Special Needs National Frameworks Report
1. Scope
1.1 This document considers the extent to which the partner's countries have systematic provision for monitoring the progress of competence development in learners with special educational needs. It is designed to inform the project about possible ways in which weakest practice can be levelled up to match that of the strongest. We start with the UK because it is apparent that through the P-scales there is a national mandatory system that is not only well-established but proven to be workable on a national scale. This has to be seen in the context of the background framework for Special Needs.
2. UK special needs framework
2. 1 The 1981 Education Act
2.2 Funding issues
2.3 Special Needs Register and the Code of Practice
- Only pupils who have been placed on the SEN school register as required under the SEN Code of Practice should be recorded. A pupil’s placement on the SEN register should occur when he/she is placed on Stage 1 of the Code of Practice.
- Pupils who are not on the SEN school register but who receive therapeutic or other health-related services from external agencies should not be recorded as having special educational needs.
- Under-attainment may be an indicator of SEN but poor performance may be due to other school or home based factors such as poor school attendance or adverse family circumstances.
- As under the SEN Code of Practice (paragraph 2.15) lack of competence in the language used in school must not be equated with, or allowed to mask, learning difficulties as understood in the SEN Code of Practice.
- A pupil who falls outside the context of the SEN Code of Practice should not be recorded. At the same time, some pupils whose first language is not English may also have learning difficulties, which do lead to special educational needs.
- A medical diagnosis or disability is not necessarily a special educational need, unless special educational provision is needed to access the curriculum.
- Stage 1 - class teacher identifies difficulty and explores ways of helping
- Stage 2 - school’s SEN co-ordinator draws up an education plan
- Stage 3 - external specialists will become involved
- Stage 4 - statutory assessment: detailed assessment of a child’s SEN
- Stage 5 - education and Library Board decides whether to issue a statement
2.4 Criticisms
- more expensive to support and
- not in the management experience of most mainstream teachers.
Technology has the potential to overcome 1. but the change of practice required to get teachers effectively supporting individual programmes is likely to take a lot of effort and some time to achieve.
2.5 Pscales and learner certification
The background above is the context in which the Pscales have arisen. Learners with Special Needs, especially those withlearning disabilities were not able to access the mainstream National Curriculum and learning progress measures were impossible to implement. How would a teacher make judgements about which Stage a learner should be placed on the SEN Register if their learning progress could not be measured? The Pscales were therefore designed to provide seamless transition from learning associated with the most profound special needs to the lower levels of the National Curriculum. The innovation that TLM applied was to use the Pscale level criteria which are written in the form of statements of competence as a means of certificating the attainment of Special Needs learners using ECVET principles. A natural extension of this was to use the Pscale structure as a means of under-pinning qualifications that at higher levels reference the European Qualifications Framework. The set of levels that would enable easier access toqualifications referenced to EQF level 1 could then be extended to further sectors. The purpose of this document is to see how the partner country's qualifications frameworks currently relate to the EQF and to providing compatibility with a Pscales approach.
2.6 UK assessment related to the lower levels of the EQF
Pscales and National Curriculum subject levels are not provided with nationally accredited certificates, probably because of perceived costs. GCSE is the General Certificate of Secondary Education. A levels are the qualifications generally need for university entrance but some QCF qualifications are also accepted. Some QCF qualifications can be done as replacements for or complementary to GCSEs.
2.7 The UK education system structure
3. Bulgaria
3.1.1 Knowledge
- has initial knowledge of the evironment;
- knows the routine in performing known tasks;
- recognises tools needed for initial education.
3.1.2 Skills
- performs simple tasks with understanding;
- expresses, through his creativity, the established initial ideas for the environment;
- uses known materials while performing tasks.
3.1.3 Attitudes
- participates actively in simple, known activities;
- can perform tasks under guidance from an adult;
- knows the consequences of his own actions.
- understands and passes on short, simple information in oral form;
- works in a group demonstrating tolerance to other children in the group;
- begins to express his autonomy as a new social role.
Current status of the SEN subject matter in Bulgaria is largely a result of actions in response to the Salamanca Declaration(1994). Bulgaria is also a party to the Florence Agreement (1950; BG accession 1997) which is referenced in the Salamanca document, and to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (1989, BG accession 1991).
Internal legislation has been continuously updated and as of 2006 fully corresponds to abovementioned framework and policy documents related to SEN. As during the accession to EU legislation was harmonised, there is also full correspondence to the acquis. Last changes define the statute and role of various institutions, specialised schools, integrated schools, teachers responsible for SEN, resource centers. Integrated education of pupils with SEN has been implemented since 2002. A national framework document is in place - National plan for integration of children with SEN and/or chronic diseases in the system of public ediucation.
Important definitions in internal legislation
Children with SEN are those who experience different type of difficulties in their education, due to:
- sensory damage (impaired vision or hearing);
- physical disability;
- mental retardation;
- language-speech disorders;
- specific education/learning difficulties;
- emotional and/or behavioral problems;
- communication disorders;
- chronic diseases leading to SEN;
- multiple damage/disabilities.
Integrated education
Integrated education of children with SEN is such an education where the child, irrespective of the type of damage/disease is included in the mainstream education environment (general schools). This is achieved through constructing and functioning of a supportive environment, including appropriate architectural and social conditions, individual education programs, teams of experts, special technical means and apparel, didactic materials and tools.
Note: Integration policies as a term is used in BG simultaneously and as equivalent to inclusion policies.
Principles of integrated education (as laid out by the National plan for integration of children with SEN and/or chronic diseases in the system of public ediucation):
- each child has the right of equal access to education;
- each child is a unique personality with its traits, interests, abilities and education needs;
- each child with special education needs has the right of access to mainstream kindergartens and schools which must provide education focused on the child and his/her needs;
- each child with SEN has the right to be educated based on individual education programmes (or individual learning plans), commensurate with his/her abilities and needs;
- mainstream kindergartens and schools with integrated children with SEN create a tolerant society and achieve education for all.
3.3 Institutions engaged in SEN integration in education
- Ministry of Education, Youth and Science
- Regional inspectorates of education
- Regional resource centers for support of integrated education of children and pupils with SEN
- Kindergartens and schools
Also involved in the process:
- Ministry of Labor and Social Policy (through Agency for People with Disabilities)
- Ministry of Health
- State Agency for Child Protection
- Social Assistance Agency
- Regional and municipal authorities
- large number of NGOs, day centers, etc.
A very detailed study was prepared in 2007 by the Center for Economic Development (BG), commissioned by Save the Children (UK). Summary of main conclusions:
- The numbers of children with SEN in he mainstream system is increasing.
- Many children with SEN are still kept away from the mainstream education system by being directed to specialized schools where education is, by general consensus, substandard.
- Mainstream schools lack the competencies and resources (such as specialized and psychological help available, safe environment (material), motivation of staff) to deal with SEN and tend to discriminate.
- Numbers show that slightly less than 20% of all children with SEN had been assessed in terms of what their particular educational needs are.
- Mainstream education is not necessarily good for all children with SEN (see above). Parents often tend to have very high expectations which are not always correlated to their children's SEN.
- Lack of contemporary training materials for children with SEN (outdated and boring content).
- Total number of specialised schools - 80, 50 of which for children with mental retardedness, 4 for impaired hearing, 2 for impaired vision.
- Number of children in special SEN kindergartens: 876.
- Number of children in special SEN schools (mental retardedness): 483
- Number of children in special SEN schools (hospital and rehabilitation schools): 242
- Total number of children in specialised SEN schools: 4996 (down from 6651 in 2008/2009)
- Total number of children with SEN in integrated schools or in care of a resource center: 10359
* All data current as of 2011/2012 school year unless otherwise indicated.
- The number of children with SEN in specialised institutions is declining fast. Taking 2008/2009 school year as base, the reduction is from 6651 to 4996, or just under 25%. This reflects the move to integrated education and inclusion of more SEN pupils in mainstream schools. As the number of specialised SEN education institutions remains unchanged in the last few years and with the declared policy of promoting inclusion, one would expect that, with reduction in number of children, at least some move toward effiiciency is made in reforming these specialised institutions. Moving children out means that, according to the principle of "money follow the pupil", these specialised institutions are even more under-financed. As the number of integrated SEN pupils can never be zero, policy-makers should demonstrate clear vision of reforms in a sector which has been dominated for over a decade by the slogan "let's take the SEN kids out of special schools and into mainstream schools".
- Although the NQF Level 0 descriptors (see above) can be traced to P-scales descriptors, it is clear that all 8 levels of P-scales need to be accommodated in one "bottomless" NQF level. Clearly this loses the fine resolution of the Pscales needed to track progress accurately in the sort of detail supported by the UK system in special schools. This can be solved by using the certification model interface and tools for recording achievements and marking clear progression routes for individual SEN learners (e.g. we can record learner's performance and achievements as 10% NQF level 0, 25% NQF level 0, etc., eventually reaching 100% NQF level 0 and heading towards NQF/EQF level 1). This is supported by the on-line progress tracking facilities that have been developed as part of the project beyond the original specification. This response to user needs has made it very much more likely that the certification can be sustained in Bulgaria and it has been well recieved by MEP Dr Kovatchev.
- Current data indicates that about half of the learners with registered SEN (approx 5,000) are in integrated schools, while regional resource centers work with approx 11,000 children. Regional resource centers appear to be the right ally in promoting SAFE and P-scale model.
The next diagram provides a representation of the Bulgarian education and training system
4. Czech Republic
4.1 The changing context in the Czech Republic
4.1.1 The Czech Republic education system is under-going a total transformation. There is considerable volatility in the political direction and the views of implementation of educational change. The rapid rotation of many different experts to ministerial positions, and the conflicts in their views and ideas, is indicative of the background context for the project in the Czech Republic. New changes are announced on an almost daily basis, with some simple expressions of initiation and others full development plans.
4.2 The nature of Special Needs in the Czech Republic
- Chronic disabilities (including long term illnesses)
- Physical defects and other health defects
4.3 Specific issues include:
4.3.1 Blindness and deafness
4.3.2 Learning disabilities
4.3.3 Speech problems
4.3.4 Specific Learning Disorders
4.3.5 Emotional and Behavioural Disorders
4.3.6 Autism Specrum Disorders
These are disorders of neural development characterised by impaired social interaction and communication, and by restricted and repetitive behaviour. The signs all begin before a child is three years old. Autism affects information processing in the brain by altering how nerve cells and their synapses connect and organize; how this occurs is not well understood. It is one of three recognized disorders in the autism spectrum (ASDs), the other two being Asperger syndrome, which does not include delays in cognitive development and language, and Pervasive Developmental Disorder - Not Otherwise Specified (commonly abbreviated as PDD-NOS), which is diagnosed when the full set of criteria for autism or Asperger syndrome are not met.
4.3.7 Diagnosis and assessment of special needs
4.3.8 Special educational needs provision
4.3.9 Individual student integration means
- Their education is supported in the classrooms of nursery, primary, secondary or vocational high schools which are not separately identified for pupils with special educational needs.
- Group integration means a pupil in a special education class or special class established under special laws.
4.3.10 Institutions involved in SEN education
- Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports
- Regional Pedagogical – psychological centres
- Pre-schools and schools
4.3.11 Special Schools
- Special schools are a part of the overall educational system but the number of them is decreasing due to a policy of integration. These schools provide education to pupils with mental, sensory or physical disabilities, pupils with communication difficulties, pupils with complex needs, pupils with learning and/or behavioural difficulties. Pupils who are ill or pupils with a health risk are temporarily placed in hospitals and/or other health care institutions and can attend schools in these institutions.
- Special schools offer education for pre-school children, for pupils at the age of compulsory school attendance and at upper secondary level, including vocational schools. They mostly serve children whose special needs that can not be met in mainstream settings and for those pupils whose parents prefer this kind of placement.
4.3.12 Curriculum issues
- The aim of special education is to provide education, tailored according to the needs of the pupil and which supports the pupils' social inclusion.
- All pupils follow the national school curriculum. Pupils with learning disabilities follow a reduced school curriculum.
- There is no specific assessment framework like the pscales to monitor progress of learners with special needs or facilities for certificating their achievements at the same levels.
4.3.13 Some of the currently applicable legislation and regulations in the Czech Republic for integration / inclusion
- The Charter of Fundamental Rights and Freedoms
- The National Plan for Equalisation of Opportunities for Persons with Disabilities
- Decree No 72/2005 Coll. the provision of consulting services in schools and school facilities (Vyhláška č. 72/2005 Sb. o poskytování poradenských služeb ve školách a školských zařízeních)
- Decree No. 73/2005 Coll. the education of children, pupils and students with special educational needs gifted children, pupils and students (Vyhláška č. 73/2005 Sb. o vzdělávání dětí, žáků a studentů se speciálními vzdělávacími potřebami a dětí, žáků a studentů mimořádně nadaných)
- Act No. 561/2004 Coll. preschool, primary, secondary, vocational and other education (Education Act) Zákon č. 561/2004 Sb. o předškolním, základním, středním, vyšším odborném a jiném vzdělávání ( školský zákon)
5. Germany
5.1 Qualifications in Germany
5.2 DQR, P-Scales and inclusion
5.2.4 Summary
- More time will be needed in awareness raising than initially envisaged
- Political support is likely to be needed to effect the policy change needed for mass take up
- It is essential that training and support is sustained until the time required to get widespread acceptance has elapsed
6. Romania
6.1 Integration of SEN in the Romanian Educational System
- the individual perpective on child.
- the curricular perpective.
6.1.7 In Romanian educational system, the integration of children with special educational needs in mainstream schools can be achived in two ket ways
- compact classes, groups of 3 – 4 children.
- individual children with SEN integrated in mainstream schools.
The most comonly used form of integration is the individual integrated in normal classes in mainstream schools with the SEN child living at home.
- teaching – learning activities conducted by special education teachers, in the morning,
- specific rehabilitation therapies, conducetd by psihopedagog teachers and therapists
- educational activities carried out by educators, in the afternoon.
7. Netherlands
7.1 Overview of th eeducation system
- to enable pupils with special needs to attend mainstream primary schools;
- to control costs by awarding a set budget to consortia of mainstream schools and special schools for primary education, from which the latter schools and special facilities at mainstream primary schools are funded;
- to broaden and strengthen special needs facilities at primary schools 'basisscholen' so that more pupils with special needs can remain in mainstream education and all pupils receive the support they need, at the same time helping to eliminate waiting lists for admission to special schools for primary education.
7.1.5 Pscales and the curriculum
There is currently no systematic national method for monitoring progress of learners who can not access the mainstream curriculum. Pscales are a new concept in the Netherlands and the use of IT systems to enable management of this type of assessment is not evident. There is considerable interest generated in vocational occupational support but this will require extension of the assessment criteria to cover popular occupational areas for those with special needs related to learning disabilities. The raising of awareness of the issues in the SAFE project needs to be continued even though sustainability is more likely in the short term by applying the methods to provide certification of those in Sheltered Workshops rather than mainstream and special schools. To gain significant traction for Pscales in the school system will need political backing. The contacts with MEPs have the potential to provide this but as with any innovation there is risk that the necessary support will not be forthcoming.
8. Spain
8.1 Development of National Qualifications Framework
8.2 Special needs education
- repeating a cycle or school year,
- significant curricular adaptations,
- support measures for pupils with special educational needs,
- curricular diversification
- as a last resort, Social Guarantee Programmes.
8.3 Pscales and progression
ANNEXE 1 - Classification of types of Special Educational Need