€¦  · web viewscottish attachment in action (saia) newsletter. issue 7 may 2014 welcome to the...

13
Scottish Attachment In Action (SAIA) NEWSLETTER ISSUE 7 MAY 2014

Upload: hoangnga

Post on 23-Apr-2018

213 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: €¦  · Web viewScottish Attachment In Action (SAIA) Newsletter. Issue 7 May 2014 Welcome to the 7TH Scottish Attachment in Action newsletter!

Scottish Attachment In Action (SAIA)NEWSLETTER

ISSUE 7 MAY 2014

Page 2: €¦  · Web viewScottish Attachment In Action (SAIA) Newsletter. Issue 7 May 2014 Welcome to the 7TH Scottish Attachment in Action newsletter!

Welcome to the 7TH Scottish Attachment in Action newsletter!

In February 2014 the Advisory overwhelmingly agreed to the formation of a Development Team and we are delighted to inform you that the team will be Fiona Lettice & Barbara Godden. Fiona & Barbara have been members of SAIA since we started bring a wealth of experience, knowledge and passion which will be both invaluable and inspiring to this role.

The role of the Development Team will be preparing SAIA to move to charitable status, respond to & coordinate requests for information & training and matching these to skills & resources within the membership. They will also Coordinate & organise regular events, support the Newsletter Editorial team [Elizabeth King & Tracy White], develop resources and partnerships with other similar organisations and promote SAIA to increase memberships, continue with involvement with Scottish Government and promote training opportunities. This year we aim to build on these events by producing a range of 'Practice Papers' as useful guide of where & how our learning has been put into practice.

We have also had 3 very successful events.In September 2013 'Why Attachment Matters When CHILDREN have to MOVE - THE EMOTIONAL JOURNEY FOR ALL OF US' Our Annual Conference in December 'IT CAN'T BE TOO LITTLE AND IT'S NEVER TOO LATE: WHY ATTACHMENT STILL MATTERS BEYOND THE EARLY YEARS' – see report on page 2

March 2014 network seminar saw us 'branch out' of the central belt to Dundee, with the topic of 'Secondary Trauma - causes, impact and support.'

Members of our Advisory Group continue to be active in promoting an understanding of Attachment on many fronts, including

Early Years Collaborative [Learning Sets]

Two events in N Lanarkshire - Early Years and GIRFEC – an interagency group

Presentation to a group of Paediatricians ay Royal Alexandria Hospital, Paisley

One member has set up some work with midwives in which various members have been involved. This led onto further work to do with the school curriculum.

Helen Minnis was a guest on Radio 4 'Woman's Hour' discussing the prevalence of reactive Attachment Disorder

We would like to hear from you, our fellow members, your ideas, thoughts & comments on any of the above focus points and where you may wish to or able to be more involved. Contact details are at the end ofthis newsletter.YoursPaul Gilroy, Chair on behalf of Executive committee

National Attachment Round Table – 3 rd February 2014

Representatives from the SAIA Advisory Group were delighted to be included in the invitation from NHS Health Scotland and the Scottish Government to the first meeting of a national round table discussion on attachment. The invitation was directed to a wide range

Page 3: €¦  · Web viewScottish Attachment In Action (SAIA) Newsletter. Issue 7 May 2014 Welcome to the 7TH Scottish Attachment in Action newsletter!

of national leaders and groups in this area. The overall purpose of the round table is to develop a collaborative approach to supporting secure attachments for all children in Scotland, so SAIA were keen to be represented. Prior to the meeting on the 3rd February, held in Atlantic Quay in Glasgow, participants were asked to complete and submit survey responses, providing information on any programmes/ projects across Scotland promoting attachment. A truly impressive range of initiatives and materials were identified from the survey, and a summary was distributed to participants before the meeting. It was a challenging task for Laura Martin, Senior Health Improvement Officer – Maternal and Child Health, who chaired the meeting, to identify a date which suited everyone! However, the majority of those invited were able to attend. Anne Rooney from the Scottish Government

provided an overview of the ‘driver diagram’ methodology and Laura and Anne organised group activities aimed at developing draft driver diagrams for taking forward the attachment agenda. There was a lively discussion around various issues, including whether the word attachment itself is the ‘right’ word to use. However the main focus of the dialogue was on current commonly used definitions of attachment. The meeting has given SAIA the opportunity to further strengthen links with various colleagues and groups across Scotland who share our vision and our aims.A second meeting is planned for 19th May 2014 and we will keep you up to date via the newsletter on the development of this key national initiative.

Elizabeth KingPrincipal Psychologist, South Lanarkshire Council

Dr Lio Moscardini

Dates for your Diary:-

SAIA Network seminar:- Friday 19th September ‘Why attachment matter for all - 'Putting the Baby in the Bath water' – Jonothan SherSt. Andrew’s Children’s society – Edinburgh 1.30 – 4pm

SAIA Annual Conference – Inchyra Grange Hotel – Falkirk – Friday 5th December 2014

More details about these events will be sent by email to members soon and will appear on our website www.saia.org.uk

Page 4: €¦  · Web viewScottish Attachment In Action (SAIA) Newsletter. Issue 7 May 2014 Welcome to the 7TH Scottish Attachment in Action newsletter!

Heather BaldrySchool of EducationFaculty of Humanities and Social SciencesUniversity of Strathclyde

Page 5: €¦  · Web viewScottish Attachment In Action (SAIA) Newsletter. Issue 7 May 2014 Welcome to the 7TH Scottish Attachment in Action newsletter!

Learning Together about Making Choices

BackgroundLearning Together about Making Choices (LTaMC) is a three-year action-research project funded by the Robertson Trust, KPMG Foundation, NHS Scotland and Glasgow City Council. The project is led by a team of researchers and practitioners from the University of Strathclyde and the Jeely Nursery in Castlemilk, Glasgow. It is currently taking place in two mainstream primary schools. The aim of the project is to develop and sustain an inclusive model of support for young children with attachment issues as they move into and through mainstream primary schools.

LTaMC followed on from a highly successful evaluative project carried out in the Jeely Nursery over a three-year period between 2007 and 2010. The purpose of the Jeely Nursery project was to meet the particular needs of children exposed in their earliest years to highly adverse social and economic circumstances, including the experience of living with parental substance abuse and addiction. The Jeely Nursery project was successful in developing a collaborative strategy that involved children, nursery staff and parents together in ways that helped to build the emotional resilience needed by children to overcome adversity. The LTaMC project builds on this by working with two primary schools and specifically school managers, teachers, parents and anyone with a responsibility in supporting children’s well-being in developing and maintaining effective and sustainable support for children with attachment issues. It has been strategically designed to monitor and support, over a three year period, not only those particular children identified in the early years who have come through the Jeely Nursery and moved on to primary school but also to develop the capacity of teachers to identify and support any child with attachment issues. The project focuses on working with the schools to develop and extend existing practice and to map this practice onto current support structures, procedures and national policies, namely Getting it Right for Every Child (GIRFEC) and Staged Intervention.

The project model and deliveryThe project was called Learning Together about Making Choices for two main reasons. Firstly it captures the collaborative nature of the project acknowledging that

all participants have a role to play in its development. Secondly it emphasises the importance of the concept of choice and the need for autonomy to support children with attachment issues.

The project began in August 2011 by following the transition of a small number of children from the Jeely Nursery as they moved on to primary school. The role of a key liaison person, the Director of liaison (DoL) from the Jeely Nursery with teachers and parents was established. Following some professional development sessions on attachment theory led by the research team, the key role of the DoL was established. This involved working closely with classteachers and supporting them in carrying out and analysing classroom observations around the children who had moved on from the Jeely Nursery. The DoL worked with the teachers in class on a weekly basis. Professional development then took the form of highly focussed dialogue between the class teachers and the Director of Liaison (DoL). A key finding at the early stages of the project was that the teachers lacked confidence and felt that they did not have the requisite skills to support particular children when in fact their classroom practice was very supportive and appropriate. They just needed this reassurance.

The next phase of the project, which began early in 2012, involved replicating this model of support with all teachers and support staff in both schools. This quickly led to the DoL working with 15 teachers in one school and 5 teachers and 1 pupil support assistant (PSA) in the other school. This was in response to the teachers’ identification of children with attachment issues requiring support. An important finding at this stage of the project was that teachers were beginning to recognise and respond to children who previously would not have been noticed or would perhaps have been dismissed on account of behaviour.

As we enter the final year of this three year cycle, the project team have been working particularly with the senior management teams in each school to move them towards assuming more responsibility for maintaining the practice models which the project has introduced into the schools. This responsibility will mean that in each school a member of the senior management team

Page 6: €¦  · Web viewScottish Attachment In Action (SAIA) Newsletter. Issue 7 May 2014 Welcome to the 7TH Scottish Attachment in Action newsletter!

will gradually assume the functions of the DoL. In order to ensure this transition is as effective and comfortable as possible, this development is being implemented through a carefully monitored mentoring programme. Concurrent with this development, the project team is working with the schools to connect this practice to national practice models which are set out in national policies, specifically Staged Intervention and GIRFEC (Getting it Right for Every Child).

Emergent issuesThere are a number of issues that have emerged in relation to the main aim of the project which was to not only support those children with attachment issues who had moved on from the Jeely Nursery, but to develop a sustainable model which would recognise and support any children with attachment issues. Firstly, we have evidence that the initial small group of children would not have been identified as requiring support had it not been for the project. Secondly, teachers are now beginning to identify other children throughout the schools requiring support who previously had been dismissed as simply being ‘difficult’ or ‘naughty’. There has also been some evidence of children being overlooked because ‘someone else will be dealing with it’. However there is a growing awareness by teachers of their personal skills which were not previously attributed as responses to issues of attachment. The responsibility that all teachers have towards every child is at the heart of GIRFEC and it is this connection between practice and policy which we are continuing to build on.

Growing up in Scotland and Scandinavia: What do our longitudinal studies tell us about our children's wellbeing?

Conference - November 13th 2013 - John McIntyre Conference Centre, Edinburgh

The conference was hosted by Leslie Riddoch and invited professionals (national and international) to explore the experiences of children growing up in Scotland and Scandinavia. Keynote speakers included Aileen Campbell (MSP Minister for Children and Young People) who highlighted the latest (OECD) report; Scandinavia (Norway and Sweden) is top- ranked for outcomes for children. Aileen Campbell identified some positive developments in Scotland such as “Getting It Right For Every Child” as well as the challenges of child poverty. A full list of presenters can be accessed on the links at end of this article, also an insightful and

Useful links:- The research ‘Baby Bonds’ has just been

published – the link to the research is in the following article:- http://www.suttontrust.com/news/news/40-of-children-miss-out-on-the-parenting-needed-to-succeed-in/

Visit our website www.saia.org.uk for a link to an article by Patrick Tomlinson on 'Communicating with traumatised children'

Page 7: €¦  · Web viewScottish Attachment In Action (SAIA) Newsletter. Issue 7 May 2014 Welcome to the 7TH Scottish Attachment in Action newsletter!

enjoyable statistical overview of Glasgow and Gothenburg (europeinminiature) video which is a useful method of illustrating common health and well-being statistics. There is also a link for the full content of this article which explores GUS in respect of attachment/empathy.

Growing Up in Scotland (GUS) is a large-scale longitudinal research project with the task of following the lives of several cohorts of Scottish children through their childhood trajectory. Commissioned in 2003 by Scottish Government to "generate, through robust methods, specifically Scottish data about outcomes throughout childhood and into adulthood for children growing up in Scotland" across a range of key domains inclusive of physical, social, emotional and educational development. GUS is an excellent resource for professionals of all disciplines whom have an interest in the lives and aspirations of children and young people in our society.

From a Scottish perspective the conference aimed to explore individual children's experiences through their development trajectory. It provided a clear perception of the challenges, strengths and aspirations of individual children who collectively made up cohorts. The conference highlighted effective and productive work which is evident in Scotland as well as highlighting the levels of parental mental health conditions, poverty and high levels of anxiety in childhood. The inclusion of direct interviews with children and their carers was powerful and acknowledged the Scottish Government’s aim that future planning of services needs to engage service users and professionals collaboratively in the improvement of outcomes for children's wellbeing. The questions illustrated as an ecological model of assessment. As professionals we have a shared responsibility in recognition of a holistic and person centred way which promotes inclusion. The responses from participants should influence future planning of services and promote a sense of citizenship for those involved in the aim of improving outcomes for children's wellbeing.

GUS collates information over time with the same cohorts of children and enables a comprehensive/critical analysis of developmental stages and the interplay of parent/child relationships. GUS

provides the statistical evidence to substantiate this. Child development is not one which operates in isolation, a fundamental component is the presence of a healthy, reciprocal consistent care giver whom has a secure attachment to the child. Neuroscience among other fields is increasing our awareness of the potential damage individuals may be exposed to pre-natally and in early childhood. Over-stimulation by way of high levels of cortisol can create a hyper arousal to stress. Research tells us that the majority of brain development occurs early in childhood and highlights an overproduction of synaptic matter, pruning occurs naturally when synapses don't join up.

In acknowledgement of secure attachment processes, one area of interests is the 18 months parental leave given to both parents after the birth of a child in Scandinavia. The very early physical and physiological interactions after birth which facilitate attunement and the development of a secure base can be compromised when parents are either physically or emotionally away from their child, for example, at work or themselves experiencing mental/physical health conditions.

GUS identified the difficulties young people can experience during the transition to primary and high schools. A key developmental task in infancy is attachment to the primary care giver which creates opportunities for self-control. This skill if achieved in infancy creates the capacity in later childhood to move from control of self to control of the environment. Lack of positive reciprocity between family members/carers can create dubiety for children during interactions with teachers, peers and within school environment. All presenters promoted the sense of self-esteem and resilience to empower young people in overcoming the challenges they face.

To conclude GUS highlighted the need to analyse information in a meaningful way. Adopting an ecological/holistic child centred framework such as "Getting It Right For Every Child” co-ordinates a shared assessment and planning approach with the inclusion of risk assessment. The conference reminded all of us of Article 12 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. Longitudinal studies provide an extra dimension to our collective knowledge of when working with children and families and highlights awareness of rights/access to services. Attending the conference and accessing the research collated by

Attachment in Action

Attachment in Action – what can it be?A mother’s touch, a father’s smile

but my gran watches me,

Attachment in Action – where does it show?

A place to stay, to eat, to sleep or to play

but how can I know,

Attachment in Action – why is it there?To tell me it’s fine, my world is okay, no

matter what – there is someone to care,

Attachment in Action – who gives it to me?

My gran, sister, key-worker, teacher…I know now because caring is free.

Hazel Whitters

Page 8: €¦  · Web viewScottish Attachment In Action (SAIA) Newsletter. Issue 7 May 2014 Welcome to the 7TH Scottish Attachment in Action newsletter!

GUS provides professionals of all disciplines with a learning opportunity. Having an open mind in the appreciation of other professional knowledge is a systematic way to improve outcomes.

For full access the main link for all conference presentations:

* http//www.crfr.ac.uk/gus international - provides access to all presentations and highlights findings of research and future planning

* http//www.europeinminiature.com/ - provides an enjoyable and insightful overview of similarities and differences of life in Scotland and Scandinavia

* Full article - Analysis of Growing up in Scotland and Scandinavia: What do our longitudinal studies tell us about our children's wellbeing in respect of attachment and child development.

Eileen Stewart

Social worker

Attachment in Action

Attachment in Action – what can it be?A mother’s touch, a father’s smile

but my gran watches me,

Attachment in Action – where does it show?A place to stay, to eat, to sleep or to play

but how can I know,

Attachment in Action – why is it there?To tell me it’s fine, my world is okay, no matter

what – there is someone to care,

Attachment in Action – who gives it to me?My gran, sister, key-worker, teacher…

I know now because caring is free.

Hazel Whitters

Page 9: €¦  · Web viewScottish Attachment In Action (SAIA) Newsletter. Issue 7 May 2014 Welcome to the 7TH Scottish Attachment in Action newsletter!

Introducing The Child’s Curriculum Group

In 2007 Barbara Robertson, Head of the Cowgate Nuresery in the Old Town of Edinburgh started a campaign to respond to Edinburgh City Council plans to close the Cowgate, and other much loved stand-alone nursery schools in the city, and to reduce staff in all nursery schools and classes, all to cut costs by incorporating preschool classes in primary schools under a primary head teacher. They had reduced the number of children, many in areas of multi-deprivation, who can take up full-time places at nurseries, following a plan to encourage parents to use private preschool. This policy, counter to the objectives of the SNP Government for the Early Years, ignores the wise tradition of nursery or kindergarten education and care, long supported famously in Scotland, which accepts the benefits of creative play, and the social sensibility of infants and toddlers wanting and their responsiveness to care from affectionate and imaginative teachers, before mastery of reading, writing and arithmetic. A young child’s body and mind does not thrive in a classroom with little freedom to move, to explore the natural world, and to celebrate peer company.

With Prof Aline-Wendy Dunlop, Emeritus Professor of Childhood and Primary Studies, Strathclyde University; Vice President of the British Association for Early Childhood Education, who had been a nursery head in Edinburgh, I and others have joined Barbara’s colleagues, all highly experienced early years teachers. We call ourselves the Child’s Curriculum Group, and in 2008 we started recruiting support from experts in development of infants and toddlers, and their families. We advise statutory provision of quality nursery care for all communities, as in some European countries.

Conferences we have organized with distinguished presenters from universities, the education community and the Scottish Government, as well as experts from overseas, are described in our website. http://www.childscurriculum.org.uk/index.php -- 2010 "The Child's Curriculum I: What is the Value of Early Childhood Education and Care?"; 2012 “The Well-Connected Child”, in the ESRC's Festival of Social Science, and 2013 "The Child's Curriculum II: From Ideas to Action". In May, June, July and August, 2013, we had a series of seminars at the Scottish Universities Insight Institute: 1 – The Child's Ecology of Relations; 2 – The Child's Social Environment; 3 – The Child's Natural & Built Environments; 4 – The Child's Community; and finally in October, 2013, at the Scottish Parliament, Edinburgh, Seminar 5 – Early Childhood Education &

Care in Policy and Practice, with speakers from Stockholm, Helsinki and Edinburgh, all experts in Social Policy for Early Years.

Our work explores a different form of attachment, focused on companionship of life in the world with friends of all ages, enjoying fantasy play in groups or clans where each boy or girl can claim a role with a distinctive personality they feel proud of. Taking help from more experienced teachers of any age, as long as they accept the learner’s ‘zest’ or motives for knowing and doing and do not require obedience to an rational curriculum planned for future employment in a highly structured society. There is much valuable learning of thinking, feeling and knowing before literacy and skill in mathematics, and this early learning gives nourishment to the appreciation of beauty and to moral responsibility.

Colwyn Trevarthen, Professor (Emeritus) of Child Psychology and Psychobiology at the University of Edinburgh; Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh; Vice-President of the British Association for Early Child Education.

Page 10: €¦  · Web viewScottish Attachment In Action (SAIA) Newsletter. Issue 7 May 2014 Welcome to the 7TH Scottish Attachment in Action newsletter!

This is a new experimental section for the SAIA newsletter. If you would like to respond to send in a letter/email responding to some of the previous articles perhaps, please contact the editors. (Details below) We may publish further letters and responses in the next issue.

What is the overlap and what is the burden? New research on Reactive Attachment Disorder and Autism Spectrum Disorder.12th June 2014 - Delegate fee £25 (payable in advance)To book please contact :Irene O’Neill, Academic Secretary, Caledonia House, Royal Hospital for Sick Children, Yorkhill, Glasgow, G3 8SJ0141 201 9239 / [email protected]

Dan Hughes Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy Level 2 Training: 9th - 12th September 2014 –

Dan Hughes Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy Level 1 training:26th – 29th January 2015 FACILITATED BY DAN HUGHES For more information on both events download the booking form from our website www.saia.org.uk or contact [email protected]

Nurturing Attachments Training Resource Running Parenting Groups for Adoptive Parents and Foster or Kinship CarersKim S. Golding Jessica Kingsley 2013 £80.00 ISBN: 978-1-84905-328-0

Contact detailsIf you would like to get in touch with comments, an email or contribution, such as poetry, drawing, photographs etc, please contact the development team [email protected], Elizabeth King (editor) at [email protected], or Tracy White at [email protected] For information, current SAIA committee post holders are

Chair Paul Gilroy [email protected] Secretary Tracy White [email protected] Fiona LetticeDevelopment Team

Fiona Lettice &Barbara Godden

[email protected]

Thank you for taking the time to read this. Your feedback is greatly appreciated.

If your organisation has events coming up on topics which would be of relevance to SAIA members, please let us know the details and we could promote it within this section. We could also provide feedback on your events in the following issue of this newsletter.

Forthcoming Events

Letters Section

Books and Resources