Children and Young Peoples Plan 2014 – 2017

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Transcript Children and Young Peoples Plan 2014 – 2017

Local Strategic
Partnership
“The Best Start In Life”
Children and Young People’s
Plan 2014 – 2017
• The best start in life for every child
• How we prioritise spending
• Focus on partnership arrangements – a locally agreed
vision
• Outcome focused – not just actions
• Children and young people’s voice is critical to
success
• The Children’s Collective oversees the CYPP and
report to the LSP
Measuring our progress against the
2011-2014 plan
• Reduce obesity in children and young people (19.4% to 18% in
Year 6 but up from 8.8% to 9.4% in Reception)
• Reduce health inequalities (self-reported alcohol use down from
21% to 16%, self-reported drug use down from 9.2% to 2%)
• Reduce under 18 conceptions and promote positive sexual health
(25% reduction from baseline has improved to 38.3% reduction
from baseline)
• Help children, young people and adults to develop positive
relationships and not to bully (secondary aged pupils reporting
being bullied fell from 47% to 31%)
Measuring our progress against the
2011-2014 plan
• Ensure all children and young people including all vulnerable groups
receive high quality teaching and learning, improving academic progress
and narrowing the gap in performance between settings, schools and phases
(children looked after and those on free school meals closed the attainment
gap at the Early Years Foundation stage from 38% to 30%, at KS2 from
20% to 16% and from 35% to 33% at KS4)
• To reduce the causes and mitigate the impact of child poverty (children
living in families with out of work benefits reduced from 22.3% to 20.9%
but has begun to increase again)
• Support young people to remain in education, employment and training and
prepare them for adult life (NEET population decreased from 7.1% to
6.8%)
• We were concerned about the rate of unintentional and deliberate injuries
leading to hospital admission for young people. (This has increased from
192.6 per 10,000 to 205.9)
What children and young people are
telling us?
The social norms survey of over 1,000 young people showed that
drug use and alcohol use had fallen
Key messages from a survey of over 200 young people:
• 75% know where to access information and advice
• 60% feel safe in Darlington
• 75% like living in Darlington
• 52% think there is not enough employment opportunities in
Darlington for young people
4,000 young people voted for the Youth MP – with key campaign
issues being about health, employment and leisure
Data also shows the annual rate of admissions as a result of self
harm amongst young people has begun to rise
Emerging priorities for 2014 – 2017
• Improving health - particularly sexual and mental
health
• Preventing harm
• Effectively engaging children and young people in
the design of services
• Narrowing the attainment gap
• Employment opportunities for young people
• Access to leisure activities
The Best Start in Life –
[Discussion groups for 15 mins]
• What are the Boards priorities for children and
young people?
• How can the Board support the key issues
identified by children and young people [eg
mental health, healthy activities, employment
and protection from harm]?
• How can the Board support the Children’s
Collective to deliver the outcomes?