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National Occupational Standards
Parenting NI believes that support for parents should be both high quality and standardised throughout the country. To help achieve this goal, Parenting NI's Parenting Forum has been the lead local body working to introduce and subsequently review National Occupational Standards for Work with Parents.
To find out more about these Standards, please click on the links below ...
What are National Occupational Standards?
National Occupational Standards for Work with Parents
Why have the National Occupational Standards for Work with Parents been introduced?
Benefits of using National Occupational Standards
What do the National Occupational Standards for Work with Parents look like?
What are National Occupational Standards?
National Occupational Standards (NOS) are nationally agreed statements of competence which describe what an effective and competent worker does, and what they need to know to deliver quality in their job. Competence is defined as "the ability to perform to the standard required in employment across a range of circumstances and to meet changing needs" (QCA).
National Occupational Standards for Work with Parents
The National Occupational Standards for Work with Parents were developed in consultation with the sector and were originally approved by the United Kingdom (UK) Regulatory bodies (QCA, SQA, ACCAC and QCA NI) on 26th April 2005. They apply to work with parents across the four countries of the UK. National Occupational Standards for Family Learning were also developed and approved at the same time. There is some common ground between the two sets of standards and, because they were approved at the same time, qualifications can be developed which take account of skills and knowledge common to both areas of work. The Standards were subsequently fully reviewed during 2010 and the updated version was approved by the UK regulatory body UKCES in January 2011.
The standards can be used to:
- Recognise previously acquired competences
- Identify knowledge and skills gaps
- Benchmark practice against the standards
- Ensure training is relevant to job roles
- Facilitate self-assessment
- Help to develop and retain a more effective workforce
- Support organisational review and planning
- Improve recruitment
- Enable staff to achieve through the workplace
To download a full copy of the National Occupational Standards for Work with Parents (January 2011), please click here.
The refreshed Functional Map (2010) is also available to download. Please click here.
Why have the National Occupational Standards for Work with Parents been introduced?
In January 2005, Lifelong Learning UK (LLUK) became the new Sector Skills Council with a footprint in the community-based learning and development sector. Prior to 2005, PAULO was the National Training Organisation. Its responsibilities have now been subsumed by LLUK.
In 2003, Paulo received funding to begin developing Standards for Work with Parents - as none previously existed. National Occupational Standards define what a sector agrees to be good practice and can be used in a variety of ways. National Occupational Standards also provide the basis for qualifications such as NVQs, SVQs, and apprenticeships within the sector. Standards have to be developed before these nationally recognised qualifications and awards can be developed. Higher education establishments and other institutions can also use the Standards within their qualifications.
The Standards were developed following widespread consultation across the sector in each of the four countries of the UK, and after a piloting period towards the end of 2004 and in early 2005. The Standards were reviewed during 2010 and the updated version was approved by the UK regulatory body UKCES in January 2011.
The Standards can bring everyone into the "learning cycle". Unlike the qualifications which are based on them, the National Occupational Standards themselves are not set at levels. They define the competence, skills, knowledge and understanding required by those who work with parents. They can also be used to develop and monitor these requirements in individuals and services.
For example, by using the National Occupational Standards a set of skills and learning objectives can be drawn-up, which is agreed between the individual, their supervisor and training specialists as a "prescription" for a development programme.
Benefits of using National Occupational Standards
For Organisations ...
National Occupational Standards form a ready made, nationally agreed, set of competencies. They can be used to support any organisation to:
- Improve recruitment and the composition of teams through job descriptions, person specifications and effective interviewing
- Ensure staff are clear about their responsibilities and work activities
- Help to develop and retain a skilled, motivated and flexible workforce
- Appraise individual performance and provide focused feedback to staff
- Identify knowledge and skills gaps
- Reduce training costs through effective design of learning and development programmes and work-based assessment
- Encourage staff to acquire skills and knowledge for enhanced job prospects
- Ensure staff comply with legal and organisational requirements
- Measure performance against clear benchmarks
- Identify priorities for development and improve organisational planning
- Inform discussion about practice
- Use common standards when working in partnership
- Provide evidence for national quality standards, such as Investors in People and Matrix
- Improve customer care
For Individuals ...
The benefits for workers include:
- Clearly defined job descriptions and responsibility levels
- A benchmark to measure own skills against nationally recognised standards
- Guidance on best practice
- Appraisals which recognise and reward their true levels of skills and competency
- Identifying skills and knowledge gaps
- Training to meet the needs of the individual
- Encouragement to acquire skills and knowledge for enhanced job prospects
- Ability to use the National Occupational Standards to gain recognised qualifications
- Undertake work-based assessment, which does not involve extensive time away on courses
- Job satisfaction, which comes from confidence in one's own standards of performance
What do the National Occupational Standards for Work with Parents look like?
The NOS for Work with Parents are made up of:
- Principles and values - all work should be undertaken in accordance with the identified principles and values
- Units which describe an area of work
- Elements which give detailed descriptions of the activities for the area of work
- Performance criteria which describe the competence performance that needs to be achieved
- Knowledge and understanding which describes what the person needs to know and understand in order to perform to the National Occupational Standards
- Links to Key and Core Skills
- Glossary of some of the words used in the unit
Each competence is designed to address a discrete area of responsibility which a practitioner working with parents may be asked to undertake. These are the sort of responsibilities you are likely to find on a job description, for example: "Develop and use a range of approaches to engage with parents and build and maintain relationships" or "Work with parents to identify specialist and other services which will meet family needs beyond their internal strengths, extended family and immediate community networks."
The Principles and Values of the Work with Parents* sector are:
1. All work with parents should reflect the rights of the child set out in the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (1989) ratified by the UK in December 1991
2. Practitioners need to work in partnership with parents at all times, encouraging independence and self-reliance
3. Mothers, fathers and those in a parenting role are acknowledged as having unique knowledge and information about their children and are the primary educators of their children
4. Children are the responsibility of, and make a positive contribution to, the wider society as well as their families
5. Work with parents should value and build on parents existing strengths, knowledge and experience
6. Parenting information, education, support and interventions should be available to, and practitioners should engage with, all those in a parenting role
7. Services should aim to offer a range of appropriate support according to both child and parent level of need, what is available in the family already and in communities
8. Respect for diversity and different needs, promotion of equality and taking action to overcome threatening, offensive or discriminatory behaviour and attitudes are of fundamental importance to work with parents
9. Anyone who works with parents should have specific training, qualifications and expertise that are appropriate to the work they are undertaking
10. Good practice requires reflection, regular and appropriate supervision and support as well as a continuing search for improvement
11. Parenting practitioners utilise effective working partnerships with agencies and individuals in providing support to parents and families. Integrated working and the sharing of approaches across services is a key element of this role
12. Parenting information, education, support and interventions should utilise the best known evidence for good outcomes for children and parents
13. Parenting practitioners should be committed to engaging with children, young people and families fully through identifying goals, assessing options, mentoring or coaching, making decisions and reviewing outcomes. They should support children’s and families’ involvement in the development, delivery and evaluation of children’s services
14. Work with parents should place the interests of children and young people at the heart of the work. Practitioners are committed to working with parents and families so that children and young people have the opportunity to achieve positive outcomes
15. Work with parents recognises the need for innovation and creativity to address both emerging and local needs and to build self-regulating and supportive community networks
* Throughout these National Occupational Standards, the term "parents" has been used to mean mothers, fathers, carers, and others with responsibility for caring for a child or young person. A range of parenting services which meet the National Occupational Standards should be available for all those in a parenting role, including step parents, adoptive parents, foster parents, grandparents or other family carers, gay and lesbian parents and their partners, residential care workers, and carers of young offenders in secure units.
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