Tag Archives: Older care
Bournville College seeks to increase employer participation in online training
BOURNVILLE COLLEGE SEEKS TO INCREASE EMPLOYER PARTICIPATION IN ONLINE TRAINING TO IMPROVE STANDARDS WITHIN THE CARE SECTOR
- Care Quality Commission report calls for improvements across a number of areas
- Bournville College looking at new ways to utilise technology to increase participation in training and skills development across the care sector
- CPD certified Marshall ACM has designed a range of flexible e-learning modules to engage people working in the care sector and support their CPD
In response to the Care Quality Commission report, Bournville College is looking at ways to utilise learning technology to support necessary improvements in UK care. The technology includes online communication and a new partnership with e-learning experts, Marshall ACM.
Working parents may hit ‘ceiling’
The report was commissioned to probe whether Universal Credit, which combines six different benefits and tax credits into one simplified payment, will achieve its goal of making work pay. It suggested that people without children will generally have stronger incentives to work.
Moving into “mini jobs” of up to 10 hours a week would see families better off under the shake-up, but working beyond this threshold results in a slow climb towards a higher disposable income, it found. Families could end up “trapped” on inadequate funds to get by.
The system risks being undermined by high childcare costs combined with low wages and sharp cuts in Universal Credit once families earn above certain thresholds, the report, titled Does Universal Credit Enable Households To Reach A Minimum Income Standard? said.
Donald Hirsch, from the centre for research in social policy at Loughborough University and author of the report, said the rewards for working extra hours under Universal Credit can be “tiny”. He said: “Parents hit a ceiling where a lid is placed on the aspiration to work more hours for an adequate income, because the return is negligible.”
Prince’s Trust teenagers add colour to east Norfolk care home garden
Lauren Rogers Tuesday, July 9, 2013 01:04 PM
Teenagers have flexed their green fingers to make life more enjoyable for residents of an east Norfolk care home.
Students from Great Yarmouth High School’s Prince’s Trust group rallied together to spruce up the garden of Clere House care home in Pippin Close, Ormesby, near Yarmouth.
Ten teenagers took part in the community gardening project, part of their course.
Helen Hyde, the school’s Prince’s Trust coordinator, said: “The pupils worked hard sanding down existing wooden planters and giving them a fresh coat of preservative with the residents watching over the action.
“They then filled the planters with fresh compost and added a variety of colourful plants.”
The project came about after Ms Hyde went to the care home to discuss a different project, but during the visit noticed that the gardens lacked some colour.