
Effective Multi-Agency Partnerships
Putting Every Child Matters into Practice
- 160 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
With downloadable electronic resources
Offering practical advice and guidance on how to establish and maintain effective multi-agency partnership working in your setting, this book will tell you how to meet the Every Child Matters outcomes for children and young people.
It clarifies the skills and knowledge required in order to form productive partnerships, and shows you how to set up and maintain good collaborative practice.
The following are provided:
- useful checklists;
- examples of best practice in multi-agency working;
- a range of activities to support team building;
- reflective questions, to facilitate training and improvement;
- practical tools for evaluating the impact of multi-agency working;
- photocopiable materials to use with each chapter of the book.
It is an invaluable resource for leaders and managers in any early years setting, Children?s Centre, primary, secondary or special school or Pupil Referral Unit, and will support anyone responsible for coordinating and managing multi-agency partnership working.
Lecturers in higher education responsible for training members of the children?s workforce will value this book, as well as Local Authority officers and Workforce Remodelling Advisers.
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Information
1
The Origin, Concept and Principles of Multi-Agency Partnership Working
- Where multi-agency partnership working originated from
- The current terminology relating to multi-agency partnership working
- The key principles of effective multi-agency partnership working in educational settings and childrenâs centres
- The skills and knowledge required by practitioners in the childrenâs workforce for multi-agency working

The origin of multi-agency partnership working
- a lack of information sharing across agencies and services
- duplicated assessments to identify needs and subsequent provision
- poorly co-ordinated integrated activities across agencies
- too much âbuck passingâ and referring on of clients between agencies
- a lack of continuity and inconsistent levels of service provision
- unclear accountability.
- identify the needs, circumstances and aspirations of children and young people
- agree the contribution each agency will make to meeting the Every Child Matters outcomes
- improve information sharing between agencies
- oversee arrangements for agencies to work collaboratively in the commissioning, delivery and integration of services.
Childrenâs centres
- integrated early education and childcare, available 10 hours a day, five days a week, and 48 weeks a year
- baby weighing and health visitors
- health checks
- links to Jobcentre Plus
- crèche
- antenatal and post-natal services
- speech and language development
- training sessions
- support networks for childminders
- play sessions
- baby massage
- signposting to employment opportunities
- support for children and parents with special needs
- pre- and post-natal classes
- home visits to families
- play sessions in community settings
- mobile toy libraries.
Extended schools
- high-quality wrap-around childcare available from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. all year round
- a varied menu of activities which can include homework clubs, study support, sport, music tuition, dance and drama, arts and crafts, special interest clubs such as chess and first aid courses, volunteering, business and enterprise activities, visits to museums and galleries, and learning a foreign language
- parenting support which includes information sessions for parents at phase transfer, information about national and local sources of advice, guidance and further information, parenting programmes and family learning sessions
- swift and easy referral to a wide range of specialist support services such as speech therapy, Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS), family support services, intensive behaviour support, and (for young people) sexual health services. Some of these services may be delivered on or near the school site
- providing wider community access to information and communication technology (ICT), sports and arts facilities, including adult learning.
The concept of multi-agency partnership working
- Inter-agency working is where more than one agency work together in a planned and formal way.
- Integrated working is where practitioners work together, adopting common processes to deliver front-line services, co-ordinated and built around the needs of children and young people.
- Multi-professional/multidisciplinary working is where staff with different professional backgrounds and training work together.
- Joint working is when professionals from more than one agency work together on a specific p...
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- About the author
- Dedication
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- How to use this book
- Downloadable materials
- Key for icons
- 1 The origin, concept and principles of multi-agency partnership working
- 2 The benefits and challenges of collaborative multi-agency working
- 3 How to operate and manage productive multi-agency partnership working
- 4 Developing effective Team around the Child partnership working
- 5 The features of good practice in multi-agency partnership working
- 6 Evaluating the impact and outcomes of multi-agency partnership working
- Acronyms and abbreviations
- Glossary
- Further reading and references
- Index