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Learning environment and partnerships Special educational needs and/or disabilities Training toolkit Working in partnership with students Session 17
33

Working In Partnership With Students - Session Seventeen

Jun 26, 2015

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Education

Mike Blamires

Special Educational Needs and/or disabilities: a training resource for secondary undergraduate Initial Teacher Training courses
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Page 1: Working In Partnership With Students - Session Seventeen

Learning environment and partnerships

Special educational needs and/or disabilitiesTraining toolkit

Working in partnership with students

Session 17

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Learning outcomes

You will understand:− different types and degrees of student participation− elements of effective communication and how communication can

be improved for students with SEN and/or disabilities− the importance of a whole-school approach to increasing

students’ participation in school life − how students with SEN and/or disabilities can be included

in assessment for learning− how to support students with SEN and/or disabilities

in setting and reviewing their targets

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Learning outcome

You will understand different types and degrees of student participation

Activity 1

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United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child

“Children who are capable of forming views have a right to receive and make known information, to express an opinion, and to have that opinion taken into account in any matters affecting them”

Article 12, United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child

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Students and decision making

“Children and young people with SEN have a unique knowledge of their own needs and circumstances and their own views about what sort of help they would like to help them make the most of their education.

“They should, where possible, participate in all the decision-making processes that occur in education.”

DfES, 2001

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Principles of pupil participation

− Clear commitment to involving pupils− Valuing their involvement− Equality of opportunity to be involved− Pupils’ involvement evaluated and reviewed

DfES, 2003

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Student participation

− Formal happens at set times and for a reason,

eg at the annual review of a statement

of SEN − Informal happens as part of daily

interactions, eg in the corridor

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Making decisions

− Personal made by students, eg about their own learning goals

− Public students are involved in deciding about planning, policy or resources, eg about the development of the school’s disability equality scheme

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The Disability Discrimination Act 2005− Every school must now have a disability equality

scheme (DES)− Disabled people, including students, must be

consulted on these schemes

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Principles of the Secondary National Strategy− Expectations − setting high expectations and

challenging targets for all students to achieve − Progression − strengthening the transition from KS2 to

KS3 and ensuring progression in teaching and learning across KS3

− Engagement − promoting approaches to teaching and learning that engage and motivate students and require them to take an active part

− Transformation − strengthening teaching and learning through a programme of professional development and practical support

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Ofsted

− Encourages inspectors to obtain students’ views about their learning, personal development and the school

− Talks to individuals, groups and school councils and issues questionnaires to students

− Their 2005 framework encourages the use of case studies of vulnerable students, which includes talking to those students

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Filsham Valley School

The clip includes:− eye contact− listening skills− strategies for making friends − taking turns− conventions for joining a discussion (put hands up)

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Learning outcomes

You will understand:− the elements of effective communication− how communication can be improved for students with

SEN and/or disabilities

Activity 2

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Effective communication

− Students with SLCN may have difficulty expressing themselves

− Students with an ASD may find it hard to take turns in talking and to understand things from another person’s

point of view− Listening to students shows respect and builds their

self-esteem

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Essential skills

To help students express themselves and talk about their feelings, teachers may need to model and teach the skills of:− greeting people− listening attentively− speaking calmly− taking turns− refusing politely

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Essential skills (continued…)

To help students express themselves and talk about their feelings, teachers may need to model and teach the skills of:− asking questions− responding to questions− sustaining a conversation

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Social and academic skills inmathematics learningStudents are to work in groups to explore a problem

Group work is a challenge for the student with an ASD

This student might:− practise the new skill without the demands of

group work− take part in the group but with different learning

outcomes, related to group work skills such as taking turns, listening to others or sharing equipment

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Active listening: set the scene

− Find an appropriate time and place− Sit next to, not opposite, the student− Make eye contact− Check that students with a hearing impairment or other

communication needs can see your face

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Active listening techniques

− Give the student time to respond− Help them focus on the main issue (learning

and/or behaviour)− Reflect on what is said to check your understanding− Keep suggestions brief and concrete; avoid

passing judgement − Use practical examples to aid understanding− Write down key issues and commit to specific

follow-up

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Effective communication

− Why might some students with SEN and/or disabilities find it difficult to communicate with teachers/other students?

− How can teachers make sure that students with communication difficulties are clear about what to do next?

− How can teachers make sure students get the correct support?

− How can collaborative learning be encouraged, where students talk and listen to each other?

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Effective communication (continued…)

− How can teachers’ questions aid communication skills?

− How can the rule of ‘one person speaking at a time and the other one listening’ be taught to students who find this difficult?

− How can teachers make sure the views of students with SEN and/or disabilities are acted on?

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Learning outcome

You will understand the importance of a whole-school approach to increasing students’ participation in school life

Activity 3

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Key issues in planning for student partnership

− School ethos− Problems of school site− Time for making reasonable adjustments− Commitment of school support team− Funding for building improvements− Local authority involvement− Medical problems

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Learning outcome

You will understand how students with SEN and/or disabilities can be included in assessment for learning (AfL)

Activity 4

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Evaluating AfL

Do students:− understand their own goals?− understand how they will be given feedback?− feel supported in their self-assessment?− receive constructive comments?

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Evaluating AfL (continued…)

Do students have opportunities for:− self-correction?− peer assessment?

Do adults:− pinpoint students’ strengths?− ensure that those likely to be excluded have

opportunities to take part?

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Learning outcome

You will understand how to support students with SEN and/or disabilities in setting their own targets and monitoring their own progress

Activity 5

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Possible barriers

− The target-setting process is difficult to understand− Vocabulary − Anxiety about the process− Unrealistic expectations− Belief that ability is fixed: you are either clever or you

are not

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Possible barriers (continued…)

− Time involved− Progression path for those at lowest attainment levels− Comparison with other students’ attainment− Too many targets

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Managing target setting

− Many schools have systems for recording targets− Some students may need targets in pictorial form− Some targets provided, some negotiated− Some targets generic, some subject-related − Behaviour targets reviewed more often than

learning targets− Targets should be challenging but achievable

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Types of target

− to know…− to be able to…− to be aware of…− to understand…

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Using student self-assessment sheets

− Students can record their progress regularly − Students can write comments for themselves, someone

can scribe for them or they can draw pictures − Sheets can be used in review meetings or incorporated

in the review of a statement of SEN− Sheets can be used each term for all students in the

group/class and kept in assessment files

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Learning outcomes

You will:− reflect on key learning points from the session− identify key points of action to consolidate and apply

your learning

Activity 6