Our Mission StatementTo use dramatherapy to provide psychological, educational and artistic benefits to a wide range of disadvantaged people throughout Greater London. To ensure our service is of the highest quality, and our dramatherapists and staff are fully supported.Roundabout is the largest and most successful charity of its kind in the UK. We are unique in terms of size and years of experience, and the only organisation in the UK that offers tailor-made professionally facilitated dramatherapy sessions to such a wide range of clients.Roundabout was founded in 1985 by Lynn Cedar and Deborah Haythorne, who are the Project Directors for the Charity. The Project Directors co-ordinate Roundabout’s work from the Charity’s Head Office in Croydon. There is a second office in Islington, run by Susan Crockford, for projects in the North London area.Roundabout conducts long-term, short-term and individual dramatherapy projects with a range of clients. We work with individuals and groups of all ages. Dramatherapy involves verbal and non-verbal work and makes use of a wide range of theatrical and dramatic techniques, such as story-telling, story-making and enactment, improvisation, role-play, mime, puppets, movement, music and voice work.The general aims of Roundabout’s dramatherapy sessions include:
- Building trusting relationships
- Expressing and exploring feelings
- Developing social interaction skills
- Developing artistic and creative skills
- Improving self-image and self-confidence
- Working with the imagination
- Creating opportunities and skills for self-advocacy
- Having fun
We also run staff workshop’s prior to starting projects and inset training for staff in schools.Roundabout’s therapist regularly present their clinical work and research at conferences both throughout the UK and internationally.Roundabout’s dramatherapists are registered with the Health & Care Professions Council (HCPC) and are checked by the Disclosure and Barring Service. The HCPC’s standards of proficiency for arts therapists can be viewed by clicking here:
http://www.hpc-uk.org/assets/documents/100004FBStandards_of_Proficiency_Arts_Therapists.pdfWe work according to the British Association of Dramatherapists’ Code of Ethical Practice, which can be viewed by clicking here
http://badth.org.uk/sites/default/files/imported/downloads/information/Code of Practice May 2008.pdfand with a contract drawn up between ourselves and our clients. We are a registered charity, number 297491.