• Contact
  • About
  • Authors
DONATE
NEWSLETTER SIGN UP
  • Login
Yorkshire Bylines
  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Brexit
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Health
    • Home Affairs
    • Transport
    • World
    Thwaite Hall, Cottingham,

    Plans to house asylum seekers at former student accommodation in Hull put on hold

    Whitehall bus, photo by Malcolm Laverty

    Who will the prime minister throw under the bus this time?

    Child playing

    Children first: a challenge for Wakefield parliamentary candidates

    Judy Ling Wong

    Judy Ling Wong CBE: a life in art and environmental activism

    Drax Power Station

    Drax Power Station: a burning issue

    Poster from Linton Action

    Linton-on-Ouse: Home Office set to repeat previous asylum accommodation failures

    Parliament House, Canberra

    Inside Australia’s unpredictable election

    Image of a baby deer

    Steer clear of baby deer!

    RAF Linton

    RAF Linton to house asylum seekers: what we know so far

    Trending Tags

    • Johnson
    • Coronavirus
    • Labour
    • Starmer
    • NI Protocol
    • Brexit
    • Culture
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Home Affairs
    • Transport
    • World
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Culture
    • Dance
    • Food
    • Music
    • Poetry
    • Recipes
    • Sport
    Bradford photograph courtesy of Tim Green Bradford | Tim Green | Flickr

    Will Bradford become the UK City of Culture 2025?

    Judy Ling Wong

    Judy Ling Wong CBE: a life in art and environmental activism

    Image of Norky's Ramblings books

    Norky’s Ramblings by Peter Norcliffe: a review

    Image of heath hall

    Bowls, beer, and battles: a not too serious guide to the capture of Wakefield, the Merrie City, May 1643

    Image of Skipwith Common

    Weird Yorkshire: the Skipwith Bear

    Westenra, promo image provided

    Local band to play at Whitby Abbey Guinness World Record attempt

    Photo courtesy of the JORVIK Centre

    JORVIK Viking festival

    Image of Cragg Vale

    Norky’s Ramblings: a WARTS ramble in Cragg Vale

    Image of 'no racism' at cricket match

    Condoning racism in English cricket comes at a price: £50,000 to be exact

    • Food
    • Music
    • Poetry
    • Sport
  • Business
    • All
    • Economy
    • Technology
    • Trade
    Jar with money cascading out of it

    Boosterism doesn’t put food on the table

    Desk with laptop

    Johnson and Rees-Mogg want us back in the office, but for whose benefit?

    Cost-of-living crisis, Photo by Eric Ward on Unsplash

    Poorest households continue to be the hardest hit by the cost-of-living crisis

    Food bank packing at the Cornerstone Community Centre in Newcastle-under-Lyme, by Staffs Live on Flikr

    Sooner rather than later – why the poorest households need help now

    Constructing houses

    Trouble in Happy Valley: Calderdale Council struggles to agree its local plan

    Cost of living crisis

    A government that’s out of touch and out of ideas

    Cost of living - a house, a piggy bank and a magnifying glass

    Cost-of-living crisis likely to escalate due to rising global consumption

    Driverless car

    How safe are driverless cars?

    Port of Dover, Eastern Docks, Customs Control

    Brexit border checks: better never than late?

    Trending Tags

      • Economy
      • Technology
      • Trade
    • Region
    No Result
    View All Result
    • Home
    • News
      • All
      • Brexit
      • Education
      • Environment
      • Health
      • Home Affairs
      • Transport
      • World
      Thwaite Hall, Cottingham,

      Plans to house asylum seekers at former student accommodation in Hull put on hold

      Whitehall bus, photo by Malcolm Laverty

      Who will the prime minister throw under the bus this time?

      Child playing

      Children first: a challenge for Wakefield parliamentary candidates

      Judy Ling Wong

      Judy Ling Wong CBE: a life in art and environmental activism

      Drax Power Station

      Drax Power Station: a burning issue

      Poster from Linton Action

      Linton-on-Ouse: Home Office set to repeat previous asylum accommodation failures

      Parliament House, Canberra

      Inside Australia’s unpredictable election

      Image of a baby deer

      Steer clear of baby deer!

      RAF Linton

      RAF Linton to house asylum seekers: what we know so far

      Trending Tags

      • Johnson
      • Coronavirus
      • Labour
      • Starmer
      • NI Protocol
      • Brexit
      • Culture
      • Education
      • Environment
      • Home Affairs
      • Transport
      • World
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Lifestyle
      • All
      • Culture
      • Dance
      • Food
      • Music
      • Poetry
      • Recipes
      • Sport
      Bradford photograph courtesy of Tim Green Bradford | Tim Green | Flickr

      Will Bradford become the UK City of Culture 2025?

      Judy Ling Wong

      Judy Ling Wong CBE: a life in art and environmental activism

      Image of Norky's Ramblings books

      Norky’s Ramblings by Peter Norcliffe: a review

      Image of heath hall

      Bowls, beer, and battles: a not too serious guide to the capture of Wakefield, the Merrie City, May 1643

      Image of Skipwith Common

      Weird Yorkshire: the Skipwith Bear

      Westenra, promo image provided

      Local band to play at Whitby Abbey Guinness World Record attempt

      Photo courtesy of the JORVIK Centre

      JORVIK Viking festival

      Image of Cragg Vale

      Norky’s Ramblings: a WARTS ramble in Cragg Vale

      Image of 'no racism' at cricket match

      Condoning racism in English cricket comes at a price: £50,000 to be exact

      • Food
      • Music
      • Poetry
      • Sport
    • Business
      • All
      • Economy
      • Technology
      • Trade
      Jar with money cascading out of it

      Boosterism doesn’t put food on the table

      Desk with laptop

      Johnson and Rees-Mogg want us back in the office, but for whose benefit?

      Cost-of-living crisis, Photo by Eric Ward on Unsplash

      Poorest households continue to be the hardest hit by the cost-of-living crisis

      Food bank packing at the Cornerstone Community Centre in Newcastle-under-Lyme, by Staffs Live on Flikr

      Sooner rather than later – why the poorest households need help now

      Constructing houses

      Trouble in Happy Valley: Calderdale Council struggles to agree its local plan

      Cost of living crisis

      A government that’s out of touch and out of ideas

      Cost of living - a house, a piggy bank and a magnifying glass

      Cost-of-living crisis likely to escalate due to rising global consumption

      Driverless car

      How safe are driverless cars?

      Port of Dover, Eastern Docks, Customs Control

      Brexit border checks: better never than late?

      Trending Tags

        • Economy
        • Technology
        • Trade
      • Region
      No Result
      View All Result
      Yorkshire Bylines
      No Result
      View All Result
      Home News Education

      No place for family and community in Johnson’s England

      Communities are an essential part of a child's education, yet the Pen Green Centre for Children and their Families is at risk of closure.

      Dr Pam JarvisbyDr Pam Jarvis
      30-03-2022 12:20
      in Education, Politics
      Image of children's learning blocks.

      perpetual.fostering, CC BY 2.0 , via Wikimedia Commons

      317
      VIEWS
      Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
      ADVERTISEMENT

      It appears that the world-famous Pen Green Centre for Children and their Families in Northampton may be in danger of closure, due to government funding formulas. But there is still hope for its survival – and for the future of England’s children – as the buzzards begin to pick over the wreckage of the Johnson government.

      Why is Pen Green important?

      In 1983, as the abandonment of the traditional industrial communities by the Thatcher government began to bite, the Pen Green Centre for Children and their Families opened in Corby, Northamptonshire. Iron ore sources had been mined in Corby since Roman times, but it grew into a town around the iron and then the steel industry, following the industrial revolution.

      Pen Green Centre was set up as in a disused 1930s school building, housing an integrated service for families, provided by a multi-disciplinary team including a teacher, social worker, early years worker and early health practitioner. It drew its funding from Northamptonshire County Council and was jointly managed by education, social services and the local health authority.

      The concept of integrated services, which was eventually to become the national target of the flagship Labour government early years project Sure Start, was then in its infancy, and the practitioners of Pen Green therefore worked from first principles.

      At first, local families were not sure about using precious funding for such an untested type of service, but the practitioners, led by Margy Whalley, worked with local families, local politicians and local authority officers to create the provision from the basis of community education principles.

      It takes a village …

      Whalley had worked on community projects in Brazil and Papua New Guinea, and stated that her ethos stemmed from working with local communities on the basis of negotiation, embracing multiple perspectives. Negotiations were conducted along the following principles:

      • Take what people offer and build on it
      • Pride matters: never humiliate; never blame
      • Find reciprocal ways of working
      • Look to elders for help and advice
      • Don’t accept minoritisation
      • Insist on complexity

      In summary, as the old African proverb (or possibly internet meme) proposes, it takes a village to raise a child, and those who work directly with children know that the way that this is done best is to support and educate the whole community.

      Community education: confident parents, confident children

      I started my own teaching practice in community education in the mid-1990s, not in Northampton but in Leeds, working with mothers of young children, from the position of being a mother of young children myself at that time. It was much more piecemeal provision than that which was then being offered at Pen Green, but we did share their vision of empowering families, and I think overall, we did a good job. My own programme was drawn from an Open University resource entitled ‘Confident Parents, Confident Children’ and that was our principal objective.

      Several of the mothers with whom I worked went on to study for formal qualifications, often in childcare and sometimes leading into teaching or social work training. Parent development has always been a core feature of Pen Green’s work. Their initial efforts to support parents in understanding their child’s development a little better also blossomed, into an on-site training, research and education centre.

      Cartoon by Stan
      Politics

      Naked in the spotlight: Thatcher’s folly and Johnson’s dilemma as the Russian smokescreen evaporates

      byDr Pam Jarvis
      12 April 2022

      Children and community in danger

      Sadly, it has been announced that the Pen Green Centre is now in danger of closure, due to a funding row.

      The co-director, who joined the staff as a 17-year-old trainee nursery nurse when it opened in 1983, commented that Conservative MP Graham Stuart chaired a House of Commons education select committee meeting at Pen Green in 2014, in which he warned that “rare, peculiar centres of excellence that do a brilliant job” should be protected from funding cuts.

      But as we are finding out, this Conservative government does not operate along the ethos that directed their predecessors, and it seems that the institutions and initiatives that empower ordinary people are no longer considered relevant.

      For example, a recently published white paper on schools contains a ‘parent pledge’ that does not mention what parents themselves can do for their children other than complain if “your child falls behind in English or Maths”, while the ‘pledge’ for Early Years is “more focused literacy and numeracy teaching”.

      There is no mention of the growing number of families who are forced to use food banks, and who exist in a constant state of emotional and financial stress in which children struggle to focus on schoolwork. This is not ‘levelling up’ but levelling off, as families, children and young people break down under the strains that modern society places on them, while being continually berated to ‘do better’ by those who should be trying to help.

      The white paper also does not mention the problem that schools continue to have with rolling Covid infection as each new variant emerges, causing both children and teachers to lose time in school throughout the year, putting education staff and pupils under additional physical and mental strain.

      And given that the government has dropped any advisory role on basic infection mitigations such as masking and social distancing, and given that from next week Covid tests will cease to be provided without charge, the problem stands to worsen as each new variant emerges and runs rife amongst a society that is careless about preventing and detecting disease.

      If we return to the fundamental principles of Pen Green – the common sense and empirically supported hypothesis that health, education and social services should be integrated to produce physically and emotionally healthy children who arrive at school ready to settle down to learning – it is plain that that the current government’s approach to children’s services is the complete antithesis.

      Looking forward with hope

      As Margaret McMillan pointed out at the turn of the 19th century, it is impossible to effectively educate a tired, stressed and hungry child, and it is the height of adult cruelty to insist against such odds that disadvantaged children enter a public education system that bullies them to ‘perform’ while not concerning itself with their holistic welfare.

      Nevertheless, it seems that Johnson and his ministers continue to live in a bizarre and sinister fantasy in the 21st century, in which they believe that they have no responsibility to those who voted them into power, while the general public has the responsibility to fulfil the demands that the government places on them. This, as I have pointed out in previous articles, is a highly dysfunctional relationship that relies upon denial and coercive control.

      All that those of us who care about children’s welfare can hope, is that with the building evidence of Johnson’s Russian oligarch connections, and the rolling out of the ‘PartyGate’ fines which confirms the existence of concrete evidence that Johnson misled the House of Commons, then perhaps he and his abysmal cabinet will soon be consigned to their ultimate, infamous position in England’s historical record.

      ADVERTISEMENT
      Previous Post

      The reality of a government that over claims and under delivers

      Next Post

      Predatory bosses feel the heat at Fox’s Glacier Mints

      Dr Pam Jarvis

      Dr Pam Jarvis

      Pam is an author, chartered psychologist, historian, researcher and grandparent. Originally from London, but based in Leeds since 1986, she taught and researched across community education, schools, colleges and universities between 1994 and 2019, publishing many academic articles, books and chapters. She is currently a blogger and conference/training presenter, and has recently published her first novel “On Time”.

      Related Posts

      Whitehall bus, photo by Malcolm Laverty
      Home Affairs

      Who will the prime minister throw under the bus this time?

      byJohn Cole
      24 May 2022
      Jar with money cascading out of it
      Economy

      Boosterism doesn’t put food on the table

      byAndy Brown
      24 May 2022
      Desk with laptop
      Economy

      Johnson and Rees-Mogg want us back in the office, but for whose benefit?

      byLisa Burton
      23 May 2022
      Image of the skydiving team
      Politics

      Learning Curve Group skydive to raise over £1,000 to support Ukrainian refugees

      byYorkshire Bylines
      23 May 2022
      Child playing
      Education

      Children first: a challenge for Wakefield parliamentary candidates

      byDr Pam Jarvis
      23 May 2022
      Next Post
      Fox's mint balanced on an icecube

      Predatory bosses feel the heat at Fox’s Glacier Mints

      Want to support us?

      Can you help Yorkshire Bylines to grow and become more sustainable with a regular donation, no matter how small?  

      DONATE

      Sign up to our newsletter

      If you would like to receive the Yorkshire Bylines regular newsletter, straight talking direct to your inbox, click the button below.

      NEWSLETTER

      LATEST

      Thwaite Hall, Cottingham,

      Plans to house asylum seekers at former student accommodation in Hull put on hold

      24 May 2022
      Whitehall bus, photo by Malcolm Laverty

      Who will the prime minister throw under the bus this time?

      24 May 2022
      Bradford photograph courtesy of Tim Green Bradford | Tim Green | Flickr

      Will Bradford become the UK City of Culture 2025?

      24 May 2022
      Jar with money cascading out of it

      Boosterism doesn’t put food on the table

      24 May 2022

      MOST READ

      Whitehall bus, photo by Malcolm Laverty

      Who will the prime minister throw under the bus this time?

      24 May 2022
      Jar with money cascading out of it

      Boosterism doesn’t put food on the table

      24 May 2022
      Photo credit Robert Sharp / englishpenLicensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license.

      The Davis Downside Dossier

      1 January 2021
      Desk with laptop

      Johnson and Rees-Mogg want us back in the office, but for whose benefit?

      23 May 2022

      BROWSE BY TAGS

      antivaxxers Charity climate change Coronavirus Cost of living Creative industries Crime Cummings Democracy Devolution Equality Farming Fishing hgv History Immigration Johnson Journalism Labour Local Democracy Mental Health mining money NHS NI Protocol omicron Pies pollution poverty PPE Public Health Review shortage social media Starmer tax travel Ukraine Yorkshire
      Yorkshire Bylines

      Yorkshire Bylines is a regional online newspaper that supports citizen journalism. Our aim is to publish well-written, fact-based articles and opinion pieces on subjects that are of interest to people in Yorkshire and beyond.

      Learn more about us

      No Result
      View All Result
      • Contact
      • About
      • Letters
      • Donate
      • Privacy
      • Bylines network
      • Shop

      © 2022 Yorkshire Bylines. Citizen Journalism | Local & Internationalist

      No Result
      View All Result
      • Home
      • News
        • Brexit
        • Education
        • Environment
        • Health
        • Home Affairs
        • Transport
        • World
      • Politics
      • Opinion
      • Lifestyle
        • Culture
        • Dance
        • Food
        • Music
        • Poetry
        • Recipes
        • Sport
      • Business
        • Economy
        • Technology
        • Trade
      • Donate
      • The Compendium of Cabinet Codebreakers
      • The Davis Downside Dossier
      • The Digby Jones Index
      • Newsletter sign up
      • Cartoons by Stan
      • Authors

      © 2022 Yorkshire Bylines. Citizen Journalism | Local & Internationalist

      Welcome Back!

      Login to your account below

      Forgotten Password?

      Retrieve your password

      Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

      Log In