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ISEC 2005 Glasgow

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ISEC 2005 Glasgow. ADHD: a growing challenge to educational inclusion ... Moray House School of Education. Holyrood Rd Edinburgh EH8 8AQ. 0044 1316516221 (Joan) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ISEC 2005 Glasgow


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ISEC 2005 Glasgow
  • ADHD a growing challenge to educational
    inclusion
  • Joan Stead and Gwynedd Lloyd
  • University of Edinburgh
  • joan.stead_at_ed.ac.uk

3
This paper
  • The advent of ADHD what is it? where has it come
    from?
  • Some data from Scotland
  • Issues for schools
  • Issues for thinking about inclusion

4
ADHD what is it?
  • A medical condition?
  • Medicalising of naughtiness?
  • A psychiatric disorder?
  • A label of forgiveness?
  • It depends who answers the question

5
What is it?
  • ADHD is a medically diagnosed condition
  • It is a term which has only recently been used
  • Previously the term used was hyperkinetic
    disorder
  • It comes from the diagnostic and statistical
    manual of the American Psychiatric Association
    (DSM-iv)
  • The diagnosis is still controversial

6
ADHD does not
  • Have clear physical signs that can be seen in an
    x-ray or laboratory test.
  • It can only be diagnosed by looking for certain
    characteristics of behaviour
  • (NICE Guidelines England)

7
Why?
  • Educational reasons
  • Social reasons
  • Family reasons
  • Information reasons
  • Funding reasons
  • Marketing reasons
  • Professional preferences/judgements

8
A pilot study Mapping the issue
  • Numbers of pupils identified with ADHD and those
    on medication in primary schools in Scotland
  • Explore whether
  • school staff involved in diagnostic process
  • they meet with medical staff
  • They feel adequately prepared for supporting
    pupils with ADHD in classroom

9
Methods
  • One page easy to complete questionnaire
  • Only one councils completed at present
  • Large city council
  • Half of the primary schools
  • Random sample
  • Return rate - 32 of 51 schools

10
Early findings from pilot study
  • 54 children were diagnosed with ADHD
  • 40 children were on medication
  • 22 schools had provided evidence for medical
    diagnosis-12 had not
  • In 11 schools there had been meetings with
    medical staff, in 15 schools there had been no
    such meetings
  • 14 schools said they felt adequately prepared in
    supporting pupils, 14 schools did not.

11
? Difficulties withadministration of medication
  • Not had enough time to assess this. Pupil has
    been excluded already.
  • Staff taken away from other duties. We have had
    to buy secure storage units.
  • Getting the child to swallow them.

12
?Staff feel adequately prepared
  • We are relatively new at having children
    diagnosed with ADHD and feel we need more info on
    this.
  • Yes partly. Staff have researched ADHD on the
    internet, attended courses and read books.

13
Data from 5 special schools
  • A primary mainly boys 18 pupils - 9
    diagnosed/medicated
  • B primary mainly boys 52 pupils - 3 waiting
    diagnosis 11 diagnosed
  • C secondary mainly boys 60 pupils - 7 diagnosed
  • D secondary girls 10 pupils - 1 diagnosed
  • E secondary boys 50 pupils - 3 diagnosed

14
Further Scottish data
  • Disability Living Allowance for claimants under
    16 with Behavioural Disorder
  • 31/8/00 3.6 (thousands)
  • 31/8/01 4.0
  • 31/8/02 4.8
  • 31/8/03 5.4
  • 31/8/04 6.0
  • (Source DWP, Information Directorate, 5 samples)

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A growing challenge to inclusion
  • Medical not educational solutions
  • Teachers not confident that they can address this
  • If confident, often because of psycho-medically
    based training/information

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Labels and inclusion
  • Educational inclusion depends on schools seeing
    pupils as whole human beings?
  • Expectations reduced/altered as consequence of
    labels?
  • Labels refer to individual disorder not to
    educational practice

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Author details
  • Dr Joan Stead and Dr Gwynedd Lloyd
  • Moray House School of Education
  • Holyrood Rd Edinburgh EH8 8AQ
  • 0044 1316516221 (Joan)
  • 00441316516445 (Gwynedd)
  • Joan.Stead_at_ed.ac.uk
  • Gwynedd.Lloyd_at_ed.ac.uk
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