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Index C
CIRCULAR NO: SWSG7/98 Desk Officer 3530

Previous Circular No: SWSG 5/97 (cancelled)

SWSG Guidance Package Index Ref : C1

May 1998

Chief Executives Scottish Local Authorities

Copy to: Directors of Social Work

Chief Social Work Officers

Directors of Finance

CCETSW

Holders of SWSG Guidance Package (circular only)

Dear Sir/Madam

SPECIFIC GRANT FOR SOCIAL WORK TRAINING: FINANCIAL YEAR 1998-99

Summary

1. This circular sets out the arrangements for specific grant for social work training for 1998-99 and replaces Circular SWSG5/97. Authorities should send applications for grant to Linda Brennan at the Social Work Services Inspectorate by 30 June 1998.

2. The amount available for distribution for eligible training in the two categories is £3.93 million with £1.31 million allocated to community care and £2.62 million to children’s services. These sums are to provide a 70% grant against expenditure of £5.614 million on training by authorities. The indicative allocations for each authority are in Annex 5. In addition, the sum of £270,000 will be allocated separately to help meet the costs of assessed practice placements provided for Diploma in Social Work (DipSW) students.

Aims and Objectives

3. The aim of the grant is to improve the quality of social work service provision and the management of that provision by increasing the availability of training for relevant staff. The specific objectives are to increase the competence of social work staff working

• in community care

• in service to children and families (including residential child care)

• in social work management.

Funding of job related training for staff working in criminal justice services is included in Scottish Office 100% funding of these services and is not part of the specific grant arrangement.

4. The scheme is now based on the general principle that authorities should maintain the core budgets for 1995-96, disaggregated in accordance with formulae negotiated with outgoing regional authorities where appropriate. The expenditure funded by specific grant is in addition to that.

Targets

5. Targets for the years 2000 and 2003 are identified in Annex 1 along with related objectives. These targets are provisional and will be subject to confirmation in the light of the forthcoming consultation on social work education and training.provide a range of indicators that can be used in assessing the impact of grant. We will be reviewing progress and targets with authorities up to the year 2000 in the coming months.

6. Authorities should direct their plans and expenditure towards achieving the targets. SWSI will be monitoring achievements in relation to targets and authorities should include relevant information as requested in the summary of their training plans.

Planning Staff Development and Training

7. In planning for the effective delivery of social work services authorities need to ensure that their strategies and objectives include attention to staff training and development requirements throughout their social work services. As part of the management of their human resources, authorities may want to produce training plans although they are no longer part of the specific grant application. Authorities are, however, required to produce plans for the provision of children’s services for 1999 and community care services. Planning for staff training will be part of these plans.

8. We do however, require a statement of all staff in post and their qualifications. You should express this in numerical form as per the tables in the grant application. This year we will again not process applications for specific grant without these completed tables. SWSI will use these to help with monitoring and analysing progress. Where authorities do compile discrete training plans, you should send copies of these to Geraldine Doherty at the Central Council for Education and Training in Social Work (CCETSW), 78-80 George Street, Edinburgh, EH2 3BU. This will help CCETSW identify education, training and qualification needs across Scotland in line with authorities’ workforce requirements. You can find a suggested framework for developing training plans at Annex 4.

Collaboration

9. In recent years authorities have made important gains through collaborating together to provide training. The advantage of collaboration is likely to be even greater for unitary authorities. It will help to ensure continuity for staff already embarked on training leading to vocational and professional qualifications; to make best use of scarce training resources; and to maintain a broadly based set of programmes cost effectively. It is important that authorities determine at an early date the special organisational arrangements that will most effectively facilitate collaboration with neighbouring authorities and educational establishments and facilitate links with independent sector agencies. ‘Lead Authority’ arrangements may well provide the most satisfactory structure in the future.

10. There are currently limitations in the training of different professional groups in promoting working together. Authorities should collaborate with health boards, housing agencies and independent sector providers in the provision of multi-disciplinary training for staff providing community care services. Such collaborative training can break down barriers and promote mutual understanding.

Eligible Expenditure

11. The activities and staff groups in community care and children’s services that are eligible for grant in 1998-99 are those identified in Annex 2. It is for each authority to establish its own priorities within each area of grant and authorities should demonstrate that grant is for additional training in the specified areas. Authorities may vire between the two sub-heads of grant to a maximum of 20% of the sub-head being reduced. Any authority wishing to exceed this limit must notify SWSI.

12. Voluntary agency and private sector staff require training opportunities to maintain service standards. You should include staff training costs when formulating contracts and purchase of service agreements. The Directions for Purchasing Community Care (see Circular SWSG13/1994) makes this point clearly. Authorities may also provide grant directly to voluntary organisations to meet specific training priorities.

13. Social work authorities will wish to make opportunities for joint training with other agencies that provide services to children and adults. They may wish to fund these initiatives jointly or to set fees for participation in training events that take account of the types of agencies concerned and their ability to pay.

Arrangements for Allocating Grant

14. You will find the form for applying for grant in Annex 3. Completed forms should reach the Social Work Services Inspectorate by the date shown. The allocations will remain the same as those of 1997-98.

Practice Placements

15. The provision of assessed practice placements for students studying for the DipSW is a local authority responsibility and resources to assist their provision are included within the Grant Aided Expenditure settlement. It is not always easy for authorities to make placements available. There is increasing demand for placements of the high standard required by the Central Council for Education and Training in Social Work (CCETSW). Therefore a proportion of Specific Grant (£270,000) will be allocated to authorities to give additional assistance with meeting their responsibility to provide sufficient placements of adequate quality.

16. We will make allocations on the basis of the actual number of placements provided. Using the CCETSW placement fee (£17 per day) and taking the average length of placement to be 70 days, we have calculated an average fee of £1,190 per placement. Authorities are eligible for payment from specific grant of 35% of this fee (£416) for each assessed DipSW placement of not less than 50 days which they provide. We will issue claim forms twice during the year; in July for the period 1 January to 30 June 1998 and in January 1999 for the period 1 July to 31 December 1998. Payments for placements that begin in the first period but carry over into the second will be made only if claimed in July; similarly payments for placements beginning in the second period that continue after 31 December can be claimed only in January 1999.

Monitoring

17. The Inspectorate will monitor the use of grant by examining progress towards national targets, scrutinising end of year monitoring forms and claims for payment of grant. Authorities must also submit a financial statement endorsed with the signature of the relevant authority’s Chief Finance Officer. You should return these forms no later than 31 August 1998.

Claim and Monitoring Forms

18. You should make claims for grant twice a year on the forms that will be issued in October and February. In October authorities will also be asked to provide revised estimates of expenditure for the rest of the year.

Summary of Action Required

19. Set out below is the time for the completion of tasks.

Task

On or before

Submit grant application

30 June 1998

Submit first claim for practice placements

31 July 1998

Submit financial statement for 1997-98

31 August 1998

Submit mid year claim for payment (this form now takes account of mid year monitoring)

30 October 1998

Submit end of year monitoring and second claim for practice placements

29 January 1999

Submit final claim for payment

10 March 1999

20. Grant is available for payment only within the financial year 1998-99. You should note that we will recover in the next financial year any overpayments of grant made and this is not then available to specific grant. Authorities should ensure that their final claim reaches SWSI by the due date and, thus, in time for payment to be made before the year’s end.

Note

21. I have sent annexes to this circular to Chief Executives of Scottish Local Authorities, Directors of Social Work/Chief Social Work Officers and Directors of Finance and CCETSW. Copies of the annexes are available to other interested parties by contacting Linda Brennan.

Contact Point

22. You should make any enquiries relating to this circular to Linda Brennan, Social Work Services Inspectorate, Room 37B, James Craig Walk, Edinburgh EH1 3BA (Telephone 0131 244 3530). [ C1 of the volume containing "Training" circulars. Circular SWSG14/96 is now cancelled.]

Yours faithfully

ANGUS SKINNER

Chief Social Work Inspector

SOCIAL WORK SERVICES INSPECTORATE ANNEX 1

TRAINING TARGETS

Community Care Training

(I) All staff in residential and day care and home care managers with HNC/SVQ3 or above:

By 2000 - 60%

By 2003 - 90%

(ii) Social workers and senior social workers with post qualifying awards:

By 2000 - 20%

By 2003 - 40%

(iii) Staff working with people with sensory impairments. HNC/SVQ3 or other specialist qualification:

By 2000 - 60%

By 2003 - 90%

Child Care Training

(I) Social workers working mainly with children and families in any setting with post qualifying awards:

By 2000 - 40%

By 2003 - 60%

(ii) Officers in charge/deputies in residential child care with Diploma in Social Work or equivalent:

By 2000 - 65%

By 2003 - 90%

(iii) Care staff with HNC/SVQ3 equivalent:

By 2000 - 50%

By 2003 - 50%

ANNEX 2

SOCIAL WORK SERVICES INSPECTORATE

SPECIFIC GRANT 1998-99

4. Activities Eligible for Grant

Funding will be available in relation to the specific objectives of the scheme and within the limits of grant available to meet

• the costs of additional staff employed to provide training and work-based assessment;

• the costs of training purchased from other sources;

• the costs of providing training to meet the requirement of the EU Directive on health and safety at work;

• the non-salary costs of staff undertaking training including the payment of course fees and travel expenses;

• the provision of additional materials, hire of premises and other administrative costs for the purposes of training and assessment of competencies;

• expenditure on evaluation of the impact of training;

• expenditure on practice placements for students undertaking the Diploma in Social Work in accordance with the arrangements specified in paragraphs 15-16 of the Circular.

Note

Salary costs of staff seconded for training are not eligible for grant, but the costs of providing replacement staff or cover is eligible, up to but not exceeding the salary and associated costs of the staff replaced.

5. Eligible Staff Groups

Community Care

Senior social workers, social workers, social work assistants, occupational therapists and assistants, home care organisers and staff, care managers, community alarm organisers, officers in charge, assistants and other care and rehabilitation staff in residential, domiciliary and day care services.

Children’s Services

Social workers and social care staff in all fieldwork (including prison and hospital), residential and day care settings; foster parents and other domiciliary care staff; officers in charge, assistants and staff working in residential child care settings.

All Programmes

Top, senior and middle managers, inspection and registration officers, advisory and training staff.

6. Type of Training Courses Eligible

Scottish Vocational Qualifications (SVQs)

(a) training of assessors for SVQs;

(b) training which enables staff to acquire SVQs and the HNC in Social Care.

Secondments to qualifying courses

Salary costs of staff seconded for training are not eligible for grant, but the cost of providing replacement staff or cover is eligible.

In-service training

Training in identified areas organised on an in-service basis for relevant staff in field, residential, day or domiciliary care services; induction training; participation in Open University and other open learning programmes which do not lead to qualifying or post-qualifying awards.

Post-qualifying training

Short courses, post qualifying and advanced training for qualified staff on CCETSW and other relevant accredited programmes.

Other training

Training for staff working with people who have sensory impairment, e.g. placement costs associated with the Diploma in Rehabilitation Studies (DipRS).

Training in management and supervision

Training for staff with management and/or supervisory responsibilities. This category includes specific courses in the management of child care and community care practice as well as education and training in social work management generally.

Inter-professional training

Training opportunities may include courses designed for staff who will be engaged in interdisciplinary work with other professionals in local authority legal departments, health boards, general practice, police, education, housing and local voluntary and private sector agencies.

Non-accredited training

Short courses and other training events run by agencies external to the local authority and not accredited within the qualifying and post-qualifying systems.

ANNEX 3

Please state planned (including in criminal justice) for

Amount of grant applied for in allocation)

Linda Brennan

Room 37B

Social Work Services Inspectorate

James Craig Walk

Edinburgh

EH1 3BA

Undisplayed Graphic

The Social Work (Scotland) Act 1968

SPECIFIC GRANT FOR TRAINING IN SOCIAL WORK 1998-99

APPLICATION FOR ALLOCATION OF GRANT

1.LOCAL AUTHORITY:____________________________

2. Name and Address of Social Work Department contact:

3. Please state planned total expenditure by your authority on social work training (including criminal justice) for 1998-99.

£______________________

4. Amount of grant applied for in 1998-99 (should not exceed the indicative allocation)

Community Care Services £______________________

Children’s Services £______________________

TOTAL AMOUNT £______________________

Please complete this form and return it no later than 30 June1998 to:

Mrs Linda A. Brennan

Social Work Services Inspectorate for Scotland

Room 37b, James Craig Walk

St. James Square

EDINBURGH

EH1 3BA More follows overleafÔ

5. Cost of activities eligible for specific grant proposed for 1998-99.

TOTAL PROPOSED EXPENDITURE 100%)


Community Care and Adults

Children’s

Services

Costs of additional staff employed to

provide training and work based assessment.



Costs of training purchased from other sources



Non-salary costs of staff undertaking training

(e.g., fees and travel)



Costs of providing staff cover for staff in training



Costs of administrative support staff



Material and Premises



TOTAL COSTS (£)



Undisplayed Graphic

STATEMENT OF STAFF IN POST AND QUALIFICATIONS HELD AS AT 1 APRIL 1998

CHILDREN’S SERVICES

LOCAL AUTHORITY:

QUALIFICATIONS HELD

OFFICER IN CHARGE AND ASSISTANTS IN RESIDENTIAL AND DAY CARE

CARE STAFF IN RESIDENTIAL AND DAY CARE

SENIOR SW/SW

MANAGERS/

ADVISERS

FOSTER PARENTS

No of staff in post






SVQ2






SVQ3/HNC






DipSW or equivalent






PQ (excluding management)






Management Qualifications






Training Development Lead Body






Other






Undisplayed Graphic

Undisplayed Graphic

STATEMENT OF STAFF IN POST AND QUALIFICATIONS HELD AS AT 1 APRIL 1998

ADULTS AND COMMUNITY CARE

LOCAL AUTHORITY:

QUALIFICATIONS HELD

Officer in charge and assistants in residential and day care

Care staff in residential and day care

OT/OT Assistants

Senior SW/SW

Staff in sensory

Impairment

Home care staff

Home care managers

Managers/

Advisers

Inspection and registration officers

No of staff in post










SVQ2










SVQ3/HNC










DipSW or equivalent










PQ (excluding management)










Management Qualifications










Training Development Lead Body










Other










Undisplayed Graphic

ANNEX 4

1997

1997

SOCIAL WORK SERVICES INSPECTORATE

A FRAMEWORK FOR SOCIAL WORK DEPARTMENT TRAINING PLANS

Introduction

7. The importance of developing a strategic and planned approach to the management and resourcing of training for social work department staff has become clear with the implementation of community care policy, the introduction of national standards for work in criminal justice, and now with the implementation of the Children (Scotland) Act 1995.

8. The following guidance is offered to local authorities to assist them in the formulation of training plans and to facilitate the monitoring and review of the operation of the plans. Training plans are primarily to meet the authorities’ management requirements. Where authorities do compile training plans, they should send copies of these to Geraldine Doherty at the Central Council for Education and Training in Social Work (CCETSW), 78-80 George Street, Edinburgh EH2 3BU which has been commissioned by the Government to promote training in social work. This will help CCETSW identify education, training and qualification needs in Scotland in line with authorities workforce requirements.

Structure and Content of a Training Plan

9. A training plan should relate to the whole of the social work department’s training programme for the year and should be set within the longer term training strategy. It should include plans for staff at all levels of the organisation and staff working with all client groups.

10. The plan should be set within the policy context of the social work department and should flow from the strategies and objectives set out in plans for community care, criminal justice services and children’s services. The training plan, therefore, will show how the training strategy relates to the priorities of the department as a whole. This in turn should lead to a statement of policy for staff development and training.

11. The training plans should include:

• training provided by the department’s training section

• programmes, for example, in management development, which are provided by other departments of the local authority

• training purchased from external organisations

• vocational training

• professional qualifying and post-qualifying education and training.

Training Objectives

12. The objectives flow from the department’s priorities and statement of policy. They will also take account of the national standards for work in criminal justice, objectives identified in Community Care plans and the targets set out in Annex 1 of Circular SWSG1/95. It is essential that training plans take full account of service plans for the relevant period. Training objectives should be shown in relation to data about the size of the workforce, qualifications held and any training needs analyses carried out. The plan should include information about the means, timescales and estimated costs of achieving the training objectives. Much of the information can be summarised in tabular form on the attached annexes.

13. The plan should show what progress was made towards achieving the objectives in the previous year. Tables should show how many staff in different categories have undertaken different types of training, how many have successfully completed their programmes and where possible the costs of these achievements.

14. Priorities for the current year should be outlined, along side expected outcomes. Outcomes should be expressed in terms of the number and type of qualifications to be achieved by staff undertaking training.

Evaluation and Review of Plans

15. Training plans should outline how the impact of training will be assessed by:

• staff who receive it

• users of services provided by staff receiving training

• those who manage staff receiving training

• senior managers.

It is unlikely to be possible for assessment by all these categories to be made every year. However, over time local authorities will be able to develop a programme of evaluation that includes all these perspectives.

16. Regular monitoring and review of plans will be necessary to allow adjustments to be made and to ensure best use of resources. The plan should include a statement about the intervals at which review will normally be carried out.

ANNEX 5

SOCIAL WORK TRAINING - SPECIFIC GRANT TO REGIONAL COUNCILS

INDICATIVE ALLOCATIONS 1998-99





£000s


Core Budget

GRANT DISTRIBUTION


1995-96

Baseline

Community

Care

Children’s Services

Total

Aberdeen

448134

53

106

159

Aberdeenshire

460069

45

89

134

Angus

270000

28

55

83

Argyll & Bute

66007

24

48

72

Borders

294862

27

53

80

Clackmannan

102425

10

21

31

DunbartonshireC’Bank

110856

25

49

74

D & G

266000

34

68

102

Dundee

504000

44

87

131

E. Ayrshire

70676

30

60

90

E. Dunbarton

54333

18

37

55

E. Lothian

177000

20

40

60

E. Renfrew

45731

16

31

47

Edinburgh

1062000

124

247

371

Falkirk

300190

35

70

105

Fife

580727

77

153

230

Glasgow

998937

225

449

674

Highland

320880

49

98

147

Inverclyde

38409

24

47

71

Midlothian

177000

15

29

44

Moray

176866

17

34

51

N. Ayrshire

93680

35

70

105

N. Lanarkshire

182606

76

153

229

Perth & Kinross

296000

28

57

85

Renfrew

113272

43

87

130

S. Ayrshire

58180

38

75

113

S. Lanarkshire

196713

68

136

204

Stirling

171810

19

38

57

West Lothian

354000

30

61

91

Orkney

178000

10

21

31

Shetland

153095

10

21

31

W. Isles

43500

14

29

43






TOTAL

8365958

1310

2620

3930

 

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