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NCC Sos The Three Houses Assessment Tool Guidance

The Three Houses assessment tool uses three houses to elicit a child's worries, strengths, and goals in a way that makes them feel more comfortable. Practitioners have the child draw or use pre-drawn houses to write or draw their worries, strengths, and dreams. This gives the child's perspective in their own words to share with parents and other professionals in order to better understand and address the child's needs.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
252 views2 pages

NCC Sos The Three Houses Assessment Tool Guidance

The Three Houses assessment tool uses three houses to elicit a child's worries, strengths, and goals in a way that makes them feel more comfortable. Practitioners have the child draw or use pre-drawn houses to write or draw their worries, strengths, and dreams. This gives the child's perspective in their own words to share with parents and other professionals in order to better understand and address the child's needs.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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The Three Houses Assessment Tool

The Three Houses method mimics the three key assessment questions of the Signs of Safety
Framework:
• What are you worried about?
• What’s going well?
• What needs to happen?

Locating the questions within the three houses makes them more accessible for children.

Introducing the Three Houses to the child


Practitioners can either use the tools provided in Castle or encourage the child to draw an outline of
three houses on separate pieces of paper. The practitioner can use the following explanation to the child
“in the first house we will write your worries, so that’s the house of worries, the second we’ll put
in the things you like in your life, that’s the house of good things and then we will have a house
of dreams where we can write and draw how you would like things to be in your life if all your
worries were solved”

Offering the child choice is always a good strategy, so most practitioners ask the child which house they
would like to start with, the house of worries or house of good things. Often it is easier to start with the
good things, particularly where the child is anxious or uncertain, or the worker is concerned the child has
been told by the adults not to speak. Focussing on the good things is a good place to start as it would be
unusual for a child to be told not to talk about things they are happy with in their life and family.

The child and practitioner can use words or drawings as seems most appropriate to the situation and the
child. If writing, the worker can offer the child the choice of whether they write or want to do the writing.
Sometimes the child will ask the worker to do the writing but will end up speaking faster than they can
write, in which case the worker can offer to take over the writing process. If drawing the worker will
probably want to guide the process a little about what the child draws in the house of worries, it will
usually be better to write rather than draw things such as “Daddy hits Mummy”, “Mummy hits me”.

In using the three houses with children, always make sure to use the child’s exact words and ideas.
Where the worker is doing the writing and filling in the information for the child, always read everything
back to the child before finishing. This gives the worker an opportunity to ensure that they are accurately
reflecting the child’s views, and it also provides an opportunity to dig further into an issue that the child
has raised, but the worker feels they may benefit further exploration.

In situations where a child may be finding it difficult to participate in the conversation, it is often helpful to
provide prompts or cues to assist the child. For example: What is good about where you are living at
the moment? What is good about school? What is good about the friends you have? What is
good about your visits with mum?

Exploring things the child feels are positive in their life often provides an entry to explore what is not so
good, and what they are worried about. As the worker opens up a child’s worries, always check with the
child whether his/her responses should go in their house of worries. For example a child might say “I

Signs of Safety Resource Feb’16 Page 1 of 2


wish mummy and daddy didn’t fight so much at home” or “I wish I wasn’t being bullied” the
worker can then amplify this statement by asking “It sounds like you are worried about being bullied
at school (or mummy and daddy fighting), should we put that in your house of worries?”

Drawing upon the three houses session, the child can easily be asked to give their judgment about
where life is for them, between a life dominated by their worries, to a life which is the way they would like
it to be. This can be done using a straight forward number scale from 0 to 10 or can also be done using a
pathway drawn from the house of worries, to the house of dreams and invite the child to locate where
they are on that path.

Children may also take a while, or even need till almost the end of a conversation to bring up the things
they are most worried about. To give the child every chance to express what they want to say, it’s always
a good idea before finishing the interview to ask the child if there is anything they want to add to any of
the houses.

Explain to and involve the child in what will happen next


Once the three houses session is finished it is important to explain to the child what will happen next,
and obtain permission of the child, to show the three houses to others whether they be parents,
extended family, or professionals.

Usually children are happy for others to be shown their three houses assessment of their situation. For
some children there will be concerns and safety issues in presenting what they have described, to
others. In these situations it is important to talk to the child about what they are afraid might happen and
discuss ways to make them safe. Sometimes this will mean removing the child into care, at least while
the issues are explored with their parents. Involving the children in this process will sometimes slow
down how the professionals act, but if at all possible, it is important to go at a pace that the child is
comfortable with. Where the worker makes the decision to act in ways that goes beyond what the child is
comfortable with, these decisions need to be explained to the child before action is taken.

Presenting the child’s views to parents and others


Workers often find that taking the child’s words and pictures back to the parents/carers, is often the
catalyst that makes the adults see the situation differently, and to face the problems more openly. When
bringing the child’s three houses to parents it is often useful to begin with the “house of good things” as
this shows the parent that the worker is able to see things in a balanced way and creates an opportunity
to build engagement with the parents around the positives. A good strategy in bringing the information to
the parents is to ask them what they think the child would have described as good in their life and seeing
what the parents might expect the child to say, before presenting the child’s house to them. This same
process can be followed with the house of worries and dreams.

This strategy can serve to engage the parents in the process further and also gives the worker a greater
sense of the parent’s insight into their child’s perspective.

Make sure the child’s Three House assessment is put onto Castle
The three houses tool, though it seems simple, is a mechanism for enabling the child to provide their
assessment of their life. Some workers wonder whether the three houses assessment is too childlike to
put it on the case file, or include it in something like a court report. The child’s own assessment is very
often, far more powerful and revealing than a professional assessment of that child, and very often, has
far greater effect on adults involved with the child than professional assessments.

Judges receiving court reports on the child and family, and authorities who review the files are
consistently impressed to read a three houses style assessment, since it directly communicates the
child’s voice and perspective, and demonstrates the worker has engaged with the child.

Signs of Safety Resource Feb’16 Page 2 of 2

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