Driving Outcomes Learning to drive, resilience and young people living in residential care David...
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Transcript of Driving Outcomes Learning to drive, resilience and young people living in residential care David...
Driving OutcomesLearning to drive, resilience and
young people living in residential care
David Berridge
Background
• Dates back to a previous study of residential homes in England (2011)
• Practical and theoretical interest• Concerns about outcomes for adolescents
experiencing State care as well as the quality and purpose of residential care
• Role of the State as Corporate Parent
A small social experiment
• Providing driving lessons for a group of adolescents living in residential homes in Bristol
• Sponsored• Online search found no previous studies of this
topic• Why do we not provide the same opportunities
for children in care as we do for our own children?
• Unusual but interesting initiative, which might also give meaning to some residential homes
Resilience theory (Rutter et al)
• How to explain the variation in human responses to adversity, including child abuse?
• ‘...reduced vulnerability to environmental risk experiences, the overcoming of a stress or adversity, or a relatively good outcome despite risk experiences’ (2012)
• Dynamic rather than fixed
Some key themes in resiliency
• ‘Turning points’• Importance of good social relationships• Wide range of social roles• Heightened self-esteem and self-efficacy• Strengthening instrumental and social skills• Feeling more in control• Ability to plan for the future• Limited exposure to risks in controlled circumstances• Various critiques but useful field of inquiry• Stein, Gilligan et al
Learning to drive initiative
• Qualitative study• Examine process of selection; young
people’s perceptions of participating; staff views of impact on young people and their ‘outcomes’; impact of initiative on peer groups and functioning of the residential homes concerned
Sample
• Six young people, 17+• All left care. Male• Individual interviews, also with two Council
service managers and three heads of the homes in which the young people had lived at the time
• Transcribed and analysed using NVivo
Results
• Only one to date passed driving test. Three others making good progress with driving but finding online theory test a challenge. Practical and cognitive reasons?
• But overall conclusion that the initiative had been very successful and worthwhile
Two examples
‘Do you know what, actually all I would say is that everything went brilliantly, it really was. I couldn’t think of anything to be improved really at all’ (James)
‘...it was pretty brilliant I think really, there was nothing bad about it’ (Calum)
Impact on young people - personal
• Personal, instrumental and social• Yp liked the positive feedback from instructors• Sense of pride – staff went outside to watch• Major topic of conversation in the res homes• General feeling that self-esteem and self-
confidence had benefitted• Helped provide a source of motivation about
achievement
Instrumental/social benefits
• Linked to job/career opportunities• Yp accessed wide variety of support from staff eg watching training
videos, quizzes• Strengthened Keyworker relationships• ‘Role model’ impact• Social inclusion benefits? Symbolism as a widespread adult activity• Overcame stigma for a couple of hours a week: both while driving
and as a consumer of a service• No perceived wider educational benefits• No identified disadvantages
Discussion
• Obviously modest experiment• Practical implications eg selection, theory
test• Consistent with theoretical resilience
literature: particularly heightened self-esteem and self-confidence
• Also closer relationships between young people and staff
Conclusion
• Unusual project. What other small, social experiments can we undertake without disadvantages?
• Wouldn’t expect it to be a panacea; but is it of disproportionate benefit? Inexpensive cf costs of residential care
• Moral obligation to provide in any case?• Other examples (sports/ the arts etc - Gilligan)? Part-
time jobs; advocacy work for young people in care...
Acknowledgements
• This initiative and the research were kindly supported by the AA Charitable Trust, British Academy and University of Bristol Initiative Fund.
Further information
• Article submitted to international journal• Project summary:
http://www.bristol.ac.uk/sps/research/projects/completed/2014/drivingoutcomes/index.html
• Blog: http://policystudies.blogs.ilrt.org/2014/07/09/driving-outcomes/
References
• Berridge, D. et al (2011) Living in Children’s Residential Homes. DfE – RR201. London: Department for Education
• Rutter, M. (2012) ‘Resilience as a dynamic concept’, Development and Psychopathology, (24), 335-344.