Wirkungsnachweis aus der Literatur

Langfristig (> 5 Jahre)
Mikro (Individuum)
Sozial

improved family life

Beziehungsaufbau und Interaktiosfähigkeiten

The workless status of the young people had often been causing difficulty for the family. Many will be estranged from their families, or former carers. For this outcome, data from the Fifteen Social Report could be used. Obviously, the corollary of that is that it also improves the lives of family members. One family member per apprentice was assumed, although it is likely to be higher. Although a range of outcomes were mentioned in relation to families, only one was chosen to be taken forward. An increase in income for the family, or increased aspirations for the family were not included.

Beschreibung der Aktivität

Fifteen London apprentice programme
Fifteen London is a social enterprise restaurant which runs an apprentice programme for young people.
Großbritannien
12 months
95 graduates, 18 participants per training
teilnehmende Kinder und Jugendliche

Evaluierung der Aktivität

Social Return on Investment (SROI) is an adjusted cost-benefit analysis that quantifies the value of social, environmental and economic outcomes that result from an intervention. An SROI analysis proceeds via five key steps: 1) Boundary setting to establish scope; 2) Engagement of stakeholders to understand the interventions? theory of change; 3) Data collection to evidence outcomes and impact; 4) Model development; 5) Reporting. Although imperfect, "Fifteen" does have an existing research base. For its annual report, and for previous evaluations, extensive qualitative research with apprentices has taken place. Whilst this was carried out for a different purpose, it provided a starting point for the stakeholder engagement phase of this project. This was accompanied by two workshops - one with staff and one with a project steering group - to identify stakeholders and begin to develop a theory of change.
1) Improved family life 2) Improved family life for families
1) £1,716 2) £9,610
Großbritannien
Forschungsbericht