Upload
mitchell-chase
View
215
Download
0
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
Disability and Education
Countering the culture of low expectations
CDA at work
Poor Outcomes, poor systems• 80% of students with disability attend mainstream schools
• School completion is 30% lower than other students
• 63% of students with disability report not fitting in at school
• 66% of students needing individualised support go without
• 90% of support funding goes to aides
• Bullying is still a major problem
Education - The Wasted YearsReleased August 2009 after a national consultation by the National People with Disabilities and Carer Council
A bleak picture of life for people with a disability and their families in every area of community life in Australia
The Chapter on Education is called The Wasted Years
National Disability StrategyAustralia’s plan to improve citizenship for people with disabilities consistent with the UN Convention on the Rights of People with Disabilities .
The 6 Policy Action Areas:
• Inclusive and Accessible Communities• Rights Protection and Justice• Economic security• Learning and Skills• Personal and Community Support• Health and Wellbeing
So how is change coming?Key milestones
• Disability Education Standards 2005
• The Melbourne Declaration 2008
• Professional Standards for Teachers 2011
• UN Convention on the Rights of People with Disabilities
• National Disability Strategy 2011
• Gonski Review
Disability Education Standards 2005
• Reasonable adjustment• Enrolment, participation • Harassment and victimisation• Curriculum development, accreditation and delivery• Support services • Associates of students with disability
National Disability StrategyCh 5 - Learning and Skills
• Strengthen the capacity of all education providers to deliver inclusive, high quality educational programs for people with all abilities from childhood to adulthood.
Focus on reducing the disparity in educational outcomes for people with a disability and others.
Ensure that Government reforms and initiatives for early childhood, education, training and skill development are responsive to the needs of people with disability.
Improve pathways for students with disability from school to further education, employment and life-long learning.
The Melbourne Declaration 2008 Goal 1:Australian schooling promotes equity and excellence.
All Australian governments and all school sectors must:provide all students with access to high-quality schooling that is free from discrimination based on
gender, language, sexual orientation, pregnancy,culture, ethnicity, religion, health or disability,socioeconomic background or geographic location
And promote personalised learning that aims to fulfil thediverse capabilities of each young Australian.p7
More Support for Students with Disabilities National Partnership
$200M program over 2 years
24 partnerships across State, Catholic and Independent systems
Targeting capacity building activities
Additional funding on top of existing State and Territory funding to schools
MSSD Objectives• Students with disabilities have improved learning experiences and
outcomes. • Schools are better able to meet the educational needs of students with
disabilities, in collaboration with parents, carers, and students. • Schools become more inclusive environments, in accordance with the
DES recognising the diversity students with disabilities bring to the school.
• Principals are better able to support teachers and teachers are more capable of identifying and addressing the educational needs of students with disabilities.
• Teachers of students with disabilities have better access to expert support.
What the MSSD is doing
• Different in each State. Not topping up existing programs but includes:
– Provision of technology + training– In-service and pre service training to teachers and
principals on teaching strategies– Education of all staff on the Disability Education Standards– Establishing specialist resource centres– Utilsing allied health input– Training of aides
National Professional Standards for Teachers
• Standards for 4 levels of teachers, covering:
• Knowledge and understanding of inclusive teaching strategies (graduate)
• Active implementation (proficient)• Leading and mentoring other teachers (highly accomplished)
• Developing and reviewing school policies (lead)
Gonski Review
• Proposed new funding model to lift standards across the board
• To improve top student performance also close the gap between top and bottom students
• Increase equity across the funding system
• 2 level funding model. School Resource Standard + loadings for disadvantage
Basic Funding Model
• School Resource Standard (2009 $) for all students
Primary Secondary$8,000 $10,200
• Loadings payable for students with disadvantage
• Disability• Aboriginality• Remoteness• Low English Proficiency
Funding approach for students with disability
• Loadings will be portable and payable to any system (Independent/Catholic/State)
• Non-Government special schools to be fully govt funded
• Disability loadings to be paid to systems not students by the Aust. Government
• BUT….
Disability Loading not yet in the bag
• Gonski Review left the detail to governments to work out
• COAG agreement there should be a loading• National Data Collection in 2013 to establish
support and adjustment levels• Relying on self-report by schools about the need
for adjustments• Education legislation 2012, Loadings 2013/2014
Curriculum reform
• Australian Curriculum and Reporting Authority• Reviewing the curriculum requirements for
students with disability• K-10• Consultation open until 7 October• http://www.acara.edu.au/curriculum.html• Important structural piece of the reforms
What the system needs to look like
• Strong culture of inclusion and consultation with students and families
• Real choice of school
• Skilled staff and informed/motivated leadership, good support systems
• Core funding expectations to include competencies for the education of all students
• Good planning, inclusive curriculum and transition support
Reform imperatives
• Make the disability/learning impairment debate one about education
• Bring the Disability Education Standards to life
• Build in as much as possible INSIDE the core expectation of schools and funding systems
• Use programmatic funding as the primary tool to develop the individual program and sustain the positive environment, supplemented by individual funding where needed
Reform imperatives
• Inform the conversation on both sides of the school gate. Families and students need to be clear about what is being taught, to what end.
• Build skills across the teaching workforce
• Negotiate a strong interface with the NDIS
• Organise the policy voice in the disability sector
• Maintain strong advocacy in schools
How will the NDIS interface with education?
• Launch sites?• Therapy?• Equipment?• Transitions?• Planning?• Workforce Skills?• Coordination across
sectors?• Advocacy?
NDIS implications for education• Detail still emerging
• Interface arrangements will be dynamic
• More cross-agency activity at the policy level
• Greater transparency and accountability for educational outcomes will be required
• Programs will jump the school gate – higher levels of external coordination, advocacy and expectation will be the norm
• Not all SWD will be eligible for NDIS
Key reform questionsNDIS Education
Eligibility – defining functional disability
Defining Reasonable and necessary support
Design of the trial sites - timing
Focus on complementing other sectors and informal support
Disability sector development when, who and how
Who will lead the sector interface negotiations?
National Data Collection - how will it inform the design of the disability loading
Capacity building and workforce development – who and how to fund it
How to Disability Education Standards
Funding model design
Where to after the More Support for Students with Disabilities National Partnership?
How to define funding for N/G special schools
In Summary
• Education reform is pivotal to overall disability reform and the raising of expectations
• It should not be a bolt-on option to the education system, and the funding model should reflect this
• Interface with the NDIS will be critical
• It’s about the education, not just the funding package