Voices 2021 all you need to know

13 Jul 21

Coram Voice will celebrate the Voices 2021 awards tomorrow (14 July 2021) with a virtual ceremony on our YouTube Channel.  

Voices is our national creative writing competition for children in care and young care leavers, this years theme was “What Makes Life Good“.

The ceremony will be open for everyone to watch and streamed on the Coram Voice YouTube channel from 5.00pm on 14 July and will be co-hosted by award-winning Scottish actor and former Doctor Who star Peter Capaldi, a long-standing supporter of the competition, and Voices 2019 winner Sophia Alexandra Hall.

We will also feature members of the competition judging panel announcing this year’s winners, including the children’s authors Abi Elphinstone and Cynthia Murphy, novelist Kirsty Capes and the poet Joelle Tay.

Be sure to join us for an excellent night of creative writing and celebrating the writing of care experienced children and young people.

Voices 2021 Info

Voices winners 2021 

Download the PDF of all the Voices 2021 shortlist entries and winners

 

‘Home is Not a Placement’ Campaign Launches

30 Jun 21

A National Voice has today (30th June 2021) launched a new national campaign, ‘Home is Not a Placement’.

For the past few months, A National Voice Ambassadors have been developing a campaign that aims to support children in care and care leavers to be empowered to ask for the things that make a house a home, and push local authorities, foster carer’s and residential settings, to really think about how they support young people to feel at home.

They chose Home is Not a Placement as the topic for their campaign, after looking at the key findings and messages from children and young people that have participated in the Bright Spots survey.

“I think it is really important that a young person feels settled, comfortable and welcome where they are living. Jargon within the care system has become all too familiar and sometimes people forget that having a home where you feel safe and settled can be one of the most important things in a young person’s life. A home can be defined in many different ways depending on the young person and what they feel makes it their home.” – Tia 17, A National Voice Ambassador.

“Home is not a placement campaign for me highlights the need for awareness and change for Looked After Children and Care Leavers. It is a campaign I am more than grateful to have been a part of creating as part of the Coram Voice National Ambassadors. As looked after children and care leavers, we as a group have first hand experience of the change that is needed but also the positives of going into care. The idea of going into care being a positive is something that is under reported within media but it is something that very much exists and needs to be recognised that although there are of course areas of change necessary, care gives people like me the ability to live safely and happily. A chance to grow, develop and make it to where I want in life which otherwise wouldn’t have been possible.” – Susan 22, A National Voice Ambassador.

In order to support the campaign, we would love to spread the message far and wide and they are a few different ways you can get involved.

If you are care experienced:

  • Share a picture or comment that illustrates something that makes you feel at home over on Instagram or Twitter – don’t forget to tag us @coramvoice and use the hastags #HomeIsNotAPlacement and/or #ANationalVoice.
  • Check out our poster and tell everyone what home is and isn’t for you.
  • Challenge your Local Authority, Director of Children’s Services, Corporate Parenting Committee or even pass a motion at Full Council to sign up as a supporter of the campaign and make their own pledge to ensure all children in care and care leavers have the opportunity to have a home and not just a placement.

Download care experienced young people poster

If you are an ally, local authority worker, foster carer, or anyone who cares about children in care and care leavers having a home:

  • Retweet and share care experienced young people’s messages, help to amplify their voice and add weight to the campaign. Look out for their messages on the hashtags #HomeIsNotAPlacement and #ANationalVoice.
  • Sign our pledge to show your commitment and support to ensuring children in care and care leavers are supported to have a home.
  • Pass it on, don’t keep the campaign to yourself, share the message far and wide, challenge others to sign up to the pledge and challenge each other to do more to keep it.
  • Taking a photo with your completed card and send it to us at anv@coramvoice.org.uk or tweet or instagram your picture and tag @coramvoice using the hashtags #HomeIsNotAPlacement and #ANationalVoice.

Download a pledge poster

Sign your organisation up to the campaign

If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to ask by getting in touch with me via anv@coramvoice.org.uk

 

Coram Voice part of £2.8 million MRC research programme to explore mental health outcomes for care-experienced young people

29 Jun 21

A significant, new research programme was announced yesterday (28 June 2021) by the Medical Research Council (MRC) that will investigate factors linked to the mental health and wellbeing of care-experienced young people. The research will be overseen by Dr Rachel Hiller and Dr Lisa Holmes from the universities of Bath and Oxford, with support from Coram Voice and Adoption UK, as well as three panels of care-experienced young people. 

The research focuses on two transition periods: moving from primary to secondary school, and moving from adolescence into adulthood. It aims to identify key processes linked to the mental health and wellbeing of care-experienced young people, with a specific focus on psychological process and the role of support systems and services, to identify targets for future intervention and prevention programmes.

By involving young people with direct experience of foster care, residential care and/or adoption, the researchers want to develop a deeper understanding about individuals’ pre-care experiences (ie. challenges they faced before coming into care), their experiences in care and at school, as well as how individuals see themselves and others, and manage their emotions.

Linda Briheim, Head of Policy and Practice at Coram Voice said: “Understanding how transitions impact on children in care and care leavers mental health and well-being and how they can be best supported to deal with these changes is incredibly important.

“Coram Voice are excited to be part of a research programme that explores these issues. As a charity committed to giving children and young people a voice in their care, Coram Voice are delighted to be facilitating young people’s panels with children in care and care leavers to co-produce the research.

“This will ensure the research is grounded in their experience and can identify solutions that can truly make a difference to their lives.”

Response to “The Case for Change”

18 Jun 21

Yesterday (17 June 2021), “The Case for Change” was launched as part of The Independent Review of Children’s Social Care”, lead by Josh McAllister.

The Review asks the core question of us all, what the purpose of children’s social care should be? We believe that the aim must be to make the lives of care experienced children and young people better, by focusing on the issues that matter most to them. We should establish a care system that not only keeps young people safe, but helps them to flourish, by designing services and providing support that is focused on what well-being is to them and based on what we would want for our own children.

We welcome the focus on building, not breaking, relationships as outlined in “The Case for Change”. It is Important that we focus on the quality of the relationships that children in care and care leavers have with the people inside and outside the system. From what children and young people have told us from our Bright Spots findings making trust the cornerstone of these relationships is the challenge – they wanted to be able to trust carers and workers, have people they could trust in their lives and be trusted themselves.

We agree with the review that the state needs to be a ‘pushy parent’. Being a care leaver should benefit, rather than disadvantage young people. The state should give care leavers and also children in care, the same opportunities and experiences as other young people.  Like a good parent it should provide a caring, nurturing home, with adults that champion children and young people, meaning they can continue to live where they are up until the age of 25 and flourish into adult life.

“Please don’t forget about us. We are people too and although we may be incredibly marginalised it does not mean we are not worthy or deserving. Often we require more support and care than the general population because of our experiences, though in reality we get much less. Please fix that.” – Care leaver

We are, however, particularly concerned about the young people whose needs are not even recognised by the system. Sadly, in our Homeless Outreach Service we still all too often see young people aged under 18, who are homeless, not being accommodated and losing out on the support that comes with being looked after and subsequently a care leaver. In many cases the associated safeguarding concerns of a child experiencing homelessness are not recognised. Similarly, in our Special Advocacy Service we see children with disabilities who do not always receive all the support and entitlements they should as looked after children. The review needs to address these issues, ensuring all children and young people receive the care and support they deserve.

The review asks the important question; “Do we genuinely have properly independent relationship based advocacy which can support children to contribute meaningfully to their care journey?” The answer is no, it is there for some children and young people some of the time, but as our recent Always Heard report has pointed out, the provision is not consistent and there can be real barriers for children and young people getting the advocacy they need.

It is now essential that children and young people’s voices are put at the heart of the review. That they have the space to set out what they want the purpose of the system to be, what care should look like, how they should be supported to build and keep the relationships that are important to them and challenge poor care where this happens. A National Voice will play a key role in making this happen by working with local authorities to engage their Children in Care Councils to get young voices heard in the review.

Brigid Robinson, Coram Voice Managing Director

To find out more how you can get involved as a young person, or make sure that the young people you work with have a voice, visit our Independent Review of Children’s Social Care page.

 

Coram Voice to host virtual awards ceremony for Voices 2021

14 Jun 21

Coram Voice will celebrate the Voices 2021 awards ceremony virtually again this year, due to ongoing pandemic restrictions. 

Voices is our national creative writing competition for children in care and young care leavers, this years theme was “What Makes Life Good“.

The ceremony will be open for everyone to watch and streamed on the Coram Voice YouTube channel from 5.00pm on 14 July and will be co-hosted by award-winning Scottish actor and former Doctor Who star Peter Capaldi, a long-standing supporter of the competition, and Voices 2019 winner Sophia Hall. It will also feature members of the competition judging panel announcing this year’s winners, including the children’s authors Abi Elphinstone and Cynthia Murphy, novelist Kirsty Capes and the poet Joelle Taylor.

Peter Capaldi said: “It is an honour to host the Voices awards ceremony again this year. The competition is a fantastic opportunity to showcase the creativity and talent of care-experienced young people and builds greater understanding around their lives and experiences.”

Sophia Hall said: “I am delighted to be co-hosting this year’s award ceremony with Peter. I’m a proud care experienced person, but that wasn’t always the case. I used to hide the fact I was in care, and never really spoke about it when I was a teenager. Today, after being encouraged by organisations such as Coram, my peers, and the wider community, I embrace my experience as an important and integral part of my identity. The Voices competition means a lot to me because it’s all about encouraging young people in care to use their voices, and encouraging non-care experienced people to listen”.

This year marks the sixth anniversary of the Voices competition, which is sponsored by UK management consultancy Cadence Innova. The competition received over 250 entries on the theme of ‘What Makes Life Good’ submitted from across the country. Just 24 of these have been shortlisted over four age categories: primary (age 4-10), lower secondary (age 11-14), upper secondary (age 15-17) and care leavers (age 18-25).

Brigid Robinson, Managing Director of Coram Voice, said: “The uncertainty and disruption of the pandemic has made the past year incredibly challenging for many children and young people in and leaving the care system. But reading the competition entries, we have been so inspired by the stories and poems that show how children and young people are using their strength and creativity to deal with these difficult experiences. Their motivation and resilience is an inspiration to all.

“I want to congratulate all the young people who entered this year’s competition. This is your night, and we are delighted to be able to host the awards online so that we can all celebrate together and share the talents of every young person who took part.”

Gary Ashby, Founding Partner at Cadence Innova, the Headline Sponsor of Voices 2021, said: “It is our third year sponsoring the Voices competition and we are delighted to be working with Coram once again. The Voices Awards champion children’s creativity and development and we are immensely proud to be a part of this inspiring contest. We hope that the artistic exploration of this year’s topic – What makes life good – will not only help the participants explore their creative sides, but also grow their confidence for the future.”

Coram Voice Youtube Channel

Click image to download invite