Young offenders

 

Measuring together

Impact measurement in the youth justice sector

Camilla Nevill and Tris Lumley

May 2011, 30 pages

Charities working in the field of youth justice have good reason to take impact meaurement seriously. Many of these charities receive a very high proportion of their funding from statutory sources - 78% of Nacro's funding and 89% of Catch-22's funding come from the government - and in the face of budget cuts it is more vital than ever for them to prove their approach works.

This report is part of NPC's Measuring together series which aims to help charities to overcome barriers to impact reporting by working together and sharing methods and approaches. Most youth justice charities aim to reduce re-offending and agree that this is the outcome they need to measure. But they also need to consider interim outcomes, such as improved relationships or gained qualifications, on the path to understanding what works.

The report includes recommendations for improving impact measurement in the youth justice sector. Charities can collect data from the young people they work with, and work closely with other charities to coordinate measurement efforts. Funders need to invest in charities that measure their results. And the government needs to make it easier for charities to access the data they need to measure successsfully.

‘One day we’ll look back with bemusement at the fact that charities used to have to work out how to measure their results from scratch, without coordination, competing to develop the best measurement framework which they would jealously guard. We don’t ask doctors to come up with their own frameworks for measuring the results of their work. Or engineers. Or cancer researchers. One day we’ll stop asking charities to do this, the framework will already be in place, and they’ll be free to focus on delivering the best results.’
Tris Lumley, report author

 

Read about standardised approaches to measurement and reporting, shared measurement, and impact measurement in the youth justic sector on NPC's blog.

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Charity insight

"More than one in five 11 year olds leaves primary school with literacy skills below the expected standard.''