer 2017 Term Timetable

Recovery from Psychosis: A Ten-Week Program

The Implementation of Recovery in Medium Secure Services

Date Time Activity Location Key participants Sunday 3 Oct. Workshop on Ageing and Alzheimer s Disease *

Setting Direction in the South Eastern Outcomes Area to improve the lives and children, young people and families

The Oaktree Foundation s GENERATE PROGRAM

FAMILY SUPPORT WORKER APPLICATION PACK

Youth Advisory Group Member. Community Engagement Officer. Level 1, 360 Burwood Road, Hawthorn VIC 3122

Living Evidence Network

SPECIALIST TEACHING AND LEARNING SERVICE

Empowering young people to challenge mental health stigma and discrimination. Wendy Halliday, See Me

MENTAL HEALTH AND EMOTIONAL WELLBEING KEY STAGES 3 AND 4

NEWSLETTER. LiveWell Dementia Hub. September In this month s newsletter :

CWP Drug & Alcohol Education Curriculum Overview

Setting up a Mental Health Support Group

Hillside Specilalist School for Autism Spectrum Disorder, Communication and Interaction.

Workplace Wellbeing Training

Contents. Contact information

Empowerment, healing and transformation for women moving on from violence

Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University First Year Experience Peer Mentor Program Application & Information Packet

work of Khululeka Grief Support

Peer counselling A new element in the ET2020 toolbox

Positive Relationship and Social Development in the Early Years 5. Language for Learning Foundation Stage- Adult and Child Interaction 6

UK Psychotherapy Training Survey Summary

DRUG EDUCATION POLICY

UCLH Cancer Collaborative Patient Experience and User Involvement Steering Group Member s Role Description: People affected by cancer

Dementia Action Alliance survey for carers and professionals

Expert Carers Helping Others (ECHO) A case study on carer involvement in mental health research

Transcription:

Peer Support for Children and Young People s Mental Health Programme 2017-18: Facts and Frequently Asked Questions 1. What is the Peer Support for Children and Young People s Mental Health Programme? This programme supports and provides schools and colleges with evidence informed training and resources to successfully refine or develop a peer mentoring programme which focusses on mental health and emotional wellbeing. If you are a children and young people s community organisation please download the CYPCO expression of interest form. The programme consists of two-days of training workshops where school/college staff can explore any existing peer support they have in place at their setting or would like to implement. The training workshops will give staff an opportunity to refine their programmes based on evidence informed peer support principles. Attendees will leave ready to establish or refine their own effective peer support in their setting. The workshops and supporting toolkit will be based on 5 key principles: Building a project appropriate for environment and developmental stage Involving the right people Relationship and trust Young people ownership Keeping safe and establishing boundaries There will be five workshops over the two days. You will also be provided with a toolkit which will support you to implement learning from these workshops back in your setting. The workshops will be co-delivered by expert trainers and young people who have previously experienced peer support. Workshop 1 Introduction What is peer support? A young person s experience of peer support. What to do when things don t work well. Relationships and relational practice. Children and young people s mental health. Workshop 2 - A practical workshop exploring how you could set up your project How to recruit the right people as peer supporters and ensure you are supported. Practical exploration of different peer support models and how you could support each of these in your setting. How you will ensure that young people take a lead in setting up and shaping your project. Workshop 3- A practical workshop preparing for training your peer supporters Based on the peer support principles, learning objectives and set resources we will support you to adapt three readymade lesson plans for your setting. Workshop 4- An experiential workshop exploring how will you safely supervise the peer support project Peer Support for Children and Young People s Mental Health 2017-18 1

Keeping the peer support project safe, confidential and within set boundaries. How and where to seek supervision and support. Workshop 5- Evaluation and impact How the project will be evaluated. What are the expectations from the school lead with regards to evaluation. How schools can better evaluate impact in their setting. Please note this is not an academic support programme aimed at raising attainment. This programme is about improving the mental health and emotional wellbeing of children and young people. 2. Who is the programme for? This programme is for any education provider wishing to set up or refine a peer support programme supporting young people s mental health and emotional wellbeing. Education providers could include Primary Schools, Secondary Schools, Colleges, Sixth Forms, APs, PRUs or Special Schools. The programme will support a designated member of staff to co design, implement and deliver a sustainable peer mentoring programme. It is therefore critical that the right representatives attend the training. The named lead member of staff must be available for the duration of both training days and must have the capacity to implement and supervise the programme at their school/college. The lead contact must also commit to attending termly Community of Practice support groups. Community of Practice meetings will take place by telephone, via webinar or face to face. We are welcoming expressions of interest from schools/colleges in the following areas only: Derbyshire Greater Manchester East Sussex Suffolk West Yorkshire We are expecting high volumes of expressions of interest from schools/colleges and have robust selection criteria which includes the prioritisation of schools/colleges in the following opportunity areas: Bradford Derby Hastings Ipswich Oldham If you are a children and young people s community organisation please download the CYPCO expression of interest form. 3. Why should schools/colleges be involved? 1/10 young people have an emerging or more significant mental health disorder. There is evidence that many of these young people can be effectively supported by their peers to become more resilient and as a result not go on to develop more severe difficulties. Young people typically are much more likely to engage with their peers than an adult. The key is to make sure that these peer supporters have the right skills and support to be able to safely and effectively provide this support. Peer Support for Children and Young People s Mental Health 2017-18 2

Dr Simon Munk, Children s mental health service lead, London borough of Newham/Chair of More than Mentors peer mentoring board. This DfE funded programme is an exciting opportunity to support mental health and wellbeing in your school/college setting. The Peer Support for Children and Young People s Mental Health Programme will involve over 100 schools/colleges across Derbyshire, Greater Manchester, East Sussex, Suffolk and West Yorkshire. The programme will be externally evaluated by Ecorys. We will work with Ecroys to ensure that schools/colleges receive individualised reports which demonstrate both quantitatively and qualitatively the impact their local project is having on young people s emotional and educational outcomes. Evidence and impact will be shared nationally, making a real difference to support the MH and wellbeing of children and young people. Evidence Base The programme is centred on evidence based peer support principles derived from a review of the literature Characterizing Mentoring Programs for Promoting Children and Young People s Wellbeing. 4. What will it cost? There is no charge for workshops or materials. Schools/colleges will receive 3500 to support their participation in the programme which can be used to backfill staff time, pay for travel or other costs associated with the programme. 5. What commitment of time and resources is needed from schools/colleges during the programme? Schools/colleges will need to nominate a lead contact who will hold overall responsibility for the project. The lead contact must be able to attend both days of training workshops (see training timetable in section 7) and must be the member of staff who will implement and supervise the programme at their education provision. The school lead will need SLT sign off prior to attending the training. Having attended the two initial days of training workshops the lead contact, with the support of the toolkit, will go back to their setting and: Recruit a small group of young people as peer supporters. Work with the group to develop a project idea. Train the group over 3 sessions (using the toolkit lesson plans). Implement the first phase of the mentoring programme from March through to July and provide regular supervision to their peer supporters. Attend the termly Community of Practice meetings. Meetings will take place by telephone, via webinar or face to face. Reflect with the young people on what has worked well and how the project could be improved and use the findings to refine the project. Deliver the refined project from October through to February 2019. Participate fully in all required monitoring and evaluation of the project outlined in section 6 below. 6. Monitoring and Evaluation requirements The programme is being externally evaluated by Ecorys. The monitoring and evaluation requirements for the programme are outlined below: Peer Support for Children and Young People s Mental Health 2017-18 3

A 10-minute internet survey of the lead in each school/college to assess knowledge, attitudes and awareness at the start and again at the end of the programme. An in-depth 45-minute telephone interview with lead contacts in 40 selected schools/colleges near the start of the programme to look at issues in more detail. Self-evaluation tools will be provided to schools/colleges to allow them to conduct data collection with relevant individuals or groups in their school/college. An electronic data collection platform will be provided allowing results to be inputted easily. Schools/colleges will be fully supported through this process. Around 15 schools/colleges will be selected to take part in case studies involving around a day visit to schools/colleges to speak to a range of staff, peer supporters or beneficiaries and parents/carers depending on the particular site. We will work closely with each selected school/college to ensure their needs are taken into account in this process. We will also look to work with a small number of those taking part in case studies to support children and young people to conduct participatory action research. 7. Training Workshops The programme is specifically designed to have minimal burden on resources and capacity of schools/colleges. The training workshops will be delivered as two, day-long, face-to-face sessions (10.00am - 5.00pm), held on consecutive days. Please see below for the training timetable. To ensure the staff build relevant networks, schools/colleges in each location will be split into cohorts according to the age of pupils at their provision. Lead School contacts must be able to attend both training sessions in full to take part in the programme. The Lead School Contact must be the person who implements the Peer Support Programme at your school/college. Training timetable Location Date Time Venue Greater Manchester Greater Manchester -primary age cohort day 1 Monday 15th January Greater Manchester -primary age cohort day 2 Tuesday 16th January Greater Manchester secondary/college aged Wednesday 17th January Greater Manchester secondary/college aged Thursday 18th January West Yorkshire West Yorkshire - primary age cohort day 1 Monday 15th January West Yorkshire - primary age cohort day 2 Tuesday 16th January West Yorkshire secondary/college aged Wednesday 17th January West Yorkshire secondary/college aged Thursday 18th January Peer Support for Children and Young People s Mental Health 2017-18 4

Derbyshire Derbyshire - primary age Monday 22nd January Derbyshire - primary age Tuesday 23rd January Derbyshire secondary/college aged Monday 22nd January Derbyshire secondary/college aged Tuesday 23rd January Suffolk Suffolk - primary age Monday 29th January Suffolk - primary age Tuesday 30th January Suffolk secondary/college aged cohort day 1 Wednesday 31st January Suffolk secondary/college aged cohort day 2 Thursday 1st February East Sussex East Sussex - primary age Monday 5th February East Sussex - primary age Tuesday 6th February East Sussex secondary/college aged Wednesday 7th February East Sussex secondary/college aged Thursday 8th February Peer Support for Children and Young People s Mental Health 2017-18 5