Tuesday 24 September 2024

Probation : A Profession?

Thanks go to regular reader 'Getafix for pointing us in the direction of the following Position Paper just published by the Probation Institute:-

Professionalism and Probation


Introduction 

This Position Paper is a contribution to the important discussions about professionalism in probation. The service is taking steps towards formalising the professional status of practitioners through a licence to practice, codes of conduct and values, continuous professional development and registration. We hope that this paper will stimulate discussion in the probation service and among the many various partner agencies, about the meaning of professionalism in probation. 

The Probation Institute is developing a sister paper on the relationships between regulation, scrutiny, inspection, accountability and individual practice, particularly in the context of risk assessment, risk management and victims.

Professionalism and probation over time 

It is interesting to note that the status of probation as a profession has been contested throughout its history. Writing in 1985, in the third of his four papers discussing the evolution of probation practice, Bill McWilliams noted the resistance to professional training for probation officers between the 1920’s and the 1960’s, for fear that professional status may diminish the zeal of the original police court missionaries. Even at time when a professional social work qualification was required to practise as a probation officer, there was no mechanism for setting standards for probation work, nor of regulation and monitoring of practice. And, despite the job role requiring professional qualification, the Probation Service did not have a formal process of registration and monitoring for practitioners, in the way that health roles have always had, and which social work and psychology, for instance, do now.

Following the demise of the reorganisation of probation services through Transforming Rehabilitation, the issue of regulation for probation work was resurrected. Writing in 2021, The Centre for Justice Innovation made the case for professional registration of probation work, and identified the key factors which it considered define a profession; a professional register conferring a licence to practice; a code of practice and associated standards; and an independent body which regulates practitioners who are subject to registration. (Bowen, 2021.) 

It is critical to note that, historically, professional status and regulation evolved out of the recognition that professional roles conferred significant responsibilities on practitioners working with people who could be defined as vulnerable – patients in the case of medicine, children and vulnerable adults in the case of social work, and, for probation, people who are doubly vulnerable, whose status as probation supervisees may well have been informed by their own experience of trauma, and, in addition, who are involuntary users of the Service. In this context, it is important to note that people convicted of crime may also be victims themselves - a commonplace scenario in probation work, and one which confers additional vulnerabilities, requiring corresponding additional responsibilities of integrity and professionalism of probation practitioners. 

The Probation Institute came into existence primarily to seek to enable the formal registration and monitoring of probation practitioners, via an externally regulated independent body, and that remains a priority.

The PI is aware of the recently formed Internal Register for Probation Practice, and that the aim of The National Probation and Prison Service is to formally register all practice roles within the Service. This position paper seeks to look more broadly at professionalism in probation, and to consider key aspects of what being a professional probation practitioner actually means. 

Concepts of professionalism 

The concept of professionalism, and what being a professional means, has been similarly contested over time. The range of perspectives includes seeing professional status as a mechanism for protecting an elite and exclusive group of practitioners. Conversely – and perhaps more helpfully, in terms of probation practice – Elliott Freidson, who has written extensively about professionalism, defines a profession as ‘an occupation that controls its own work, (is) organised by a special set of institutions, and sustained in part by a particular ideology of expertise and service.’ (Freidson, 1994, 10.) 

Clearly, Probation practice does not wholly control its own work, being subject to government policy, for instance, with regard to early release from prison; the sentencing decisions of the Courts; and the workings of the parole process. But the idea of probation work being ‘organised by a special set of institutions’ seems very apt, and may include formal institutions, notably the order of the court which generates the work of the Probation Service; and the organisational practices, often through regulations, which define what practitioners do – such as the induction process for supervisees, systems of reporting and of breach and recall, and the ways in which people are assessed via the utilisation of the Offender Assessment System. (OASys.)

It is also essential to acknowledge the key work of The Probation Service with people who are victims of offending. Alongside working with people who are direct victims of crime, and their families, it is important to reinforce the point made previously, that a significant number of people subject to statutory supervision are, or have been, victims of crime themselves. In this complex scenario, due process demands that victims are treated in their own right, with the acknowledgement that victims hold a different role and place in the court process; and that care needs to be taken not to blame a victim of crime, possibly through prejudice, and inappropriate assumptions and stereotypes as to who constitutes a ‘legitimate’ victim.

Listening to the accounts of victims, and validating their experience, is key to their capacity to move forward; and Restorative Justice, pioneered by The Probation Service, can be a valuable process for both perpetrators and victims, in making sense of their differing experiences, and so to enable positive change. Core probation skills are needed to undertake this delicate and sensitive work, alongside specialist knowledge, and experience, of the contexts in which people have become victims of crime, particularly those from BAME groups, victims of domestic abuse and people who may have been trafficked, or are seeking asylum, and may be in breach of the law themselves. As part of its role in seeking to establish professional status for probation work, The Probation Institute also works with partner organisations on these issues; and is committed to sharing learning regarding situations that victims may find themselves in.

Professional identity and professional practice 

With regard to professional status, It is significant that, consistently over time, research with probation practitioners has concluded that, amongst other traits, they perceive themselves to be professionals, characterised by a deeply held professional identity, and which is justified by the specialist expertise and skills of probation work, manifest in the one to one supervisory relationship (the ‘therapeutic alliance’) with the person on probation; and by collaboration with other agencies of the criminal justice system, notably the courts, but also via, for example, MAPPA arrangements. 

Additionally, it is important to focus on the mental and emotional demands of probation work, for which possessing a sense of professional identity may be key to navigating the challenges of the role. Stuart Collins, writing in 2016, i.e. during the significant period of Transforming Rehabilitation, described what he termed ‘professional commitment:’ by which he means the investment of personal resources, or what is often called emotional labour, of service before self; a strong sense of community with peers – what could colloquially be termed as one’s ‘tribe;’ opportunities for progression in the professional role; a sense of autonomy; and confidence in the organisation to which practitioners belong. (Collins, 2016, 32.)

This sense of professional identity is strongly related to and underpinned by a commitment to what are perceived to be the values of probation work. Professor Emeritus Rob Canton (2011) discusses these ‘traditional probation values’ as including: location in and engagement with communities; social inclusion and reintegration; restorative justice; a belief in the possibility of change; and recognition of the role of social capital in desistance. A study from 2013, conducted by Rob Mawby and Anne Worrall, discussed the persistence of related beliefs over time, noting the significance of themes such as a belief in the capacity of people to change; satisfaction in the job, which was closely linked to a sense of autonomy; and practitioners finding meaning for their work through their professionalism. A particular concept which may find resonance with practitioners is Mawby and Worrall’s discussion of ‘responsible creativity,’ the capacity to work in chaotic and challenging situations, to think on one’s feet, and to continually rethink practice in order to engage the people subject to supervision, and sustain the overarching priorities of effectively assessing and managing risk. 

Two other elements seem to be critical to professionalism in probation work – reflective practice, and anti-discriminatory practice. 

Reflective practice derives from the work of Donald Schon, who formulated the notions of the reflective practitioner, and of reflection in action, as key to professional roles in a range of settings, including social work, education, and criminal justice. He identified what he described as the ‘messes’ where practitioners operate, which inform day to day practice (Schon, 2016: 42). He stated that: 
‘There are those who choose the swampy lowlands. They deliberately involve themselves in messy but crucially important problems and, when asked to describe their methods of inquiry, they speak of experience, trial and error, intuition, and muddling through.’ (Schon, 1991: 43, emphasis mine)
Schon further argues that, within this context, each professional relationship will generate different problems and challenges. This demands specific approaches and skills of the practitioner, working in a febrile and possibly volatile context; but, also, that each encounter presents new situations for learning by both practitioner and supervisee. (Schon, 1991: 155).

In a paper from 2022, written shortly after the reintegration of probation work into The Probation Service, Anne Burrell suggested that Schon’s approach ‘pretty accurately describes the experience of being a probation practitioner. And, consequently and inevitably, a typical day in the working life of any practitioner is unlikely to follow whatever is mapped out in their diary at its outset. This capacity to operate within an incessant state of flux requires particular skills and attributes – as does operating in an environment with scant rewards, whether financial or appreciative; and a setting where the outcomes of the work may be opaque for some considerable time.’ (Burrell, 2022, 441.) In other words, it may not be possible to know whether probation intervention is successful by the end of a period of supervision – the rewards for positive change may well come much later on in a person’s life. 

Relatedly, reflection affords consideration of the practitioner’s own prejudices and ideologies. Ainslie identifies that reflective practice enables practitioners to challenge their own knowledge base and assumptions - arguably, as well as the assumptions of their organisation, particularly with regard to ‘what works.’ In this context of reflective practice enabling a challenge to both personal and organisational prejudices, it is of note that, in 2021, HMIP published a highly critical report into the ways in which probation services were working with Black and Minority Ethnic (BAME) service users, as well as the experiences of BAME staff. This report concluded that, subsequent to Transforming Rehabilitation, The Probation Service had retreated from anti-discriminatory practice; and that there was therefore much work to be undertaken in this regard.

It is inevitable, therefore, that the processes of professional development for probation practitioners remain constant throughout their working lives, as probation work evolves and changes; and as the context and demands of the role are required to continually adapt and reframe. 

Conclusion 

Writing in 2018, the late Paul Senior, former Professor of Probation Studies at Sheffield Hallam University, and also former Chair of the Probation Institute, argued robustly that ‘probation is a profession – never let that go.’ In that article, and elsewhere, he worked to achieve for a Regulatory Body for Probation and Rehabilitation staff. 

And Gwen Robinson, who has researched extensively into probation work, suggests that, as the Probation Service seeks to establish itself as a unified service, key to its effectiveness will be the ways in which the Service addresses ‘issues of agency, identity, and voice.’ (Robinson, 2021:152). Significantly, she suggests that the proposed professionalisation of the service, via a professional register, is one device to seek to gain moral legitimacy within the criminal justice system. Additionally, Robinson suggests that it is the interface on a local level, with other agencies, which will provide the locations where ‘probation work is real and tangible, and where perceptions of legitimacy will be formed.’ (Robinson, 2021,161.)

So, how can professionalism in probation be summarised? The focus could be on the formal organisational processes of professional practice, and the value of monitoring and regulating probation work, and probation practitioners. These are important issues, and the landscape regarding professional registration seems likely to continue to change in the immediate future.

But it is equally important to consider the meanings of professionalism for probation practitioners on the personal level, in terms of what probation practice is, and how it is conducted. 

Firstly, it seems unavoidable that a key component of probation work is that of forming and sustaining relationships, between probation practitioners and the people whom they are supervising, as well as with victims of crime; other criminal justice agencies, primarily at a local level; and, importantly, with local communities. Professionalism encompasses how practitioners present themselves, in a range of settings. It includes skills of reflection, which enable practitioners to identify, and to address unconscious biases. Professionalism and reflection can generate an awareness of issues of power in the supervisory relationship, and the impact of practitioner decision-making on the lives of the people who are being supervise. These qualities can similarly enable effective practice in work with victims of crime. 

In their 2013 study, Rob Mawby and Anne Worrall (2013: 154) refer to probation as ‘an honourable profession.’ They concluded their book on their project by asserting that: 
‘It would be courageous …….to respect that this work inevitably involves a willingness to work holistically and optimistically, though not naively, with uncertainty, ambivalence and (to a degree) failure. Someone has to do it.’ 
And that seems to be a great summary of what probation work is all about...

Probation work is challenging, rewarding, frustrating, satisfying, and sometimes downright scary. But it is intrinsically worthwhile, with the strength of probation practice coming from the people doing the job. The Probation Institute is firmly of the belief that proper professional recognition, independently supported and sustained, will be key to the future effectiveness of this vital work. 

Summary Points 

1. The Probation Service has been in existence for over a century; yet probation work has never held formal professional status. 
2. Probation work inevitably involves working with vulnerable people, whose risks and needs mean that they require effective interventions, with a focus on safeguarding. 
3. Formal professional recognition would provide a mechanism for independent effective monitoring of probation practice, and of probation practitioners. 
4. The registration process would enable application of a code of ethics, which would place responsibilities and duties on the practitioner, whilst also providing protections from unethical or dubious policy decisions. 
5. The current landscape for probation work, and the breadth and gravity of probation practice, including serious organised crime, politically motivated offending, and cases of serious harm and abuse, demands that practitioners working in these settings are professionally qualified, and supported in their role.

References 

Ainslie S: (2020) ‘A time to reflect?’ Probation Quarterly 17: 9–12. London: Probation Institute.

Bowen P. (2021). 'Delivering a smarter approach. Probation professionalisation.' Centre for Justice Innovation. (Online.) (Accessed on 18 September 2022.)  
https://justiceinnovation.org/publications/ delivering-smarter-approach-probation-professionalisation 

Burrell, A. (2022). ‘The Reflective Practitioner in Transition. Probation work during reintegration of probation services in England and Wales.’ Probation Journal 69 (4) pp 434 – 451. 

Canton 2011: (2011). Probation: working with offenders. Abingdon: Routledge. 

Collins S: (2016). 'Commitment and probation work in England and Wales.' European Journal of Probation, 8 (1) pp. 30 – 48. 

Freidson E: (1994). Professionalism reborn: theory, prophecy and policy. Oxford, Polity press. HMIP: (2021) Race equality in probation: the experiences of black, Asian and minority ethnic probation service users and staff. London: 

HMIP. Available at: Race equality in probation: the experiences of black, Asian and minority ethnic probation service users and staff (justiceinspectorates.gov.uk) (accessed 3 August 2021). 

Mawby R. and Worrall A. (2014). 'Probation worker cultures and relationships with offenders.' Probation Journal 61 (4) pp. 346-357.

McWilliams W: (1985). The Mission Transformed: professionalisation of probation between the wars. The Howard Journal, vol 24, no 4, pp 257 – 274.

Robinson G. (2021). 'Rehabilitating probation: strategies for re-legitimation after policy failure.' The Howard Journal of Crime and Justice, 60 (2) pp 151-166. 

Schon D: (1991) The Reflective Practitioner. London: Arena publishing. 

Schon D: (2016) The Reflective Practitioner: How Professionals Think in Action. Abingdon: Routledge. 

Senior P: (2018). ‘Probation is a profession, never let that go.’ Probation Quarterly, issue 8, pp 6 – 8.

30 comments:

  1. I well remember - during PO training- writing an essay exploring ''Probation as a semi-profession'', crucially that training was University based, nationally sponsored and drew on academic Social Work for its skill set & values. Critical and independant practitioner thought was actively valued and encouraged. The independence and underpinning of Probation training was subsequently stripped away in order to facilitate political Centralised & employer control and the evolution of professionalism was effectively stifled. It is hard to see how this process can be reversed, given the dominance of correctional and risk prediction agendas, let alone under the attempted unholy welding of Probation to The Prison Service. Has Probation perhaps faired any better in Scotland where local authorities retained control? Respect to those who continue to try and defend and evolve Probation values!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Trouble with this view is that it was the very people trained like this that brought in psychometric rubbish cognitive junk group theory dynamics peer to peer pressure. Statistical analysis then you wonder why managerialism sprang up to clobber us into more metrics more group work. Hardly a professional assertion of role boundary more a race to lowest penny price point.

      Delete
    2. Possibly but as all other recognised professional roles charge fees and probation are just employees professional status is a non starter nonsense.

      Delete
  2. It all sounds very positive and may well be a good idea, but the cynic in me worries it's just another way for Probation Staff to be controlled, vilified and ultimately more easily sacked...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yeah, that's my thoughts and worries too :(

      Delete
    2. My thoughts exactly....this won't be embraced by senior management as an opportunity to grow our officers, it will become yet another tool in the armoury to threaten people to complete dumbed down and completely pointless "annual mandate e-training"....something which could be a positive opportunity for growth and repositioning will further entrench the culture of blame, fear, and targets

      Delete
  3. Recent HMIP reports are a “great summary of what probation work is all about”?

    “The report found a lack of resources continued to impact service delivery, with most staff working under excessively high workloads.“ “Inspectors were concerned that some staff reported feeling unsafe and had experienced racism, discrimination, and poor behaviour at their workplace.”

    https://www.justiceinspectorates.gov.uk/hmiprobation/media/press-releases/2024/08/essexnorthpdu2024/

    https://www.justiceinspectorates.gov.uk/hmiprobation/media/press-releases/2024/08/bedfordshirepdu2024/

    ReplyDelete
  4. The professional debate has been going on for years. It will still be going on in ten years time. The probation voice is bottom of the pile it always has been in my experience, child protection conferences to parole hearings we are tolerated because we have to be part of it. Chartered and Registered Psychologist sounds a lot better than COM or POM no recognition of your qualifications or experience are recorded in parole reports anymore but other witnesses have everything they have achieved since nursery school. The people who are supposed to bolster and represent our professionalism are nowhere to be seen and still the gullible pay union fees monthly whilst the union fiddles away whilst probation burns.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yet each one of those experts takes great pains to discuss things with a POM or COM beforehand to see if they are on the right track…

      Delete
  5. This feels like a re-run of similar debates originated by and promoting the Probation Institute.I would have no interest in being registered, licensed or otherwise ‘managed,’ by this elitist group who have as a cornerstone self promotion and empire building.
    If any such scheme were to be introduced, and it may or may not have merit, there needs to be a great debate about what is entailed, who is included and more importantly, who is excluded.
    Some years ago, as a CQSW qualified PO, I applied for Social Worker registration when considering a change of direction.
    My application was scrutinised in depth and although granted registration, the bone of contention was around a criminal conviction as a juvenile some 40 years earlier.
    I accept the need to enquire into peoples backgrounds but the parameters need to be openly defined and the ‘guardians,’ monitored to ensure any such registration scheme does not become elitist and exclusionary.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Toxic and useless organisation staffed by bitter and robotic staff , the probation service discuss

    ReplyDelete
  7. Before I left I always wondered what my ethical red line as a civil servant would be and with the shower of Tory Home Secretaries and Secretaries of State for Justice, I genuinely felt it would be the imminent reintroduction of the death penalty and the power for a PO to recommend it in a PSR.

    Apart from that, whilst probation is in the Civil Service what choice do we have to say no to something. Blanket GPS tagging, snooping on social media, actuarial risk assessments, researching addresses on Delius to see who our service users have for a neighbour, just off the top of my head, all are ethically dubious practices and official practice or tacitly recommended for risk management.

    Central government pharaoh, let the POs go

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My ethical redline was as a PO being told by CRC managers to go on a rota to be the hub receptionist for 4 hours, literally checking people off on an attendance sheet. We had just had a poor inspection outcome for risk assessment. Just showed the respect or lack of it for POs True story, I resigned.

      Delete
    2. Is that any different from being ordered to complete an EPF when you’ve already created a licence, a CRS referral for a service that doesn’t work, a Mappa review when nothing has changed or to update employment information for someone that hasn’t got a job?

      Delete
    3. Probably the same ex CRC managers currently making a mess of the north west

      Delete
  8. It’s people survey time again. Remember, do not complete the survey. No one will read your beautifully worded comments. The strongest message is not to complete it. It’s the only language they understand

    ReplyDelete
  9. profession
    /prəˈfɛʃn/
    noun
    noun: profession; plural noun: professions

    1.
    a paid occupation, especially one that involves prolonged training and a formal qualification.

    vocation
    /və(ʊ)ˈkeɪʃn/
    noun
    noun: vocation; plural noun: vocations

    a strong feeling of suitability for a particular career or occupation.

    ReplyDelete
  10. A marketing fallacy. It was a profession 26 years ago when you had to be qualified social worker apart from the odd PSA. With much professional autonomy, ethics, opportunities across social services unrestricted. The last 15 years at least has been a race to the bottom dumbing down and heavy real terms cuts in pay and conditions to lesser professional terms and conditions. Reap what you sow, chaos!

    ReplyDelete
  11. I certainly think that I was a professional when I worked as a probation officer, having had to gain a BA Honours Degree, a CQSW and a Diploma in Applied Social Studies. My studies at degree level lasted four years and included studying social work and criminal related laws, psychology, sociology relevant to the understanding of society and social systems and the theory and practice of social work. I had to undertake four practice placements, the first of which were observational and the last two were assessed, such that I had to be assessed as competent and suitable to work in a social work setting (my two assessed placements were in probation offices). I had a caseload of fifteen clients, wrote over ten social enquiry reports (now PSRs) and I also ran a group during my final assessed placement. Not everyone on my course passed their practice placements, as they were not deemed fit to practice. Subsequent to starting work as a probation officer, I had to participate in a first year officer's group and I was also assessed by my then assistant chief probation officer at the six months and twelve months stage, for her to assess whether I was competent to remain employed as a probation officer. I subsequently attended numerous training courses during my nearly 41 years in the job (early retired last year). During the early years of my employment, supervision sessions with my senior probation officer were very much focused on how to develop positive working relationships with my clients, with the aim of helping them to move on from their criminal past.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. "You were lucky... try and tell the young people of today that, and they won't believe you..."

      As a cqsw PO who became involved in training for a while in the 2000's I proposed & drafted three one-day sessions dedicated to preparing for & writing PSRs. They never happened: "Waste of time now we've got oasys" was the reply.

      Delete
    2. The Probation Institute is looking for good news stories about supervision. We want to use these in our work regarding sentencing.

      Stories should be completely anonymous and not recognisable please.

      Just a few lines about what you believe to have been successful in supervising individuals in the community.

      If you could send these to admin@probation-institute.org we would be very grateful.

      Delete
    3. Supervision....sounds a little ominous.

      Delete
  12. type "hmpps early release fails" into a search engine

    1st up: "https://www.theguardian.com/society/2024/sep/19/prisoners-freed-early-england-and-wales-not-fitted-tags-serco"

    type "early release fails":

    1st up: "https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/prisoners-released-government-early-release-scheme-b2618920.html"

    2nd up: "https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cy43kkw7pn2o"

    5th up: https://www.thecanary.co/uk/analysis/2024/09/26/early-release-labour/


    A clear & intentional distancing of the fact that hmpps is responsible. All media reports state "Labour" or "Labour Govt" are responsible. Antonia et al must be very pleased with themselves & their PR coup.

    Whilst the Labour govt must, of course, carry some responsibility, the bulk of that burden must rest on the shoulders of hmpps & its incompetent operatives:

    "We carry out sentences given by the courts, in custody and the community, and rehabilitate people in our care through education and employment. HMPPS is an executive agency, sponsored by the Ministry of Justice."

    So come on, Mahmood & Timpson, lets hear some credible explanations.

    For example, so-called "flashers" used to be prosecuted under the Vagrancy Act... Indecent exposure was only formally classified as a specifically sexual offence in 2003. Before then, it was legally defined within the Vagrancy Act of 1824. This act suggested the offence was committed by “rogues and vagabonds... When the Law Commission was trying to update the legal framework in 2015, its assessment included references to “flashing” – language that implies that legally we still aren’t viewing indecent exposure as a serious and sexual crime."

    And in 2024 the hmpps structure - despite its vociferous protestations about protecting the public - is so loose & fancy free that it ***misses*** the "incorrect sentencing" of sexual predators & releases them to commit further offences.

    So who in the hmpps hierarchy is going to fall on their sword? Or be pushed into the wilderness?

    Let me offer a prediction: Not a single one of the overpaid incompetent slimeballs.

    And where is the voice of the chief probation officer, whose name ono-one knows?

    ReplyDelete
  13. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cy43kkw7pn2o

    A man who is accused of committing a sexual offence within hours of being let out of prison under the government's early release scheme was freed in error, the BBC has been told.

    Amari Ward, 31, was one of 37 prisoners who should not have been eligible for the early release scheme because they had breached restraining orders.

    When police investigated Ward's case, it emerged he and the others had been convicted under an outdated law, which was not recognised during checks.

    ReplyDelete
  14. 26/09/2024 at 07:55: I am 25/09/2024 at 20:43 - that's truly appalling in my opinion that your proposal to run PSR writing training days was rejected. I was also involved in training during my time as a probation officer and between 1993 and 1995 I ran three PSR writing training courses with a senior probation officer colleague, each for three days. I also ran a one day PSR writing course for sessional PSR writers in 2000. The ludicrous idea that just because OASys existed there was no need for specific PSR writing training courses is beyond me!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. yup... just one of the many reasons I left.

      The 'reasoning' of these 'visionaries' - the chosen ones, the wormtongues who worshipped at 'the centre' - was that the auto-create facility would mean reports fell off the printer after an oasys was completed. Well, they did - but they were utter shyte.

      They were the same 'visionaries' who massaged figures to please their masters, who eradicated professional boundaries, who embraced TR, who were protected when it was revealed the CRCs were crap, & who are likely in siginificantly well-paid & influential positions now (if they haven't already retired with platinum pension pots).

      I've blown whistles, stuck my neck out, been diced, sliced, threatened & disciplined - nowt changes. The same vile bullying culture is nurtured & spread across probation because the rewards for such abusive behaviour attract those happy to oblige.

      The 'new' govt won't make any difference because they subscribe to the same formula, i.e. blame others for a dire legacy, ostracize the voices of reason by accusing them of being resistant to change while maintaining the status quo ... & stuffing their pockets while they can.

      Delete
    2. I recall PSR writing with colleagues then having to gate keep. This second approval reading caused difficulties. Tweaks changes and criticism damaged all the teams . Then it was partner peer reading because reports were so crap the practice had to be developed. In the end it remained so subjective we ended up with oasis. The internal snobbish competition to claim to be the best author.the slavish hours people put into them and the occasional polite judge comment made them worse. Psr while important seated so wildly in a consistency platform they had to go.

      Delete
    3. "reports were so crap the practice had to be developed... In the end it remained so subjective we ended up with oasis."

      Total fiction.

      Probation ended up having OASys imposed by senior civil servants desperate to appease politicians stirring up fears about "managing risk". The paper-based trials were morphed into an increasingly cobbled-together series of programmes (eOASys) which eventually had a psr-generator added.

      The re-imagined probation training regime post-1997 (afer a two year hiatus) placed less emphasis on the PSR; no doubt the civil servants' training spec for the imminent creation of the NPS & the risk-averse "we are an enforcement agency" mantra.

      Hansard 1999:

      Mr. Sawford: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department how many probation officers are currently in training; what assessment he has made of the prospects for a national shortage of qualified probation officers based on current projections of annual turnover, natural wastage and numbers in training; how many probation officers were in training in each year from 1990 to the latest year for which figures are available.

      Mr. George Howarth: There are at present 274 trainee probation officers. A work force planning study is currently being undertaken, and this will provide national data on the number of new probation officers needed over the next five years. Under the previous training scheme for probation officers, the Home Office sponsored students on Diploma in Social Work courses. The numbers of students starting sponsored courses from 1990 to 1995 was:

      1990: 336
      1991: 434
      1992: 451
      1993: 470
      1994: 305
      1995: 300.

      The scheme ended with the 1995 students. It should, however, be noted that research indicated that only about 60 per cent. of those sponsored went on to become probation officers.

      And The Guardian had fun here in 2000:

      https://www.theguardian.com/education/2000/mar/21/furthereducation.theguardian4

      Delete
  15. sayeeda warsi continues to impress

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c0e1q5w0q9po

    ReplyDelete
  16. latest news from hmpps - its all impossibly amazing, you wouldn't think there were any issues in the prisons estate.

    Discuss:

    https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/prison-education-and-accredited-programme-statistics-2023-to-2024/prison-education-and-accredited-programme-statistics-2023-to-2024

    ReplyDelete