www.literacytrust.org.uk family awareness, access and action: the partners in literacy approach

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www.literacytrust.org.uk Family awareness, access and action: the Partners in Literacy approach

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Page 1: Www.literacytrust.org.uk Family awareness, access and action: the Partners in Literacy approach

www.literacytrust.org.uk

Family awareness, access and action:

the Partners in Literacy approach

Page 2: Www.literacytrust.org.uk Family awareness, access and action: the Partners in Literacy approach

www.literacytrust.org.uk

Why do we care about literacy?• Access to employment and

promotion• Ability to fulfil potential at

school• Access to training and ability to

develop skills• Confidence • Helping to break cycles of

social exclusion (offending, poverty, aspiration)

• Supporting community participation and cohesion

• Choice, fairness, access – social mobility

• 95% of all employment in the UK requires employees to be able to read

• 41% of employers are concerned about their employees’ basic literacy skills

• 76% of C2DE parents see no link between literacy skills and success in life

• 50% of all offenders leaving prison are unable to read

• Men and women with the poorest literacy or numeracy skills were the least likely to have voted in the 1987 and 1997 general election.

• Community participation is higher among men and women with higher literacy skills

Page 3: Www.literacytrust.org.uk Family awareness, access and action: the Partners in Literacy approach

www.literacytrust.org.uk

Partners in Literacy (PiL) will contribute to key PSA targets including:

• Improve productivity, skills and economic performance (PSAs 1, 2 and 7)

• Maximise employment opportunities for all (PSA 8)• Halve child poverty (PSA 9)• Raise educational attainment, narrowing the gap in

attainment (PSAs 10 & 11)• Improve health and wellbeing (PSA 12)• Build more cohesive, empowered and active

communities (PSA 21)1 in 6 people in the UK struggle with basic literacy

Page 4: Www.literacytrust.org.uk Family awareness, access and action: the Partners in Literacy approach

www.literacytrust.org.uk

Evidence from Rochdale MBCSince 2005:• The most improved

primary schools nationally • A 50% increase in uptake

of adult basic skills courses

• Most improved KS2 results nationally from 2004-2007

• Helped to end child poverty by breaking the cycle of worklessness in households suffering from inter-generational unemployment

“I used to nag, nag, nag but now

I know how to help my child.”

Page 5: Www.literacytrust.org.uk Family awareness, access and action: the Partners in Literacy approach

www.literacytrust.org.uk

An evidence based approach to raising literacy rates:

• Families: parental behaviour is a more powerful force for academic success than other family background variables. [For example, Flouri and Buchanan, 2004 & Bus, Van Ijzendoorn and Pellegrini, 1995]

• Early years: the earlier parents become involved in their children’s literacy practices, the more profound the results and the longer-lasting the effects. [Weinberger, 1996 & Sylva, Melhuish, Sammons, Siraj-Blatchford and Taggart, 2004]

• The home: parents have a greater influence on the achievement of young people than school; supporting learning in the home strengthens what can be achieved in school. [Auerbach, 1989 & Desforges and Abouchaar, 2003]

• Disadvantage: low literacy associated with poverty, low educational levels, overcrowded housing, low income levels.[Literacy Changes Lives, National Literacy Trust 2008]

Page 6: Www.literacytrust.org.uk Family awareness, access and action: the Partners in Literacy approach

www.literacytrust.org.uk

2009-2011: testing the PiL approach

Community-wide awareness & support

Awareness: parents & carers are aware of their role in supporting child’s literacy

Access: families access local services that

support literacy in the home

Action: parents & carers support literacy within

the home

Page 7: Www.literacytrust.org.uk Family awareness, access and action: the Partners in Literacy approach

www.literacytrust.org.uk

Community outcomes:Improved educational attainmentImproved employability/employmentPositive health outcomesCommunity engagement/participation

Family outcomes:Increased parental confidenceLiteracy activity in homeExpectations of achievementParental involvement in

education

Individual outcomes:Increased literacy skills and

confidenceRaised educational outcomesEmployment, further education,

trainingVolunteering, community

participation

Page 8: Www.literacytrust.org.uk Family awareness, access and action: the Partners in Literacy approach

www.literacytrust.org.uk

How might this look for a priority family locally?

Children’s Centre Staff andGPUp-skilled and supported to:- Identify literacy need in

families- Be able to discuss this with

parents and offer practical advice

- Know where to signpost for more support

- Track impact- See literacy outcomes as

core to own targets and work practices

Teenage parents- Become aware of role as

primary educator- Supported to feel confident

to try out practical activities at home

- Know where to go for more support, for courses and for events/activities

- Start to support literacy in the home

- Become role models for children and other parents

- Feedback informs future service delivery

Page 9: Www.literacytrust.org.uk Family awareness, access and action: the Partners in Literacy approach

www.literacytrust.org.uk

Achievements to date• Authority-wide data used to identify priority

disadvantaged families• Partnerships established across community to “reach”

families e.g. Social Care, Housing, VCS• Opportunities identified to:

– Embed support and training for partners– Bring together all services which support literacy to embed

mutual signposting and cross-referrals• Planning intensive work to test this approach with priority

families • 4 pilot authorities and 17 partners (receiving no funding)• Effective and unique partnership between central

government, local government, communities and researchers, led by VCS to deliver evidence-based and targeted provision

Page 10: Www.literacytrust.org.uk Family awareness, access and action: the Partners in Literacy approach

www.literacytrust.org.uk

Success for families• Awareness: more disadvantaged families are aware of their role via

professionals– Tracking professional awareness AND practice (reach to

families and support of literacy)– Capturing awareness among parents and carers via case

studies• Access: more disadvantaged families are accessing services

– Mapping services which support families with literacy in the home

– Base-lining uptake to track impact – Case studies of families supported

• Action: more disadvantaged families are engaged and involved in supporting literacy in the home– Case studies

Page 11: Www.literacytrust.org.uk Family awareness, access and action: the Partners in Literacy approach

www.literacytrust.org.uk

Success for communities

• Promoting and supporting integrated planning and service delivery - literacy across community-wide partners (council directorates, VCS, Local Strategic Partnership partners, Children’s Trust partners)

• Local leadership - strong and active senior management support

• Targeted local provision

• Sustainable and embedded approach – literacy embedded in local planning and practice

• Efficiency savings and service improvements