In a sector largely ignored in policy and the public imagination, Alternative Provision works to care for and educate children who have been excluded or cannot be appropriately supported within… Click to show full abstract
In a sector largely ignored in policy and the public imagination, Alternative Provision works to care for and educate children who have been excluded or cannot be appropriately supported within mainstream schools. Central to their mission is the engagement of families, often seen as both the cause of their child’s difficulties and the solution to their successful educational re-engagement. Practitioners within Alternative Provision work within sophisticated strategies of family engagement, from regular communication to the more intensive interventions of home visits, supporting families with everything from filling in forms to cleaning, from managing outbursts to sourcing furniture. With the majority of families living within contexts of deprivation, many have life histories containing trauma, trauma that Alterative Provision Practitioners listen to, confront and, often, internalise, risking ‘compassion fatigue’. This article focuses on the potential for compassion fatigue within family engagement in Alternative Provision, beginning with the impact on practitioners. It then discusses the role of leadership in building an assemblage of organisation interventions to both mitigate compassion fatigue and maximise ‘compassion satisfaction’, the fulfilment that comes from empathic work. Finally, it examines how compassion satisfaction could mitigate the deleterious impacts of vicarious trauma.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.