HEALTH AND WELLBEING
Dr Sims-Schouten is on a mission to stamp out this labelling by training professionals who work with vulnerable children , including refugees , children in care and care leavers , and lobbying for increased support funding .
“ If there are not enough resources , if there are not enough practitioners or if there ’ s not enough training , then practitioners also become vulnerable groups themselves because they have to work with limited means ,” she says .
TRAINING AND RESPONSE Dr Sims-Schouten cites the case of a young mixedrace girl who had been excluded from school , indicating the school had given up on her . Further investigation revealed she had been acting out behaviour in response to severe bullying .
“ I did a number of training sessions with the teachers because it turns out they had not had any diversity or inclusive-practice training ,” she says . “ So together with the Chair of the Racial Equality Council and an ethnic minority representative from the police , we did some training in the school .”
When all parties agreed the girl could return to school , the global pandemic hit and education institutions closed , not only cutting off education and that social infrastructure , but also the free school meals that many poor students rely on .
“ There was a lot of fear , especially in ethnic minority communities , about going outside , about getting their food , about being stopped by the police – because we know that a large percentage of black children get stopped and searched by the police regularly – too regularly ,” Dr Sims-Schouten says .
“ And so we did sessions again with the police and the school and we managed to make sure that she could go to school safely to pick up her free school lunch without feeling intimidated by the police presence .”
While this is a local example , Dr Sims-Schouten says the failure of child welfare systems is a worldwide challenge .
She has researched and worked in children ’ s care in Greece , Finland , Egypt and Canada . “ The issue is about changing practices and creating awareness of what particular children need and also where practice fails ,” she says .
Recently , Dr Sims-Schouten has been collaborating with colleagues from Jakarta and Surabaya universities in Indonesia , looking at how marginalised and disadvantaged groups there have been affected by the country ’ s lockdown restrictions . These people are usually casual and temporary workers who are not supported by Indonesia ’ s social safety net .
Dr Sims-Schouten says a holistic approach is needed when it comes to the issue of children at risk . “ In my case that mostly revolves around providing safety and mental health support , to not accepting superficial assessments of a child being recalcitrant or beyond help and moving beyond Dickensian attitudes .”
We still have this narrative that although we like to talk about mental health , we like to support vulnerable children , there is always this group of children who are perceived as ‘ beyond help ', too difficult , too complex , their behaviour is all wrong and they ’ re bad children .
– Wendy Sims-Schouten
ISSUE 02 / 2021
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