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

 

I remember…

I remember learning to read.

I remember whizzing through the first Peter and Jane books and reading about Pat the dog. I remember the frustration when I started to find it more tricky and it became a struggle.

I remember not being able to decode words. I would make them up to fit the text. For many years I thought the words ‘long vehicle’ on the back of a lorry were ‘long voyager’. My 6 year old logic was that  the lorry travelled a long way, ‘on a long voyage’.

I remember group reading, when I couldn’t keep up and when other children had to fill in the gaps for me. I remember one boy laughing at me because I couldn’t say binoculars and another because I couldn’t spell conversation.

I remember not being able to pronounce words and not being able to spell any of the words I was given to learn. I was given six spellings a week, when I was in year three on a Monday and tested on a Friday, I could never learn them all.

I remember I really wanted a fountain pen, and my Dad said I could have one if I got all my spellings correct for 5 weeks. It look me all year to achieve this, but only because the groups I got correct were regular patterns such as ‘ee’.

A year later, my brother with the same challenge did it in five weeks and didn’t really want a pen (can’t remember what he had – I’ll have to ask him)

Over the years I had avoided things such as modern foreign languages, reciting the alphabet and listening to any directions which involved hand gestures signalling left and right. I know if I cant’t spell a word or someone’s name I have to ask them to write it for me and I always have to ask for telephone numbers to be repeated in chunks.

I didn’t know I was dyslexic until I was 27.

By this time I had mastered reading and spelling and was embarking on a Masters in SEN and Educational Psychology and the first module was specific learning difficulties (dyslexia).

Mostly having a specific learning is an advantage, I know what I can and cannot do. I know I’m a big picture thinker and have some good ideas. I know I can find solutions and problem solve. I know I can drive things forward. I know not everyone can always see or understand my vision, but it usually makes sense and works out.

I have had to teach myself to be organised and love an excel spreadsheet for some of the work I do, but I would rather be drawing mind maps on large sheets of paper with a range of chunky felt tip pens. My notebooks are a mystery to most people (as some of my colleagues will testify) with arrows, lines and stars drawn everywhere, but they work for me.

Although in times of stress it may be more apparent that I have dyslexia and I make mistakes such as  texting the wrong person (I have done this twice to the same person, over the last couple of months – so apologies to them) or not expressing myself clearly enough, this is usually because lots is going on, and I do have to verbalise things many times. I think in pictures and I forget not everyone is visual or can see the same pictures as me. But I can remember conversations, even if others can’t and what people are wearing when I meet them (so beware!).

I recently worked with a school to produce a play which celebrated dyslexia and I was humbled by one of the pupils who as a teenager was proud to call himself dyslexic and recognise his strengths and weaknesses. For me I didn’t have this confidence or knowledge, when I was a teenager, nor did I know why everything was so difficult, but as an adult I have the empathy and understanding to support early diagnosis so other pupils can stand up and be proud.

Dyslexia is a gift and one I’m proud to say I have.