1 / 17

School careers of children with special educational needs in The Netherlands

School careers of children with special educational needs in The Netherlands. ECER 2013 Guuske Ledoux , University of Amsterdam Ed Smeets, Radboud University of Nijmegen The Netherlands. Background. In the Netherlands: change in national policy concerning SEN children

haile
Download Presentation

School careers of children with special educational needs in The Netherlands

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. School careers of children with special educational needs in The Netherlands ECER 2013 Guuske Ledoux , University of AmsterdamEd Smeets, Radboud University of Nijmegen The Netherlands

  2. Background • In the Netherlands: change in national policy concerning SEN children • Decisions about allocation of budget will be transferred to regional level (local school boards) • Expectations: more inclusive education, less referral to special education, improved school careers of SEN children

  3. Evaluation program • Different policy goals, different levels of evaluation • Essential: basic information on the present state of school careers and level of achievement of SEN children, both in mainstream and in special education • Intended: repeated measurements afterwards

  4. Research Questions • What is the development of the school careers of SEN-children in primary education, as compared to non-SEN-children? • Does the presence of SEN-children in mainstream classes affect the educational performance of non-SEN-children in these classes?

  5. Methods Large cohort study in primary schools (COOL5-18) • Grades 2, 5 and 8 • 3 Year interval • ‘Pupil Profile’: Questionnaire, completedby teacher forevery pupil in class • ‘SEN Profile’: Questionnaire, completedby teacher forevery pupil in classconsidered to have SEN • Tests and pupil questionnaires . Data linkedwithnational data about school careers

  6. Definition of SEN A pupil with SEN in mainstreameducation is a pupil … • forwhomthere is anindividualeducation plan; and/or • forwhom a specificapproachor extra help is needed; and/or • who has a specificproblemorlearningdifficulty. Judgmentby the teacher

  7. Overviewcareers, %

  8. SEN categorisation (Basedonfrequencies): • Learningproblems • Externalisingorinternalisingproblembehaviour • Fysical, mental orpsychiatric disorders; alsolanguage disorders • Combination of (b) and (c)

  9. School careers x SEN category, %

  10. Other SEN indicators, %

  11. Conclusions 1 • Within mainstream schools the school careers of SEN-pupils are less advantageous as compared to the school careers of non-SEN-pupils • SEN-pupils who have been early identified (at the age of five) also have less advantageous careers as compared to SEN-pupils who have been identified at a later stage (age of eight) • SEN-pupils with more severe and complex problems also perform less well. The worst performance has been found for pupils who are entitled to extra funding or who are placed in a delayed curriculum program.

  12. Class composition • Movement to more inclusive education > implicates more SEN pupils in mainstream schools • Will this affect the achievements and wellbeing of non-SEN pupils?

  13. Methods • Multi level analyses grades 5 and 8 • Dependent variables: test scores and pupil questionnaires > self-efficacy, wellbeing in school and motivation for school work • Independent variables: class composition > % SEN pupils and mean score indicating the ‘weight’ of SEN pupils • Controlling for: gender, socio-economic status

  14. Results for test scores • In grade 5 and 8 small negative effects of the mean ‘weight’ of SEN pupils on the achievement of non-SEN pupils • In grade 5 no effect of % SEN pupils in the classroom on of achievement non-SEN pupils • In grade 8 small positive effect of % SEN pupils in the classroom on achievement of non-SEN pupils

  15. Results on wellbeing etc • No significant effects in grade 5 • In grade 8 small negative effect of the mean ‘weight’ of SEN pupils on the wellbeing of non-SEN pupils

  16. Conclusions 2 • No influence of proportion of SEN-pupils on achievement or wellbeing of their non-SEN classmates; this is consistent with international literature • Negative, but very small influence of the total ‘weight’ of SEN pupils on achievement and wellbeing of their non-SEN classmates • No arguments against more inclusive education

  17. Thank you for your attention foto: Edgar Tossijn gledoux@kohnstamm.uva.nl

More Related