|

Scotland
'Super-nurseries' to build up support for deprived children
“Super-nurseries” complete with health clinics,
community centres and pre-school classes are to be set up across the
Capital.
The centres will help to identify and support vulnerable children from
disadvantaged backgrounds.
Education bosses believe that having a range of experts looking after
young children under the same roof will make it easier to tackle any
problems they face.
Counselling, family support and parenting groups will be integrated into
the “one-stop shop” centres.
Schemes such as parent skill classes and social care facilities will
also be provided.
The first centre is set to be opened in Granton within
the next three years. Education chiefs are keen to move the scheme
forward to offer disadvantaged families as much access to facilities as
possible.
Edinburgh City Council officials have drawn up the proposals as part of
a review into nursery education in the city and councillors will be
asked to back the nursery proposals when they meet on Tuesday.
The review was approved by councillors last year, after the department
linked up with social work to become the super-department Children and
Families in a bid to ensure agencies offering support and care to
children worked more closely together.
The plans for the “super- nurseries” are being based on early excellence
centres which already operate in England. These centres educate children
as well as help families by providing parenting skills, family literacy
and health advice.
City education leader Ewan Aitken said: “Our vision is
to get more professionals working together, and by co-location, they can
support the whole child and family. The creation of our new department
is providing a great opportunity for us to shape the future of all our
children's services, and our vision will help us to shape early years
services.”
While it has not been decided where the new nurseries will be built and
what exactly they will contain, they will be centred in areas which lack
facilities.
It is expected that they will operate alongside existing nurseries
rather than replace them.
They hope that they will be similar to the centre which is being set up
beside Royston Primary in Granton, which will house a nursery, a family
centre and community facilities.
Carolyn Martin, early years officer for the city council, said:
“Children who suffer from social and family problems are more likely to
be badly behaved, or to perform badly at school in later life.
“Staff in these centres will talk to each other all of the time, which
will make it more possible to intervene when a vulnerable child needs
help.”
SNP shadow education spokeswoman Fiona Hyslop said:
“This idea should be welcomed. The SNP has been calling for such an
approach for years.”
Tory education spokesman Michael Dixon also gave the proposals a
cautious welcome.
“It sounds pretty encouraging and if these proposals help families, then
they are to be welcomed,” he said.
“But what we do not want is for the council to interfere with families.”
Fiona McGlynn
18 June 2005
http://news.scotsman.com/health.cfm?id=671562005
home
/
Previous feature |