Blogs & Feeds

Hold on, what is headspace?

Daniel reports from the Forum on Prevention and Early Intervention for Children and Youth at Croke Park in Dublin.

Why isn't Edward Tufte here?

Elle offers some advice from information design guru Edward Tufte to some of the scientists presenting at this year's Society for Prevention Research meeting in San Francisco.

I'm a washing-up liquid bottle… fly me!

Improving children’s services might not be rocket science, but maybe it's more rocket science than we've tended to think...

Making the pieces fit? Fat chance!

In which I visit the Big Apple and go large in the shade of that big Tree of Knowledge.

The bigger picture? It's still rocky

Everyone here in the basement believes in evidence based practice. Outside, most people in children's services do not.

Aspiring to be less noticeable

How long before there are designers in Scandinavia, elsewhere in Europe and in the South producing something so radically different for children that America comes running?

The executive director of Blueprints hits all the key notes.

Del Elliott talks standards of evidence, programme fidelity and scaling up, over an all American breakfast.

Going five rounds with the National Center for School engagement

Despite getting hot and bothered over poor concept, unreliable measurement and spelling mistakes, Ernest can't help but be excited by some very powerful data.

More of the same?

Reasons to make the long-haul journey to the Blueprints conference.

Discursive realities

Reporting from the Blueprints Conference in Denver, Michael Little observes how talk about 'real' families can influence the arguments for and against evidence-based practice.

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