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Making Residential Care Work: Structure and Culture in Children's Homes

Making Residential Care Work: Structure and Culture in Children's Homes

Roger Bullock
0/5 ( ratings)
Over 6,000 children live in residential homes in England and Wales, but it is proving increasingly difficult to provide them with satisfactory care. The fact that some children's homes are better than others is well established, but why should this be so? Past answers have tended to be tautologous - rather on the lines of a good home is one where children do well; children do well because they are in a good home. This Dartington study examines various aspects of children's homes and explores the connections between them in an attempt to break down the old circular argument. Structures are discernible in the relationship between different types of goals - societal, formal and belief; the variable balance between these goals determines staff cultures, which, in turn, shape the child cultures that develop. Such relationships are important because of their close association with outcomes - whether the children do well, whether the homes prosper. The model described in the book provides a conceptual framework and a set of causal relationships that should help professionals to plan and manage residential care better and so meet the needs of vulnerable children more effectively.
Language
English
Pages
200
Format
Hardcover
Publisher
Ashgate Publishing
Release
January 01, 1998
ISBN
1840144998
ISBN 13
9781840144994

Making Residential Care Work: Structure and Culture in Children's Homes

Roger Bullock
0/5 ( ratings)
Over 6,000 children live in residential homes in England and Wales, but it is proving increasingly difficult to provide them with satisfactory care. The fact that some children's homes are better than others is well established, but why should this be so? Past answers have tended to be tautologous - rather on the lines of a good home is one where children do well; children do well because they are in a good home. This Dartington study examines various aspects of children's homes and explores the connections between them in an attempt to break down the old circular argument. Structures are discernible in the relationship between different types of goals - societal, formal and belief; the variable balance between these goals determines staff cultures, which, in turn, shape the child cultures that develop. Such relationships are important because of their close association with outcomes - whether the children do well, whether the homes prosper. The model described in the book provides a conceptual framework and a set of causal relationships that should help professionals to plan and manage residential care better and so meet the needs of vulnerable children more effectively.
Language
English
Pages
200
Format
Hardcover
Publisher
Ashgate Publishing
Release
January 01, 1998
ISBN
1840144998
ISBN 13
9781840144994

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