Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Skills for Care

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Location
  
London

Founded
  
2002

Number of volunteers
  
24 (2012)

Number of employees
  
183 (2012)

Revenue
  
32.5 million GBP (2012)

Skills for Care wwwskillsforcareorgukSiteElementsimageslogo

Registration no.
  
Company ref 3866683 Charity ref 1079836

Key people
  
Dame Moira Gibb, Chair Sharon Allen, CEO

Website
  
www.skillsforcare.org.uk

Type of business
  
Company limited by guarantee and Registered Charity

Profiles

stop think dignity skills for care 2d animation


Skills for Care is the strategic body for workforce development in adult social care in England.

Contents

Skills for Care is an independent registered charity working with 35,000 adult social care employers to set the standards and qualifications to equip 1.5 million social care workers with the skills and knowledge needed to deliver high quality care to people who use services and carers. For the financial year ended 31 March 2012, 86% of revenue was received as grants from the Department of Health.

Skills for care apprenticeships in social care


Role

Skills for Care work with employers to gather data on the social care workforce through the National Minimum Data Set for Social Care (NMDS-SC) that provides robust evidence to analyse emerging issues for the social care sector. NMDS-SC and other research projects are designed to create a well trained workforce capable of meeting the challenges the social care sector faces.

The Workforce Innovation programme and Workforce Development Strategy helps employers and their staff be innovative and flexible to capitalise on future business development opportunities.

Skills for Care have been a key partner in developing the new Qualifications and Credit Framework (QCF) as a simpler, more flexible way of recognising and rewarding skills and knowledge in the social care workforce. Once the QCF is introduced in 2010 the common induction standards and knowledge sets will be linked into the framework.

The Accolades awards reward social care employers who deliver outstanding services. Care Ambassadors visit schools, colleges and job fairs to promote social care as a positive career choice. The 'I Care...' materials and the career pathway e-tool help employers promote social care as a long-term career.

Skills for Care makes sure the voice of social care employers and their workers is heard at the Department of Health and at Westminster. Skills for Care work closely with Government departments, MPs and Peers to make sure that the development needs of the adult social care workforce is reflected in new policy initiatives.

Area Networks

Skills for Care's seven supporting area networks contribute to the improvement of social care through workforce development activities in each region of England.

Skills for Care's area networks act as brokers for funding for workforce development and training.

Area Networks also develop partnerships with employers to help them to get the best out of resources available for social care workforce development in their area. They can help employers to plan their workforce development requirements.

References

Skills for Care Wikipedia