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2023
June
Limited or Lack of Local School Age Childcare
March
SOSCN's letter to First Minister Candidates
January
Children's safeguarding at risk in unregulated out of school settings in England
2022
December
Staying Safe and Professional Online as a Social Care Worker
November
Reconnecting - to care for others you need to care for yourself
Access to Childcare Fund - The Learning So Far
September
It's good to chat - SSSC Codes of Practice Conversation
Having a ball in the holidays
August
Superheroes are real- they work in school age childcare
March
A time for change- reflection on the 2021 OSC Workforce Survey Results
2021
August
Stories of Summer 2021
April
Scottish Parliament Election Manifesto Overview 2021
March
The longest year- a reflection
February
The Finnish way to a happier childhood - Putting Children First
2020
November
Reflections on the Week
September
Re-opening services - keeping your staff onside!
Low pay and limited hours are push and pull factors which create a churn in the Out of School Care Workforce
April
Reflections on our journey and the way ahead
March
Coronavirus Covid-19 Potential Impact on Out of School Care, Breakfast and Holiday Clubs
Coronavirus Covid-19 Information Update Monday 2nd March 2020
February
Promising Children - a brief overview of the Care Review
2019
November
OSC draft framework consultation- the time to have your say is now!
Working to live or struggling to get by? Why the Real Living Wage is important.
October
Welcome proposal for free holiday childcare
Giving Parents and Children a say in the Framework for Out of School Care
Out of School Care in Scotland Continues to Grow
April
Success for our STEM Champions in Out of School Care
OSC Workforce - Most Recent Scottish Social Services Council Statistics
Training Opportunities for Out of School Care services- a selection of what's available
March
Supporting OSC Across the Country
February
Recent International policy and research briefing for members February 2019
Equal play? Does your service support or challenge gender stereotypes and roles?
CHANGE Project and T.I.C.T.A.C.S. - low cost quality template test of change
2018
August
Animal Magic- animals in care settings and children in animal settings...
July
Top free foody activities you can do over the summer break
March
Out of School Care - believing that children matter
Reflections on the Week

It's Friday, and whilst this is normally a time to start thinking about relaxing into the weekend, from 6pm tonight many of us are heading into tier 4 of lockdown. This will restrict lives further, and we know this may cause increased anxiety for some- please stay safe and make sure you think about your own wellbeing as well as that of others.

What does tier 4 mean for out of school care? As we have highlighted, out of school care (as well as other registered childcare and schools) can remain open and although it is a 'lockdown' it is not as strict as the one earlier in the year, thus it is not about only providing 'critical childcare'. The guidance says that enhanced measures should be in place, which should be the case at present anyway. It also says that settings 'may be asked to implement additional public health measures that may affect capacity'. Our understanding is that this MAY be implemented in localised situations within local authorities, but will not necessarily be default across a local authority. Furthermore, we believe, if you are required to make changes, settings will be contacted directly by local health protection teams and guided in what to do. Our message is to keep risk-assessing and ensuring that you have the best measures in place, and familiarise yourself with the COVID school-age childcare guidance relating to Tier 4. We know it's hard but try not to worry- you've got this!

This week has been one of trying out new things- we have held our first online AGM and joint events with the school-age childcare team. We have also organised an online outdoor play conversation for early December. We're having to learn new technologies and ways of working, and with each step we're gaining confidence. The events this week have proved successful and participants enjoyed the opportunity not just to hear from speakers but also share practice and ideas- we are looking at ways of creating a community of practice. With this in mind here's some of the good practice ideas that have come out of this weeks' events.

SHARED PRACTICE IDEAS

Small groups/bubbles

As our reopening survey showed, some services find this problematic and others are seeing benefits. One common way seems to be based on year groupings which might be per primary year or a range of years, depending on number of children attending each day. One service has said the smaller groupings has made walking from the school to service more manageable as they now don't need to wait for lots of different children- the groups can leave as and when all children within the group have been collected. This is something that will be continued beyond the pandemic.

Offering play sessions

Again, as our survey showed, most services are experiencing a considerable drop in numbers which is causing concerns over long-term financial sustainability. One service said they are promoting play sessions to try and increase numbers in recognition that parents might not need childcare at present but children still need interactive play opportunities with peers outside school.

Outdoor play

Our survey also showed that many more services are delivering more outdoor play opportunities than previously and children are loving it. A number of services spoke about buying torches/head torches for playing out in the dark. One service has said they have bought a couple of gazeebos and 2 wood burning ovens- they are cooking outdoors and looking to deliver woodworking activities. One service says they now operate with one bubble group being wholly outdoors in a nearby wooded area- the group changes on a daily basis, and children are picked up from this space by parents. Staff have had forest schools training.

Connecting with families

One service said that when they were closed during lockdown they provided children with play packs and developed their facebook page to allow more sharing of information and communication between the service and parents/carers. One service has also talked about how they provided online play activities for their children. Whilst we hope that childcare will not be required to close again, home play packs and online activities could be useful for children and families who are self-isolating.

At the present time relationships and communication are so important - people need to feel more connected because it's all too easy to become isolated. We'll keep in touch!

Stay safe.

Pensions
SOSCN Professional Development Book Club - First Book
Social Care: Independent Review of Inspection, Scrutiny and Regulation in Scotland - call for evidence
Communication and Engagement with Parents and Carers
National Outcomes Review 2023
Inquiry into Child Poverty and Parental Employment
Adverse Weather and Extreme Temperature
Dec 2023
A Quality Framework for Early Learning and Childcare, School Aged Childcare and Childminding Services
Mar 2024