Top Banner
22

Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’

Feb 25, 2016

Download

Documents

Balin

Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’. Gwynedd Lloyd University of Edinburgh [email protected] ISEC 2005. Paper based on range of research in Scotland. Life after school -young women with (S)EBD School Exclusion Multi-agency working and school exclusion - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’
Page 2: Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’

Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of

‘EBD’

Gwynedd LloydUniversity of Edinburgh

[email protected]

ISEC 2005

Page 3: Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’

Paper based on range of research in Scotland

• Life after school -young women with (S)EBD

• School Exclusion• Multi-agency working and school

exclusion• Travellers and school exclusion• The social history of ADHD• Reintegration to mainstream

Page 4: Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’

The paper

• Argues for a complex multi-dimensional understanding of ‘EBD’

• Critiques psycho-medical approaches• Explores ideas of inclusion

Page 5: Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’

Psycho-medical approaches

• Fail to recognise the social construction of labels like EBD, ADHD

• Deny agency

• Pupils determined by their disorder

Page 6: Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’

Writers on inclusion’s views of deviant pupils

• Sometimes hero resister• More often victim of self interested

professionals• Institutional need for order is

transformed to a child’s emotional need (Thomas & Loxley 2001)

Page 7: Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’

What gets lost in both accounts

• The possibility that young people may have individual troubles

• The enmeshing of the individual and the social

Page 8: Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’

‘EBD’

Not clearRefers to diverse range of pupilsGives no indication of how they may be likely to actDefinition tells us about a judgement

Page 9: Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’

EBD

Concerns about a child /young personJudgements about the ‘normality’ of their actions in comparison with othersAn official label An indication that someone needs help- pupil and /or teacherAccess to resources /provision

Page 10: Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’

Young people with ‘EBD’may

Be loud, angry, disruptiveBe quiet, anxiousBe both sometimesMay have friends or be friendlessMay have troubles in or out of school or both

Page 11: Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’
Page 12: Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’

Recognition of both structure and agency

The model needs to recognise that:• The concept of EBD in practice is

relational, not reflecting a fixed objective or measurable condition.

• Childen and young people are constructed and labelled as deviant or with 'EBD' in shifting professional discourses

Page 13: Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’

• Understanding the processes of construction and labelling requires a complex, multidimensional model incorporating the movements of power on and between the different but related levels of the social world

Page 14: Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’

• Young people are subject to disciplinary processes but also resistant to those processes They exert their own power in school

• Disciplinary processes are gendered, classed and racialised

• They are affected by wider structural inequalities and by a range of dominant and minority cultures

Page 15: Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’

Professionals need an awareness of

• the relevance of competing policy interests, of professional expert discourses, of financial and funding pressures, of commercial promotion

• the operations of power in the

micropolitics of schooling.

Page 16: Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’

• for an understanding of ‘problem' pupils’ it is necessary to perceive all these factors in an enmeshed and dynamic relationship with each other and with the individual choices and responses of the young people

Page 17: Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’

• Young people respond to these processes with individual human feelings, and these have to be included in the model. A complex multidimensional approach includes the acknowledgement that individual children have their own subjectivities and may have personal troubles.

• Understanding personal troubles should begin with the biographies and voices of the boys/girls and young women/men, acknowledging the many dimensions of their lives in and out of school

Page 18: Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’

Conclusion

– The way in which these troubles are expressed and described reflects the enmeshing of the individual understanding with the complex range of social factors. Both are necessary for an adequate account.

– A diverse range of factors are involved in the construction and professional labelling of educational deviance demonstrating the inadequacy of the dominant psycho-medical models.

Page 19: Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’

Implications for practice

• No one answer • Diverse mix of practice/range of strategies• Not necessarily complex• Helpful if seen as based in equitable, non-

judgemental, genuine relationships• Rooted in understanding of individual

biographies and of the social and institutional context

Page 20: Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’

Practice

• Reject medical models of therapy• Reclaim idea of therapeutic process

where children/young people involved in saying who, what might help them feel better, safer, more in control…

• Sometime one person• The right help at the right time

Page 21: Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’

The experts

• Children, young people and their families as the experts on their own lives

Page 22: Inclusion and School Deviance: the challenge of ‘EBD’

A social justice based approach to educational inclusion could assert the right of all pupils to be valued as human beings of worth in a school system:

that reflects diversity but tries to reduce the inequalities of difference

that tries to model human relationships of warmth and develops a reconstructed approach to pastoral care based on the concerns of children and young people,

that understands the pressures of their lives.