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This is our Belonging Strategy and Plan for the period 2024 to 2027. It has been co-produced with:
It is an overarching strategy and plan which sets out the priorities for all partners across Dorset. It addresses key issues through an increased sense of belonging including:
For many children and young people in Dorset, belonging is their everyday, positive reality. Our aim with this Belonging Strategy and Plan is to make sure that this is the lived experience for all our children and young people.
The Belonging Strategy and Plan sits alongside the:
It also links closely to our:
Belonging is:
A strong sense of belonging is important for:
All children and young people have a need to belong.
Schools and other educational settings can offer a common and predictable place of belonging for most.
Likewise, Elective Home Education (EHE), which is an equal alternative to school education, can provide this sense of belonging.
Elective home education: guidance for local authorities (Department for Education, April 2019) notes that ‘educating children at home works well when it is a positive choice and carried out with proper regard for the needs of the child’.
We know that:
face challenges when supporting children and young people with complex needs.
There are financial constraints on all our budgets.
Schools and settings have pressures to meet attainment targets and OFSTED expectations.
And School leaders and governors are responsible for the safety and well-being of the whole school community.
However, the changes needed to achieve a sense of belonging for all are far from insurmountable. And the potential gains are incalculable.
Through this Belonging Strategy and Plan, we want to achieve a shared vision, values and ethos with:
We want Dorset to be the best place to be a child, where communities thrive, and families are supported to be the best they can be.
We want our schools and settings to be inclusive for all our children and young people through thinking therapeutically.
This means individual needs and the development of trusting relationships are considered and enable our children and young people to flourish.
We want our children and young people to have the right support at the right time.
This will help them to have a stable and settled education.
We want our children and young people to be able to achieve their goals so that they are prepared for adult life and go on to successful futures.
We will work with children and young people, families, schools, settings and our other partners, to make sure this vision becomes a reality.
We will also draw on the strengths of our communities and the work of volunteer organisations which are often under used.
We are committed to working with children, young people, and their families in the following ways:
We are highly aspirational for the children and young people of Dorset and empathetic to the challenges faced by our families.
Relationships are at the heart of everything we do.
They help to create an environment where everyone feels that they:
We are all responsible for all the children and young people of Dorset.
We hold a shared responsibility for:
Read our Children, Young People and Families Plan to find out more about our vision, values and ethos.
The covid-19 pandemic had a big effect on our children and young people, especially their mental health.
Nearly one in five young people aged 10-17 describe themselves as being unhappy and feeling that their choices in life are gradually being eroded.
Schools and settings have not seen a return to ‘business as usual’ following the pandemic. This is evident from attendance and suspensions data.
In the Autumn term 2019, the last term before the pandemic, the overall absence rate in England was 4.9%.
The overall absence rate for the academic year 2022/23 was 7.5%
In the academic year 2021/22, one in 17 secondary school pupils were suspended from school at some point.
This is the highest level since recent records began.
Our children and young people are also being significantly impacted by the cost-of-living crisis. Families are increasingly unable to afford necessities such as:
Children can feel too embarrassed to go to school when they do not have access to:
We need to create a sense of belonging and address the challenges and issues facing the children and young people of Dorset today.
This requires a shared vision and approach.
Research shows increased health benefits when a child or young person has a sense of belonging within a school or setting.
These include:
Evidence about the relationship between a sense of belonging and student outcomes has been found in research findings from many countries and has been linked to:
Additionally, pupils who have a sense of belonging in school tend to:
Their teachers feel more professionally fulfilled, and their families accepted.
We will use the Framework for ‘Understanding, Accessing and Fostering Belonging’.
This shows that children and young people develop a sense of belonging because of:
We need to think about the whole school curriculum in our schools and settings and whether it enables young people to ‘belong’ rather than ‘fit in’.
We need to make sure that all children and young people:
Successful schools:
Dorset is a beautiful coastal county.
Over half is covered by the area of outstanding natural beauty designation and 7% is protected as a site of special scientific interest.
The rural idyll can conceal hidden deprivation, mostly in urban and coastal areas. But there is also some rural deprivation due to:
Crime is generally low but there has been an increase in serious sexual offences against girls and women.
Earnings are below average and house prices are high.
Dorset has relatively low birth rates and younger people often move away from the area.
There are approximately 75,000 children and young people aged between 0-19 years.
There are almost 90,000 aged 0-24.
Under 10% of our children and young people are from black and minority ethnic community groups.
This compares to over one third nationally.
However, there are 83 different languages spoken in our 159 schools.
We have just under 450 children in our care.
The number of Dorset children entering care is reducing. But there is an increasing number of unaccompanied asylum-seeking children entering our care.
We have over 500 care leavers aged 18-25 years.
There are approximately 3,900 children with special educational needs (SEN) supported by an Education, Health and Care (EHC) Plan as of January 2024.
Approximately 40% of these CYP aged 0-25 are placed within specialist provision.
4% of children and young people in our schools have Social, Emotional and Mental Health Needs (SEMH).
2% have a diagnosis of autism.
5% are identified as having a speech, language and communication need (SLCN).
4% have a specific learning difficulty (SPLD) (School Census, January 2023).
We currently have 664 children registered as Electively Home Educated (EHE).
Dorset now has more academies than maintained schools.
We also have two free schools.
This makes the need for a shared vision more essential than ever in ensuring successful partnership working.
85% of schools and 90% of Early Years Settings are good or outstanding.
Educational outcomes for most children and young people are in line with national at Key Stage 1 and Key Stage 4.
However, they are below national at Key Stage 2.
The gap between children who are under-resourced, and their peers is widening and larger than the national average.
The achievement of children and young people with SEN is mixed.
There is strong achievement at the early primary stages but achievement is lower than national by the end of primary.
The attendance of Dorset’s primary aged children is above the national average. Dorset’s attendance for the academic year 2022/23 was 94.0% compared to a national average of 93.8%.
However, the attendance of secondary aged children and young people is below the national average.
Dorset’s attendance for the academic year 2022/23 was 89.7% compared to a national average of 90.7%.
We had reduced our number of permanent exclusions, following a peak of 88 in 2018/19 to 31 in 2021/22. This was below both the national and southwest rates.
However, in 2022/23 the number of permanent exclusions rose to 69.
This is equivalent to doubling the rate.
Suspension rates in Dorset for 2021/22 were below both the national and southwest rates.
However, there was a rise in the number of suspensions in Dorset in 2022/23.
At the end of the academic year 2022/23 there were 244 children and young people in Dorset schools on a part-time timetable.
99% had been on part-time timetables for more than six weeks.
We spoke to our children and young people to gather their views about belonging. They told us that belonging is:
Our children and young people told us they have this feeling with:
They also said they have this feeling when they are having fun, through:
and when there is respect.
They have this feeling in their community, in school and in class.
Our children and young people told us that they feel a sense of belonging when they go:
but the costs can stop them from doing this.
Children and young people told us that the advantages of living in Dorset include:
They felt that there were some activities and safe places.
The disadvantages of living in Dorset included:
Our children and young people told us the following makes a good school day:
They also told us what makes a bad school day. This included:
But the following things could make a bad school day better:
In the summer term of 2023, we held a Belonging Workshop to co-produce this strategy and plan with:
The workshop identified that Dorset has the following strengths:
We also held workshops with children and young people from two schools with the support of Dorset Youth Voice.
To further facilitate co-production, a draft of this Belonging Strategy and Plan was shared with:
Using what we learnt, we have established the following principles of belonging. These underpin the ethos of our partnership working:
This applies whatever the presenting behaviours or emerging needs. It is the shared duty of all to work together to rigorously protect this entitlement.
Therapeutic thinking involves using a variety of person-centred tools to explore, consider and understand emotionally distressed behaviour.
They should be active participants in decision making.
This approach helps to secure positive outcomes. It requires a spirit of trust and good will.
This includes reintegration into mainstream schools and managed moves.
This approach recognises the sense of rejection felt by many young people.
It will meet the specific needs of children and young people and it will enable them to fulfil their potential and aspirations.
They will have appropriate training to help them meet the needs of children and young people.
AP will lead to reintegration into a school when it is the right approach for the child or young person.
AP should take the form of:
These will be determined on an individual basis.
They will not be treated as a long-term solution.
It is recognised that schools, settings and provisions are autonomous and will manage and implement these principles in their own way.
We have agreed the following six priorities for us to work towards to support all children and young people in Dorset have a sense of belonging:
All schools and settings have a truly inclusive ethos.
To achieve this, we will:
All children and young people are ready for the next phase of learning.
To achieve this, we will:
Additional support is available to prevent children and young people from losing their sense of belonging to their school or setting.
To achieve this, we will:
Schools and settings work together to secure positive outcomes for children and young people in their area.
To achieve this, we will:
Partnership working between schools, settings and other agencies is integrated, robust and effective.
To achieve this, we will:
Children, young people and their families have a sense of belonging to their communities.
To achieve this, we will:
We will use the following measures to check how successful we are.
The progress of this strategy will be reviewed at the Dorset Education Board.
A termly report detailing evidence and impact of action points will be presented for each of the priority areas.
Key performance indicators will also be monitored through the Education Performance and Practice Board and Children’s Services Performance Board
Belonging: a review of conceptual issues, an integrative framework, and directions for future research Kelly-Ann Allen, Margaret L. Kern, Christopher S. Rozek, Dennis M. McInerney & George M. Slavich (2021)
Dorset Children, Young People and Families Plan (2023-33)
Exclusions up on pandemic lull, suspensions at record-high (schoolsweek.co.uk) (August 2024)
Hertfordshire’s emotional wellbeing and behaviour strategy (2020 – 2023)
Riley, Kathryn (2022) Compassionate Leadership for School Belonging, UCL Press
Telford and Wrekin (2019) Belonging Strategy
National Educational Union, Place and belonging in school: Why it matters today, 2019
Lost and Not Found, The Centre for Social Justice, March 2023.
This strategy was last reviewed in 2024.
The next expected review date is 2026.