ResearchSEND: Considering Abandoned Educational Research

In my latest piece for nasen connect I consider ‘Rescuing, Recycling and Renovating abandoned research’ influenced by an Instagram feed called ‘its abandoned’ and some of the principles behind the recent publication ‘ResearchSEND in Ordinary Classrooms’

Have you come across ‘its abandoned’ on Instagram, a feed of pictures featuring not just abandoned buildings but also cars, railway lines and amusement parks?

Many of the buildings such as a castle in Scotland or a house in Detroit have stories of historical significance behind their abandonment and suggest there is possibility that they could be renovated, repaired or recycled, maybe to become a family home again or a wedding venue for example.

Whereas other featured abandoned items, usually objects such as the car in the forest in Finland covered in moss, or stonemason’s yard of full of  ‘giant’ uncompleted busts of past American Presidents have been deserted and could be considered unlikely to ever be useful or functional again.

I have often thought that elements of education policy and research are not dissimilar. There are policies, which carried huge weight at the time, but are long forgotten and are difficult to locate, such as the 1944 Education Policy which created the statutory system of education into three stages; primary, secondary and further education.

And then there is The Warnock Report (1978) which has been rediscovered over the last couple of years, with a publication from Rob Webster (Including Children & Young People with SEND in learning and life: How far have we come since the Warnock Enquiry and where do we go next) , an anniversary and a tribute at the TES Awards.

Forty years on, it may be difficult to appreciate the impact of the Warnock Report in changing narrative around SEN, its influence on subsequent government legislation, and its role in the creation of the modern SENCO, but it was this inquiry which informed the 1981 Education Act and amongst its outcomes, recommended that eleven categories of ‘handicap’ were replaced by one; Special Educational Need and introduced the Statement of SEN.

Equally, key pieces of research can be largely abandoned and overlooked but they may have paved the way for greater understanding. Dyslexia for example was first recorded in the British Medical Journal in 1896 when ‘Percy’ was described as having ‘an inability to learn to read’ and although it was described as ‘congenital word blindness’ a term which we don’t use today, it began an recognition that children and young people could have underlying difficulties which could make learning to read more difficult for them.

This is not the only example where dyslexia is concerned, there are many more, for example, Miles & Miles’ dyslexia research undertaken at Bangor University in the 1990s, is in essence the Dyslexia Friendly Schools checklist, which is not acknowledged and rarely mentioned but schools use ‘dyslexia friendly’ resources every day, often without realising it, as many of the strategies have become what could be considered ‘good teaching.

In previous editions of Nasen Connect I have spoken about the journey of ResearchSEND from its inaugural conference and now to the publication of a book two years later. ResearchSEND was set up and continues to be a knowledge exchange platform for sharing research and what works for pupils with SEND, and sharing our experience about research from the past and the present. We want to acknowledge that what we know in education does not exist in a vacuum, and much of what we know has a tradition of practice, which has been built on over many years.

ResearchSEND recognises that pieces of research can have impact but may have become hearsay in popular education language and we pick up and acknowledge original research and its intentions, throughout our promotion of the use of research in supporting learners with SEND.

In the recent ResearchSEND publication, ReserachSEND in Ordinary Classrooms there is a section entitled new voices, but paradoxically the new voices, all recent Primary PGCE trainee teachers have visited the past to put their subject into context. Jess Horsley for instance, has written an account based on her first hand experiences, but uses references such as Skinner’s (1974) focus on reinforcement, to consider the PECS system used in a Specialist setting.

Whilst Rona Tutt and Sean Starr through their consideration of policy around SEND recognise that provision for learners with SEND has been on a journey, responding to many inquiries, pieces of research and Education Acts throughout its Tour. The very title ‘ordinary classrooms’ has also been recycled from a range of publications that followed the Warnock Report in the 1980s to early 1990s, where ‘ordinary schools’ were the focus.

As Michael Jopling says at the end of the ResearchSEND in Ordinary Classrooms publication, we need to keep talking but we also need to continue to break down the barriers between research and practice that exist in education, and one way to do this, could be to recognise our already existing research tradition and rescue it from its current moss covered resting place in a forest in Finland!

ResearchSEND in Ordinary Classrooms is now available from Amazon

https://www.amazon.co.uk/researchSEND-Ordinary-Classroom-Michelle-Haywood/dp/1912906015/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2OTLZUIA0NOTM&keywords=researchsend+in+ordinary+classrooms&qid=1562500894&s=gateway&sprefix=researchsend%2Cdigital-text%2C134&sr=8-1

 

Using Case Study to Support Learners with SEND

On Friday the 12th of July 2019, I presented a session at Nasenlive on Using Case Study to support learners with SEND. This is the narrative to support the presentation taken from an edited piece that I originally wrote for nasen connect.

The case study , is often used individually within the context of Pupil Premium (PP) to demonstrate PP spend, or to outline the support a learner with SEND may have received within a school or Early Years setting. Case studies, used in this way, usually list how support which is additional to or different from the usual classroom arrangements has contributed to pupil attainment, by putting the school and learner into context, the approaches to learning used, the impact of any intervention delivered and identifying next steps.

Within a wider framework case studies are often seen as a way of recording and presenting good practice, across a larger area, may be a group of schools or early years settings. In the Partnership case Studies, undertaken by Action for Children (foundation years.org.uk) for the Department of Education (DFE) Voluntary and Community sector grant programme, for example produced ten case studies which identified top practice tips from early years (EY) settings with sections on benefits, challenges and next steps, which could aid another professional if they wished to adopt similar strategies within their own setting.

In another example, case studies can be used for illustrative purposes to support an evaluation. The Independent Evaluation Report into nasen’s Early Year’s SEND Resources, undertaken by LMKCO, commissioned by nasen (http://www.nasen.org.uk/newsviews/News/News.the-independent-evaluation-report-into-nasen-s-ey-send-resources-is-published.html) uses four case studies following a questionnaire to probe further around the impact of the nasen resources within an Early Years setting. The final evaluation uses these four examples to enhance the conclusions drawn.

There are a range of different publications, including edited books which use case studies, as their chapter format. The work of Villa & Thousand (2005 & 2015) is of particular significance as it was used by Deb Robinson, from the University of Derby, at a recent ResearchSEND Conference to illustrate the features of inclusive schools, such as team work and collaboration, flexible and diverse teaching approaches and improving universal provision Both of Villa and Thousand’s publications take a case study approach, but Deb had analysed these herself to present the features she thought were important to an inclusive school

A case study approach can enhance work, where similarities and differences are being documented and patterns are likely to emerge,. These possibilities can be identified at the beginning of the process and identified though the research methodology during the development of the research proposal and the submission to the Ethics Committee, which have been discussed in a previous piece within this series .

Case study research is popular in professions such as health, political science, social work, architecture, operations research and business management, as its intention is not to describe a subject or situation but to answer a hypothesis in the same way that another research project would be set up to answer a question.

Case studies are most effective when they are collected across a similar theme and a number of these are produced and the information collected is through a mixed method approach, using both qualitative data and qualitative techniques. Case study methodology, in an educational context, allows for the collection of multiple sources of data to build a picture of a setting to highlight what they may be doing well, or to examine a professional undertaking a specific role or even consider the impact of an intervention for a learner with SEND.

Research information for the case study can be gathered from a range of data sources, starting usually with document analysis to establish the context. This could take the form of collating and studying information, readily available within the public domain, such as a setting’s website, their Ofsted grading and any assessment results and analysis they may publish.

Fieldwork following the initial information gathering stage, could then take the form of a number of different research methods. In one piece of research it may be appropriate to gather data from the whole school staff, and an online questionnaire may be the best way to achieve this, whereas in another piece of research, the case study, may only be examining the role of SEND support staff, so a focus group and follow up with semi structured interviews may provide all the information required.

Case studies when collected around similar themes across a wide area may reveal some expected outcomes, which were not identified at the beginning, giving scope to re-evaluation and will add, understand and give conviction to a subject.

It may be that in school there is not the capacity for undertaking case studies, but finding ones already completed, as either a single case study using mixed methods, or examining ones within an evaluation, may help to inform and support pupils with SEND more effectively.

Some examples of Educational Case Studies

1.Early Years SENCO Case Studies https://foundationyears.org.uk/ey-senco-case-studies/

2.Evaluation Report for nasen’s Early Years SEND Resources http://www.nasen.org.uk/newsviews/News/News.the-independent-evaluation-report-into-nasen-s-ey-send-resources-is-published.html

3.Education, Health & Care Plans. Examples of Good Practice. https://councilfordisabledchildren.org.uk/sites/default/files/field/attachemnt/EHCP%20Exemplar%20Guide%202017.pdf

4.Freedom to lead: A study of outstanding primary school leadership in England. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/outstanding-primary-school-leadership-in-England

5.Primary School Case Studies (NI) https://www.csscni.org.uk/schools/good-practice-primary-school-case-studies