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Disciplinary exclusion: issues for practice

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Title: Disciplinary exclusion: issues for practice


1
Disciplinary exclusion issues for practice
  • Resource material for Multiverse
  • Louise Gazeley

2
Illustration One
Inclusion

Exclusion
3
Illustration Two

Inclusion
Exclusion
4
Illustration Three
Social
Policy level
School level
Teacher level
Socio-economic and cultural factors
5
Disciplinary exclusion as a process
  • Recorded exclusion - either fixed term or
    permanent. This is a formal process that is
    monitored and regulated
  • Internal exclusion/ isolation/ seclusion.
  • Alternatives to exclusion - college placements,
    work experience, managed moves
  • Other disciplinary sanctions and behaviour
    management strategies

6
Inclusion or exclusion?
  1. Being withdrawn from a specific curriculum area?
  2. Being required to work outside the head teachers
    office for a day?
  3. Attending a work experience placement for one day
    a week as part of an Increased Flexibility
    Programme?

7
National Statistics
  • Government collects and publishes data on the
    recorded exclusion of pupils
  • Rates of recorded exclusion are lowest in
    Primary schools
  • Rates of recorded exclusion are highest for
    pupils in Years 9 and 10
  • Schools are required to collect data on the
    exclusion of particular groups of pupils and to
    use it to inform their own policies and practices
  • There is a tendency in schools to think of pupils
    as individual problems rather than as members of
    specific social or ethnic groups

8
Issue 1 The exclusion gap
  • Pupils from Black backgrounds are at least two
    and a half times more likely to be excluded from
    school than White pupils.
  • Measures to address this over-representation have
    been identified at policy level as ineffective
  • Exclusion from school represents the most
    stark and absolute denial of education. Even with
    the best efforts to improve provision for
    excluded pupils, the continued existence of the
    exclusion gap means that Black pupils are
    disproportionately denied mainstream education
    and the improved life chances that go with it.
  • (DfES, 2006, p.15)

9
Issue 2 Gender inequalities
  • Boys are more likely than girls to be identified
    as having behavioural needs.They are also four
    times more likely to be excluded from school
    than girls
  • Professional attitudes towards girls and boys
    with behavioural needs differ and this encourages
    different responses
  • There is a shortage of specialist provision for
    girls identified as having behavioural needs

10
Issue 3 Hard-to-place pupils
  • Hard-to-place pupils are those that schools are
    reluctant to accept on roll. The need for local
    protocols to share these pupils between schools
    suggests the status of these pupils
  • Schools are under pressure to raise attainment.
    Measuring a schools success by the proportion of
    pupils achieving 5 GCSE A-C grades diverts
    attention from those pupils furthest from this
    threshold
  • Schools may feel the need to compete for those
    pupils - and their parents - who will bring them
    academic success
  • There may be disagreement about the most
    appropriate placement for a pupil and appropriate
    provision may be hard, or impossible, to find.

11
Issue 4 Intergenerational disadvantage
  • There is no consensus about how social class can
    be measured in schools and professionals may
    resist talking explicitly about pupils in terms
    of their social class
  • There is a strong correlation between maternal
    levels of educational attainment and those of
    pupils
  • Very few excluded pupils come from middle class
    backgrounds
  • Growing up in poverty makes it more likely that
    you will live in poverty as an adult

12
Issue 5 Support for parents
  • Parents who are able to be support their childs
    education proactively are much better positioned
    to intervene before a crisis occurs
  • Although parents have rights in relation to
    disciplinary exclusion, they may not always know
    what these rights are
  • Parents do not always know what advice or support
    is available, and they do not always take
    advantage of it
  • The parents of excluded pupils may feel
    powerless, guilty or blamed
  • Pupils who do not have proactive parents are
    dependent on (proactive) professionals

13
Who benefits from disciplinary exclusion?
  • The excluded pupil may reflect on the situation
    and make a fresh start
  • The excluded pupil might access more suitable
    provision
  • Other pupils might experience less disruption to
    their learning
  • Other pupils will see that standards of behaviour
    have been enforced
  • Some parents may prefer a school in which there
    are few difficult pupils
  • Some teachers may welcome being able to
    concentrate on teaching

14
Some big questions
  • What is the relationship between disciplinary
    exclusion and low attainment?
  • To what extent is an increased risk of exclusion
    an indicator of poor parental experiences of
    education?
  • Are there school practices that increase the risk
    of disaffection and disciplinary exclusion?
  • What is the relationship between educational
    inequalities and social inequalities?
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