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The Oasis hubs providing a Surer Start for youngsters

Schools will play a key role in hosting the government鈥檚 new youth hubs as part of a reimagining of New Labour鈥檚 Sure Start scheme. Could Oasis鈥檚 school community hubs provide the blueprint for Sure Start 2.0? But rather than focusing on early years support as the former network of children鈥檚 centres did, this time the [鈥

Jessica Hill

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We probably need to go back to that model where a bit of funding can deliver an awful lot locally

The Oasis hubs providing a Surer Start for youngsters

Schools will play a key role in hosting the government鈥檚 new youth hubs as part of a reimagining of New Labour鈥檚 Sure Start scheme. Could Oasis’s school community hubs provide the blueprint for Sure Start 2.0?

But rather than focusing on early years support as the former network of children’s centres did, this time the government’s focus is teenagers 鈥 with a mandate for hubs to boost community cohesion and keep young people in school.

Labour鈥檚 manifesto promised its Young Futures programme would be a 鈥渘etwork of hubs reaching every community鈥, hosting youth workers, mental health support workers and careers advisers to 鈥渟upport young people鈥檚 mental health and avoid them being drawn into crime鈥.

A newly launched Home Office unit to oversee the programme will work with schools, police and charities to design and deliver the hubs.

The department says they will provide safe places for young people to be with friends and mentors, and 鈥渃hannel their time positively and keep them in school鈥.

An Oasis from adversity

Oasis, the charitable trust whose multi-academy trust Oasis Community Learning runs 54 schools, is at the forefront of this vision.

Oasis also hosts , chaired by former children鈥檚 commissioner Anne Longfield.

It recommended a 鈥淪ure Start for teenagers鈥 in 2022, envisaging a 鈥渘etwork of intervention and support鈥 for vulnerable young people, with hubs 鈥渋n and around school鈥.

It met with Labour鈥檚 then-shadow ministers and its proposals are understood to have informed the government鈥檚 programme.

Oasis is piloting two youth hubs this autumn on the sites of former private schools in London and the Wirral in Merseyside.

We visited its Lambeth hub, where Oasis has worked for almost two decades, to see how its partnership model between schools, local government and other groups could be rolled out elsewhere.

Jupiter the goat at Oasis’ Waterloo farm

No ifs, no butts

And one of our first introductions was to Jupiter the goat, who 鈥渓oves the media鈥 according to Oasis鈥檚 chief operating officer Danielle Welch, despite his attempt to headbutt our photographer.

The farm in Waterloo, surrounded by tower blocks, normally also includes geese (who Welch says grew up into 鈥渢errible, angry teenagers鈥) sheep and pigs.

Vulnerable youngsters are sent by schools for six-week wellbeing programmes. Volunteers living on a nearby estate also help care for the animals.

Many of the estate鈥檚 families are crammed into temporary accommodation, overlooked by the 拢3 million penthouse flat actor Kevin Spacey has up for sale.

They can feel alienated from the wealth around them, but working at the farm provides a sense of purpose and community, explains Welch.

At a nearby community centre, Oasis offers free meals and play sessions twice a week, and hosts community festivals, a local authority library, foodbank, a debt and immigration advice centre and adult learning programmes.

Its six youth workers support pupils at the adjoining Oasis Academy South Bank school, one of the country鈥檚 best performing secondaries, and the nearby Oasis Academy Johanna, where children make almost two years of additional progress in reading, writing and maths.

By the time the school day ends there鈥檚 little left in the centre鈥檚 food bank fridges. The hub quickly fills up with chattering teenagers who are served squash and biscuits. Many stay into the evening to chat and do homework.

Sonia one of Oasiss youth workers

Youth worker Sonia advocates for families to access financial support and better housing 鈥 overcrowding is a big issue.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e often offered transfers to new homes many miles away,鈥 she says. 鈥淔amilies benefiting from our wraparound services don鈥檛 want to lose that support by moving.鈥

One local resident, Maria Lopez, says during the pandemic some individuals were 鈥渃ausing major disturbances鈥, leading some people on the estate to 鈥渇ear leaving their homes鈥. She and some other parents asked Oasis for support when schools reopened in safely getting their kids to school. The next day, Oasis staff escorted them and 鈥渆ven helped handle a concerning situation鈥. Lopez believes that without Oasis, their community 鈥渨ould be at a greater risk鈥.

Oasis also partners with a law firm whose lawyers mentor struggling South Bank pupils. Youth mentors working for Oasis also support victims of gang violence at St Thomas鈥檚 A&E department 鈥 echoing the government鈥檚 plans to put youth workers in hospitals.

Pillar of the community

The Waterloo farm began a decade ago after Oasis鈥檚 charismatic founder, Baptist minister Steve Chalke, realised Guy鈥檚 and St Thomas鈥 NHS trust had acres of derelict land and asked to borrow it.

The partnership work Oasis has established here is 鈥渙ne of the firmest examples of what a school, hub and community working together can do,鈥 says Welch.

Oasis Waterloo farm

The charity, which is funded by a mix of government contracts, charitable donations and local authority grants, has 22 local hub charities linked to schools.

Ideally they鈥檇 all have access to farms like the one in Waterloo, but that is dependent on availability of facilities.

The Waterloo farm is closing soon as the land is earmarked for development, and Jupiter will likely move home to Oasis鈥檚 new youth hub at St Martin鈥檚 Village in South London.

Once there he will likely be part of the therapeutic support available to vulnerable young people at risk of school exclusion.

Oasis also recently opened a secure school (an alternative to young-offender institutions) in Rochester, Kent, called Oasis Restore, with therapy at its heart. Two more Oasis-led youth hubs are planned at school bases in Enfield, North London, and Salford, Gtr Manchester.

Giving local leadership

In Salford, the community hub at Oasis Media City UK school 鈥 which has almost three times the national average of pupil-premium kids 鈥損rovided almost 18,000 meals in the last academic year to the local community. Headteacher Paul McEvoy believes this helped boost school attendance. 

Although many heads believe schools should not be overburdened by a pressure to act as a fourth emergency service, McEvoy is a 鈥渇irm believer鈥 that community leadership is a 鈥渞eally important part of a principal鈥檚 role鈥.

He sees it as a 鈥渢wo-way street鈥 and says: 鈥淗appier communities benefit the school. If all the services work together, that’s going to better improve the circumstances that communities are in.鈥

One of his year 8 pupils lost his mum last year and is being cared for by his nan, who now attends weekly Zumba sessions at the hub.

鈥淕etting her across the threshold into our building helps us forge those relationships, to know what’s going on at home a little more and to help with uniform, clothes and food, whatever it might be,鈥 McEvoy says.

Paul McEvoy with pupils at Oasis Media City UK

There鈥檚 also a 鈥榯alk caf茅鈥 for those who speak little English, a playgroup for parents and babies that is supported by pupils, and a Friday night youth club.

McEvoy believes getting the community into the school helps them to feel ownership of it, which he says results in fewer parental complaints.

More than 100 families attended the hub鈥檚 community Iftars and Christmas f锚tes last academic year.

He says: 鈥淭he school is a neutral space for people to come together, respecting one another鈥檚 differences. Building relationships is a key part of our work, in what can sometimes be in our country鈥檚 quite segregated and fractured communities.鈥

Squash about to be served at Oasiss community hub in Waterloo

Mental health support

There are long waiting lists for mental health support services for children in Salford, McEvoy says, but the hub鈥檚 youth mentor can support pupils in the meantime.

Back in 2014, Oasis Academy Foundry in Birmingham had just been taken over by Oasis and was in special measures when Channel Four documentary Benefits Street started filming in its neighbourhood. Oasis advocated on the community鈥檚 behalf to try and dispel negative stereotypes.

鈥淚t’s not just working with families; we fight for our communities to create equity in society,鈥 says Oasis MAT鈥檚 CEO John Barneby.

He believes the reason the Birmingham school is now rated 鈥榦utstanding鈥 is due to the community hub Oasis launched there, which offers cooking sessions and a food pantry.

The local authority library homed at Oasiss hub

Moving in on vacant spaces

While falling rolls are causing headaches for many educators, for Oasis, redundant school sites are creating new opportunities.

Oasis St Martin鈥檚 Village stands on the site of one of the UK鈥檚 first girls鈥 schools 鈥 St Martin-in-the-Fields high school for girls in Tulse Hill, founded in 1699, closed last year due to falling rolls.

Similarly, Oasis partnered with the Kingsmead Trust to open a therapeutic centre for children at risk of exclusion on the site of the private Kingsmead School on the Wirral, which shut in 2020.

鈥淚n inner-city areas, if that building doesn’t get put to use it’ll become a hotel 鈥 so why not put it to community use instead?鈥 says Welch.

The vision for Oasis St Martin鈥檚 Village is 鈥渙f bringing all the services together in one place for young people and building around it鈥, she says.

Working with partners, Oasis will develop sport, music, agriculture, dance and art activities, all free for young people and their families. The concept is based around making education 鈥渁 pleasure鈥, says Chalke.

鈥淚f a child can鈥檛 learn the way we teach, we must start teaching the way they learn.鈥

Sure Start legacy

Oasis would like to see the government鈥檚 youth hubs offer expanded to include much wider family support, mirroring what Oasis already provides in its community hubs.

The Centre for Young Lives wants ministers to allocate 拢1 billion from the levelling-up fund to expand youth hubs and family hubs to all disadvantaged areas by 2029.

This, it says, would leave a lasting legacy that鈥檚 truly on the scale of Sure Start. But that vision is limited by government funding constraints.

John Barneby
John Barneby

Starved by austerity

Policies rarely leave a positive imprint in the public imagination in the way Sure Start did. The networks launched in 1998 were found to have led to a significant net decrease in hospital admissions for children and higher GCSE grades; for every 拢1 spent, educational outcome benefits were worth 拢1.09, the Institute for Fiscal Studies calculated.

Centres were subsequently starved of cash. More than one-third (38 per cent) of the 3,106 council-run centres open in 2010-11 had shut by 2022-23, Unison reported.

Sure Start鈥檚 meagre successor, the Family Hubs programme launched by the last government which focused on early years support, was earmarked for just 拢300 million funding for three years to 2025 in 75 local authority areas.

Similarly, youth hubs will get less than 4 per cent of the 拢2.5 billion funding (in today鈥檚 prices) that Sure Start received at its peak.

The 92 planned hubs will receive 拢91.7 million a year 鈥 intended to be funded by the predicted revenue from introducing VAT on private school fees.

Welch believes Oasis鈥檚 model is more cost-effective than the one used by local authorities because they rely on volunteers. But she says it takes two to five years to really make a difference and build a solid cohort of supporters.

Oasis academy South Bank pupils pile into the adjacent community hub after school

Barneby believes Oasis鈥檚 community support model could be rolled out by other MATs and schools using their convening powers.

As local authority funding has been reduced, schools have become 鈥渢he only bit of social infrastructure that’s still got that long-term relationship with families鈥, he says.

鈥淛ust 25 per cent of a child’s life is in school and it’s impossible, with a conscience, to ignore the challenges in society.鈥

He points out many Sure Start centres were started by schools. 鈥淭he integrated place-based approach creates places where people can belong. 鈥淲e probably need to go back to that model where a bit of funding can deliver an awful lot locally.鈥

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1 Comment

  1. Rubina Darr

    Great news regarding Oasis and the strong moral drive to support vulnerable young people.
    Please remember there may be so many school leaders and teachers and support staff who can extend this work into their local areas.
    Again, locality is everything when supporting our communities.
    Schools are best placed to support the community in which they are already in.

    We all need to work together and learn from each other too.
    Societal change only happens when we start from the lived experience of those whom we seek to serve, namely our communities.

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