9.3 Arrangements for Training Staff
Date of last review - April 2024
Date of next review - April 2027
Contents
Safeguarding Children Training
9.3.1 | Employers are responsible for ensuring their staff are competent and confident in carrying out their responsibilities for safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children. To do this employers will recognise that staff have different training needs depending on their degree of contact and their level of responsibility. |
9.3.2 | All professionals including staff in the private and voluntary sectors, require a general awareness of known indicators and pre-disposing factors of abuse as well as (role specific) detailed knowledge of agreed policies and procedures. As stipulated in Working Together to Safeguard Children, professionals should, in particular, be alert to the potential need for early help for a child who:
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9.3.3 | All front line staff must be trained to pass calls and enquiries about the safety of children to the appropriate professional staff. This includes reception and switchboard operators and administrative staff. |
9.3.4 | For staff working with adults, employers must ensure that they have sufficient training to inform and enable recognition of concerns about any dependent children which require referral to Children's Social Care/Police. |
9.3.5 | Health professionals, including GPs and professionals who predominantly treat adults, are expected to participate in safeguarding training. Expectations are set out in the Safeguarding Children and Young People: Roles and Competencies for Healthcare Staff (Intercollegiate document) |
9.3.6 | All employees and volunteers who have any contact with children must be included in their agency's training programme on child protection at basic or more advanced level according to their role. |
9.3.7 | For further information, please see Chapter 2 of Working Together to Safeguard Children 2023. |
9.3.8 | The Safeguarding Children Partnership is accountable for:
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Equality and Diversity Training
9.3.9 | The Children Act 1989 promotes the view that all children and their parents should be considered as individuals and that family structures, culture, religion, ethnic origins and other characteristics should be respected. The Equality Act 2010 safeguards those who may face discrimination. The act describes nine “protected characteristics” which identify those who may face inequality or harassment due to one or more of the nine protected characteristics:
All staff should, under the partnerships’ arrangements, be provided with comprehensive Equality, Diversity and inclusion training. |
9.3.10 | Such training must
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