Title: School System Strategy Planning
1(No Transcript)
228 July 2007David HugginsAssistant Director
Student Services
School System Strategy Planning An Evidence Based
Approach to Enhance the Role of School Psychology
Catholic Education Office Archdiocese of Melbourne
3OVERVIEW
- International Policy Perspectives on Inclusion
- Universal and/or Targeted Intervention
- Links between Research / Training and Policy
- Challenges to the existing service system
- Strategic Response / The Early Years Evidence Base
4CURRENT CONTEXT
5Victorian Catholic School Sector 5th Largest in
Australia
6INCLUSION A DEVELOPMENTAL APPROACH IN EDUCATION
Inclusive education means that
schools should accommodate all children
regardless of their physical, intellectual,
social, emotional, linguistic or other
conditions. This should include disabled and
gifted children, street and working children,
children from remote or nomadic populations,
children from linguistic, ethnic or cultural
minorities and children from other disadvantaged
or marginalised areas or groups. (The
Salamanca Statement and Framework for Action on
Special Needs Education, paragraph 3)
7EDUCATION THROUGH THE INCLUSION LENS
- Seeing education through the inclusion lens
implies a shift from seeing the child as a
problem to seeing the education system as the
problem that can be solved through inclusive
approaches
8THE OECD SCHOOLING SCENARIOS
Schooling for Tomorrow What Schools for the
Future?, OECD
9INCLUSIVE EDUCATION FUNDINGINTERNATIONAL
PERSPECTIVE
- Inclusive education is concerned with providing
appropriate responses to the broad spectrum of
learning needs in formal and non-formal
educational settings. Rather than being a
marginal theme on how some learners can be
integrated in the mainstream education, inclusive
education is an approach that looks into how to
transform education systems in order to respond
to the diversity of learners. - It aims to enable both teachers and learners to
feel comfortable with diversity and to see it as
a challenge and enrichment in the learning
environment, rather than a problem.
10INCLUSIVE EDUCATION FUNDINGINTERNATIONAL
PERSPECTIVE (continued)
- The study Financing of Special Needs Education
(Meijer, 1999) shows that countries where there
is a direct input funding model for special
schools (more learners in special schools more
funds) report that this financing model, may lead
to less inclusion, more labelling and rising
costs. Learner-bound budgeting also seems to have
some clear disadvantages. - The study concludes that the countries having the
most attractive funding option in support of
inclusive education are countries with a strongly
decentralized system where budgets for supporting
learners with special needs are delegated to
local institutions (municipalities, districts,
school clusters), and funds are based on total
enrolment and other such indicators.
11UNDERSTANDING THE PROCESS OF INCLUSION
12HOW INCLUSION RELATES TO EDUCATION FOR ALL
- The Salamanca Statement on Principles, Policy
and Practice in Special Needs Education (UNESCO
1994) provides a framework for thinking about how
to move policy and practice forward. Indeed, this
Statement, and the accompanying Framework for
Action, is arguably the most significant
international document that has ever appeared in
special education. - It argues that regular schools with an inclusive
orientation are the most effective means of
combating discriminatory attitudes, building an
inclusive society and achieving education for
all. - The Salamanca Statement and Framework for Action
(1994) asserts thatRegular schools with
inclusive orientation are the most effective
means of combating discrimination, creating
welcoming communities, building an inclusive
society and achieving education for all.
(Salamanca Statement, Art. 2)
13QUESTION SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGY
- Where does School Psychology fit in the Continuum
of Inclusion? - Has School Psychology moved from the Inclusion
lens of seeing the child as a problem to the
systemic response of responding to the education
system as a problem?
14UNIVERSAL / OR TARGETED SUPPORT
Tertiary Prevention Specialized Systems for
Students with High-Risk Behaviour/Need
Primary Prevention School - / Classroom-Wide
Systems for All Students, Staff, Settings
5
80 of Students
15
Secondary Prevention Group Systems for Students
with At-Risk Education performance /behaviour
15CATHOLIC EDUCATIONTOTAL NUMBER OF ELIGIBLE
STUDENTS 1993-2006
5 - 6
16FORECAST SPECIAL NEEDS REFERRALS
17THE CHALLENGE OF THE EXISTING SERVICE SYSTEM
- Demand greater than services available
- Families have complex needs - no single service
is capable of meeting the complex needs of many
families - Some families have difficulty accessing services
- Socio-economic gradient of access
- Episodic contact and many families isolated
- Focus on treatment rather than prevention/early
intervention - cannot respond promptly to
emerging child and family needs - Funding based on contacts rather than outcomes
- Fragmented service delivery
- Different sectors (health, education, welfare)
- Different funding streams
- Different cultures
- Lack of co-ordination
18CURRENT STRATEGIES INSUFFICIENT
- It is recognised that current strategies and
programmes have largely been insufficient or
inappropriate with regard to needs of children
and youth who are vulnerable to marginalisation
and exclusion. - Where programmes targeting various marginalized
and excluded groups do exist, they have
functioned outside the mainstream special
programmes, specialized institutions, and
specialist educators. - Notwithstanding the best intentions, too often
the result has been exclusion second-rate
educational opportunities that do not guarantee
the possibility to continue studies, or
differentiation becoming a form of
discrimination, leaving children with various
needs outside the mainstream of school life and
later, as adults, outside community social and
cultural life in general (UNESCO, 1999a).
19CURRENT STRATEGIES INSUFFICIENT (continued)
- The urgency to address the needs of learners who
are vulnerable to marginalisation and exclusion
through responsive educational opportunities was
also pointed out in the Dakar World Education
Forum in April 2000 - The key challenge is to ensure that the broad
vision of Education for All as an inclusive
concept is reflected in national government and
funding agency policies. - Education for All must take account of the
need of the poor and the most disadvantaged,
including working children, remote rural dwellers
and nomads, and ethnic and linguistic minorities,
children, young people and adults affected by
conflict, HIV/AIDS, hunger and poor health and
those with special learning needs (Expanded
commentary on the Dakar Framework for Action,
paragraph 19)
20UNIVERSAL / OR TARGETED SUPPORT
Tertiary Prevention Specialized Systems for
Students with High-Risk Behaviour/Need
Primary Prevention School - / Classroom-Wide
Systems for All Students, Staff, Settings
5
80 of Students
15
Secondary Prevention Group Systems for Students
with At-Risk Education performance /behaviour
21QUESTION SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGY
- Where does School Psychology fit in the
Primary/Secondary/Tertiary Paradigm of Support?
22THE CHALLENGE OF TRAINING EDUCATION PERSONNEL
- There are a number of challenges in teacher
education facing systems moving towards inclusive
education. - Generally, the level of specialists and their
training is relatively high, in contexts where
they are available, but the level of mainstream
teachers is not. - A factor that affects both pre- and in-service
training in teacher training colleges is teacher
educators lack of experience and skills for
working in inclusive settings. Furthermore,
teacher education is often seen as being mainly
about developing knowledge and skills, whereas
the question of attitudes and values is
considered as less important.
23BUILDING TEACHER INTERVENTION SKILLS
- Design long-term training plans that take into
account all the actors involved and the
different models needed to meet different
needs Implement training activities directed
to both mainstream teachers and specialists so
that they share the same approach and are
enabled to work in partnership Include the
relationship between theory and practice and
opportunities or reflection in all training
actions Start from the needs felt by the
teachers themselves Direct training to the
school as a whole whilst retaining an array of
strategies and models to achieve different
objectives and address different
needs Promote self-development, creating
opportunities for networking amongst teachers,
schools and communities and Encourage teachers
themselves to develop new teaching materials
(UNESCO, 2001c).
24NEED TO STRENGTHEN AND REFOCUS EXISTING SERVICE
SYSTEM
- Strengthen capacity of existing services rather
than invent new ones - Improve co-ordination at individual and system
level - encourage partnerships between services
between professionals and between professionals
and parents - Need flexibility - different models in different
settings - Outcomes focus
- Needs to be owned at local community level -
greater responsibility and accountability
25- There is almost no opportunity for teachers to
engage in continuous and sustained learning about
their practice in the settings in which they
actually work, observing and being observed by
their colleagues in their own classrooms and
classrooms of other teachers in other schools
confronting similar problems - Fullan - 2006
26INVESTING IN CHANGEUNIVERSITY SECTOR PARTNERSHIPS
CATHOLIC EDUCATION CASE STUDY
27RATES OF RETURN TO HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INVESTMENT
ACROSS ALL AGES
8
Pre-school Programs
6
School
Return Per Invested
4
R
Job Training
2
Pre-School
School
Post School
Pedro Carneiro, James Heckman, Human Capital
Policy, 2003
0
6
18
Age
28CUMULATIVE COST AND SAVINGS
29Intervention effects and costs of
social-emotional mental health problems over time
(Bricker)
High
Cost
Intervention effectiveness
Low
Time
30WHAT WE KNOW FROM RESEARCH START EARLY
31As children move from year 3 to year 5, the
disparity among those meeting literacy standards
grows
100
Socio-
90
economic
80
Status
The Widening Gap
70
High
60
Low
50
Proportion Meeting Standard ()
40
30
20
10
0
Year 3
Year 5
32QUESTION SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGY
- Has the linkages been made in models of school
psychology between research, professional
learning and impacts upon policy and decision
making and resource allocation?
33CHALLENGES FOR SCHOOLS
34CATHOLIC EDUCATION CONTEXT30,000 REFERRALS LATER
10 YEAR HISTORY
35EARLY YEARS STRATEGY
- There will never be sufficient resources
- Prevention is more cost effective than treatment
- Children in trouble in early school years will
not get better spontaneously - ie will not grow
out of it - Literacy is but one aim of a childs school
experience - Problems of school age children transcend the
expertise of any one discipline - Schools must be part of the community in which
they are located - cannot exist in isolation - To improve outcomes, schools need to become
connected with early childhood services
36Vocabulary Growth - First 3 Years
Vocabulary
High SES
1200
Middle SES
600
Low SES
0
12
16
20
24
28
32
36
Age - Months
B Hart T Risley Meaningful Differences in
Everyday Experiences of Young American Children
1995
37THEMES EARLY YEARS INTERVENTION
- Literacy is multi-dimensional
- Many children begin school already in trouble and
on a poor developmental trajectory - Childs developmental trajectory becomes more
difficult to change with passage of time - Challenges and opportunities for schools
- Partnerships between schools and early childhood
communities essential
38ABILITY GAPS OPEN EARLY IN LIFE
- Ability gaps between advantaged and other
children open up early before schooling begins.
Conventional school based policies start too late
to completely remedy early deficits, although
they can do some good. Children who start ahead
keep accelerating past their peers, widening the
gapEarly advantages accumulate, so do early
disadvantagesThe best way to improve the
schools is to improve the early environments of
the children sent to them. - (Heckman J. Masterov DV, 2005)
39QUESTION SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGY
- Does the early years evidence provide
opportunities for school psychology to play a
pivotal role in the literacy/numeracy performance
profile of school sectors?
40- Most schools probably still exist as isolated
islands of practice - Elmore 2006a
41- Schools need the outside to get the job done.
These external forces, however, do not come in
helpful packages they are an amalgam of complex
and uncoordinated phenomena. The work of the
school is to figure out how to make its
relationship with them a productive one - Fullan - 2000