Slough Child Sexual Exploitation Awareness Project

Last summer, we were commissioned by Slough Council's Child Sexual Exploitation team on a drama project from late autumn 2017 until March 2018. The project's aim was to educate young people in the area about Child Sexual Exploitation and Healthy Relationships. Our end goal was for the young people to then use their key learning with us to devise their own short play.

We worked with five Slough schools with Year 8 students over the course of two months. Each school participated in two workshops facilitated by our Artistic Directors - the first was workshop focussed on key learning and the second workshop guided the young people in creating their own performances by engaging them in different devised theatre activities.

Our first key learning workshop explored eight different models of Child Sexual Exploitation: Peer to Peer, Boyfriend/Girlfriend, Gang(s), Party, Online, Self-generated, Trafficking, and Commercial Sexual Exploitation. With each model, we developed and/or adapted a fun and engaging drama game that would bring awareness to these very serious issues and create critical debate. Using drama games to encourage safe conversation about social issues is one of the main points of our Artistic Directors’ M.A. Applied Theatre training and is at the core of the ethos of our company. With this particular project, we noticed that many of the school groups used these drama games as a basis to develop bits of their final drama pieces.

The second workshops focused on guiding the groups in devising their short performances. We were pleased that although every school participated in the same first workshop, they were creative and developed very different ideas with different storylines, characters, and concepts. One of the main aims of the second workshops was for each young person to create a very detailed character. We guided them in characterisation with activities such as writing diary entries as their character, thought-tracking as their character, and physicalising these characteristics with frozen images. It was really great for us to be able to see how the groups had clearly taken on board the key learning from session one, one teacher even expressing to us in an email;

“Thanks you once again, It’s been a fantastic project to be apart of so far and we look forward to the audition. You have both contributed so much value by explaining CSE & increasing awareness and understanding for our students.”- Staff member supporting one of the groups

Just a few short weeks after our second workshops within the schools, each group performed their final pieces in front of a panel of expert judges in early February 2018. Many of the teachers that worked with these students told us that the groups worked on their own to develop their short plays with very little help from the adults who were working with them. We saw five diverse and imaginative performances, packed with different and well-developed characters, interesting storylines, CSE facts and figures, physical theatre, spoken word, and music. We were very proud of what these young people created and the autonomy that they had over their work!

Two of the schools were chosen to perform at The Curve in Slough on 13 March for the council’s CSE Awareness Day event. Although only two schools were chosen to perform on this day, we believe that every single student learnt very important information, was able to be creative in an exciting way, and worked as a part of a team. Every school should be very proud of these amazing Year 8 students and their hard work!

Announcement!

We are very excited to announce that we have been commissioned by Slough Council to run a series of workshops in their secondary schools exploring topics of Child Sexual Exploitation, Grooming and Near Peer Grooming. 

Over the next coming months our artistic directors Lauren and Emily will be running these theatre based workshops. We'll be using session one to teach the young about; 

  • Dangers associated with social media and grooming 
  • Consent and healthy age appropraite relationships
  • Peer on Peer grooming 
  • The grooming process and models of grooming 
  • Substance misuse 
  • Gang Links 

We'll then be running follow up workshops with these young people where they'll be using theatre techniques to produce their own theatre shows exploring the above topics. Following this, two chosen school groups will be picked to showcase their performances to their teachers, friends, family and Slough council for Child Sexual Exploitation Awareness day in March 2018. 

We are really looking forward to beginning this process and will keep our website and social media updated with information in the following months. 

Summer 2017 Company Report

We had a busy summer term here at Unblurred Lines Theatre Company! As we begin proposal writing for autumn/winter we wanted to reflect back on some of the exciting projects we completed before the schools broke up for their summer holidays.

NCS The Challenge

One project we really enjoyed was whilst working alongside Safe! Support for Young People Affected by Crime. Both our organisations were visited by a great group of young people from NCS The Challenge, a government run scheme that gives young people aged 15-17 a chance to work alongside charities and organisations to learn about their work and help them in any way required. During our weekend together, both ourselves and Safe ran a session that got the young people discussing topics such as sexual assault, sexual consent and rape. We then set the young people a task of developing us and Safe a joint promotional video that could be shown to schools head teachers to get them to understand the importance of healthy relationship work for all their young people. The young people set off on their challenge and developed three different videos with three innovative and creative ideas. We want to thank the young people at NCS for their artistic input. We at Unblurred Lines were highly impressed with the maturity and sensitivity that they handled these difficult topics with and we hope that through these young people, our message of the importance of healthy relationship education for all young people is spread a little further.

Schools Workshops

We also had a very busy but highly creative and interesting time working in a large state school in North London. We were contacted by the school and asked to run 13 sessions as part of their year 8 and 9 ‘health days’. The school specified that they would like two drama sessions developed. One covering healthy friendships to be taught to all of their year 8s and one covering consent to be taught to all of their year 9s.

Year 8s: We decided to use a literary theme during our healthy friendships workshop and developed our workshops with the theme of Harry Potter. After our ‘contract of behaviour’ and warm ups, the session covered discussions and drama games such as ‘what makes a good and bad wizard friend’. The young people then developed their very own frozen scenes that showed their audience characteristics that they’d discussed about being a ‘good friend’ to one another. Their scenes were creative and funny and we were happy to see these young people engaging with the healthy friendships topic so well. We decided to collect our data in a much more qualitative way during these sessions by asking the young people to feedback at the end some advice for ‘Harry Potter’ on how he can be a good friend. They wrote advice such as;

  • To be trustworthy
  • Don’t be disrespectful
  • Loyal and fun as well as lovely
  • Don’t talk behind their back
  • Be friendly no matter what
  • Don’t be rude to each other and be respectful to all of your friends
  • Consider one’s thoughts before contradicting one’s opinions
  • Don’t gossip

When asked something that they had achieved during the sessions, they expressed;

  • Being nice to people, the line between banter and being rude
  • The right and wrong in a relationship
  • I made my ideas heard
  • I have reflected upon different situations and moments in people’s lives, thus expanding my knowledge and understanding of the human race.
  • Contributed
  • Used variety of levels
  • Doing freeze frames of good and bad friends
  • I achieved to communicate with others
  • Working with people that I don’t usually work with
  • I achieved how to be nice

We at Unblurred Lines were really impressed that every single young person in all our sessions took part, engaged and stretched themselves to learn new things. With one young person even coming up to us and stating that what we really liked about the session was he ‘learnt what a real friend was’.

Year 9s: We focussed this session on sexual consent and effective communication. After our usual ‘contract of behaviour’ and warm ups we got the young people engaging in discussions and exercises around ‘recognising signs of consent’ as well as giving them some key learning on ‘freedom to consent and coercive control’. As their main task we asked the young people to create their very own rap song or advert using metaphors but with the theme of consent. We also used qualitative data to find out what they had learnt from the session. When asked to give some written advice on ‘how to engage in healthy relationships’ they expressed statements such as:

  • Don’t force anyone to do anything
  • Communication is key
  • No means no!
  • Don’t force your partner
  • If they say no then no
  • Never feel pressured to do something you do not feel comfortable doing
  • Don’t do things that you don’t want to do
  • Look after one another, respect each other’s views
  • Don’t say yes if it is forced, say no if necessary
  • Always make sure all parties know what they’re consenting to
  • You always have a choice to do stuff, don’t get forced                 

When asked to write down something they had achieved in the session they expressed sentiments such as:

  • Learnt about consent in more depth
  • Performed in front of people
  • Understand how consent work
  • I understand that you shouldn’t force anyone to do what they don’t want to do
  • Helped my team make an idea
  • I said something in a performance
  • I got over stage fright
  • I wrote an entire poem alone
  • I learnt that you can use simple examples to show the importance of consent

We were impressed that every young person took part in the songs/adverts as either an actor or director and were very impressed that they were happy to ask us lots of questions to clarify anything they still needed to understand.

Autumn/Winter 2017

We have recently put in two very exciting proposals for schools based projects and we will keep you updated on how these turn out! In the meantime if you think your young people can benefit from an education similar to the above then please do get in contact!

 

Spring 2017 Company Report

Throughout spring 2017, Unblurred Lines Theatre Company has been running workshops with groups of year 10’s.

We have been working with our new ‘Introduction Workshop’ session plan which has been successful. This particular session plan teaches 15 year olds about sexual consent, sexual harassment, coercive relationships and friendships, technology safety and the laws that surround all these key topics.

Data Collection

We have been using a mix of qualitative and quantitative data collecting to help us begin to understand the immediate impact that the session may have on the participants. We ask the participants to fill out a ‘pre session feedback form’ where they circle the number corresponding to their understanding of a key theme or word. Through doing this we were able to establish in one session for example;

  • 92% of students either strongly disagreed, disagreed, or were not sure with the statement: “I understand the meaning of coercive relationships.”
  •  During reflective questions at the end, where we then asked what they learnt in the session, nearly 80% of the participants replied with varying statements concluding that they had developed a better understanding of the concept of coercive relationships.

 

  • We were happy to see that 84% of the participants in this particular session either agreed or strongly agreed with the statement “I know who I can speak to if I have any concerns about my safety.” However, during the session we still have a discussion about adults we can trust as well as send out signposting to different charities and helplines in our post-session pack.
  • We were also pleased to know that 84% of students in the session either agreed or strongly agreed with the statement “I understand the law behind consent.” We make sure to reiterate the laws behind sexual consent multiple times throughout our sessions as well as website links in our post-session pack.

(Stats taken from session on 26 April 2017, Year 10s)

 In another session with a separate group we also found that again;

  • 92% of the students also disagreed, strongly disagreed, or were not sure for the statement “I understand the meaning of coercive relationships.
  • During the reflection at the end, we found that 73% of the students had various responses of how they now have a better understanding of the word “consent” and what “coercive relationship means” when asked what they learnt in the session.
  • Again, reasuuringly, approximately 80% of the participants either agreed or strongly agreed when given the statement “I know who I can speak to if I have any concerns about my safety.” 

(Stats taken from session on 10 May 2017, Year 10s)

We as artistic directors were extremely pleased to see the young people being so open in the sessions and were happy to explicitly express when they did not understand something or were unsure on the laws surrounding a certain topic. We as experienced facilitators are aware that many young people may find the topics we work with challenging to discuss. However we also feel even more strongley that this kind of work is more important than ever.