About Inspire Childrens Services
Our single, dual and three bed homes are OFSTED approved and provide a warm, comfortable and stable family orientated environment essential for young people aged 8-18 years. Our homes are staffed with experienced social care professionals all equipped with the skills necessary to ensure that young people can flourish in our care. Over the past few years we have been successful in the tendering process to join the Greater Manchester and Greater Merseyside frameworks for placements as well as the Liverpool City Region contract.
Our Principles
We contribute to young people’s care, learning, development and safeguarding and this is reflected in every aspect of our practice and service provision.
Staff will work with parents and families who are partners in the care, learning, development and safeguarding of their children recognising they are often the young persons first and most enduring carers and educators.
Our single and dual placement homes are OFSTED approved and provide a warm, comfortable and stable family orientated environment essential for young people aged 8-18 years. Our homes are staffed with experienced social care professionals all equipped with the skills necessary to ensure that young people can flourish in our care.
Our Values
Individuality, diversity and difference are valued and celebrated and permeate all its service provision. Equality of opportunity and anti discriminatory practice are actively promoted within all aspects of the Inspire’s practice.
We actively promote Young peoples health and well-being.
Confidentiality and agreements about confidential information are respected as appropriate unless a young persons protection and well-being are at stake.
Professional knowledge, skills and values are shared appropriately at Inspire in order to enrich the experience of the individual more widely.
Best practice requires a continuous search for improvement and self awareness of how our staff are perceived by others.
We operate a “Culture Of Awareness” which recognises that young people are potentially subject to exploitation by adults who wish to use social care as an access point to vulnerable young people.