Louise Roberts
Cardiff University
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British Educational Research Journal | 2017
Dawn Mannay; Rhiannon Emily Evans; Eleanor Staples; Sophie Hallett; Louise Roberts; Alyson Rees; Darren Andrews
The educational experiences and attainment of looked‐after children and young people (LACYP) remains an issue of widespread international concern. Within the UK, children and young people in care achieve poorer educational outcomes compared to individuals not in care. Despite proliferation of research documenting the reasons for educational disadvantage amongst this population, there remains limited empirical consideration of the lived experiences of the educational system, as perceived by LACYP themselves. This paper draws upon qualitative research with 67 care‐experienced children and young people in Wales. The sample was aged 6–27 years, and comprised 27 females and 40 males. Participants had experienced a range of care placements. Findings focus on how educational policies and practices alienate LACYP from dominant discourses of educational achievement through assignment of the ‘supported’ subject position, where children and young people are permitted and even encouraged not to succeed academically due to their complex and disrupted home circumstances. However, such diminished expectations are rejected by LACYP, who want to be pushed and challenged in the realisation of their potential. The paper argues that more differentiated understandings of LACYPs aspirations and capabilities need to be embedded into everyday practices, to ensure that effective educational support systems are developed.
Child & Family Social Work | 2017
Louise Roberts
This paper presents data from a qualitative case study of a family support service, support care. As a time-limited service that aims to enable positive change within families and involves children and parents spending time apart, aspects of time feature prominently in understandings and experiences of the service. This paper uses the concept of time as a lens to explore some of the organizing principles and underlying assumptions of this service. Eighty-two qualitative interviews and 22 participant observation sessions were undertaken with stakeholders engaged in support care. This paper examines the variety of ways in which time was understood and experienced over the course of the research. This includes a conceptualization of time as a resource, together with the hopes, expectations and concerns attached to the time provision. It is argued that the service-specific questions regarding how much time to afford families, and the purpose of support have wider relevance within social work policy and practice. This includes debates about how best to respond to families with support needs, including those with enduring needs, how to manage tensions in respect of balancing need while seeking to avoid dependency and the sometimes competing nature of support and protection objectives.
Adoption & Fostering | 2016
Louise Roberts; Nina Maxwell; Paul Rees; Sally Holland; Nicholas Forbes
Improving outcomes for looked after children and young people has been a longstanding concern in Wales. This article reports the findings of a scoping study which sought to identify interventions aimed at improving outcomes for looked after children that are effective or promising. The study was commissioned by an independent funding body to inform a £5 million investment programme for Wales. It comprised a rapid review of literature, informed through consultation with an expert advisory panel and groups of young people who had been in care. The article outlines the rapid review method, provides details of shortlisted interventions and describes the interventions subsequently approved for investment. It concludes that although there are many promising interventions which address the factors associated with poor outcomes for looked after children, the evidence base is weak. It is argued that decision-making on interventions should be informed by appraisal of the empirical evidence available, but should also be guided by professional judgement that considers the needs, priorities and preferences of service users, carers, practitioners and policy-makers.
Child Care in Practice | 2018
Dawn Mannay; Eleanor Staples; Sophie Hallett; Louise Roberts; Alyson Rees; Rhiannon Emily Evans; Darren Andrews
ABSTRACT The educational experiences and outcomes of care experienced children and young people is of longstanding concern. The pervasive inequalities they face suggest that current policies have been unable to respond fully to the complex causes of the problem. This paper reflects on a qualitative study into the educational experiences and aspirations of children and young people who are looked after in Wales. The project worked with care experienced peer researchers and drew on visual, creative and participatory techniques to explore 67 children’s and young people’s experiences of education and, importantly, their opinions on what could be done to improve it. This multimodal approach allowed space for participants to think through their subjective, mundane, but important, experiences that operate alongside, and interact with, more structural challenges. A range of films, magazines, artwork, and music outputs were developed to ensure that the project recommendations could reach wide and diverse audiences. This paper argues the voices of children and young people need to be given a platform to inform policy and practice. For this to happen researchers need to be creative in their approaches to both fieldwork and dissemination; harnessing the power of the arts to make positive changes in the everyday lives of children and young people.
Children and Youth Services Review | 2017
Louise Roberts; Sarah Meakings; Donald Forrester; Audra Smith; Katherine Helen Shelton
Child & Family Social Work | 2017
Louise Roberts
Archive | 2015
Dawn Mannay; Eleanor Staples; Sophie Hallett; Louise Roberts; Alyson Rees; Rhiannon Emily Evans; Darren Andrews
Adoption & Fostering | 2011
Louise Roberts
Archive | 2019
Dawn Mannay; Alyson Rees; Louise Roberts
Children and Youth Services Review | 2018
Louise Roberts; Sara Jayne Long; Honor Young; Gillian Hewitt; Simon Murphy; Graham Moore