Supporting pupils with special needs should not be about the level
Transcription
Supporting pupils with special needs should not be about the level
TERAPROOF:User:davidomahonyDate:02/06/2011Time:19:47:52Edition:03/06/2011ExaminerLiveXX0306Page: 13Zone:XX1 XX1 - V1 ANALYSIS 13 Irish Examiner Friday 03.06.2011 Supporting pupils with special needs should not be about the level of resources but ensuring they are the right resources to enable their full development, says Áine Lynch SMARTER LEARNING C HILDREN with special educational needs (SEN) should be put at the centre of policy formation and education/health service delivery in order to best provide for their future. Who could argue? This statement comes directly from the National Council for Special Education’s (NCSE) 2006 Implementation Report. A report that provided the framework for the phased implementation of the Education for Persons with Special Educational Needs Act 2004, frequently referred to as the EPSEN Act. The act was passed in 2004 but is still not fully implemented. The Programme for Government commits to “publish(ing) a plan for the implementation of the EPSEN Act 2004”. We have a plan — we have had the NCSE’s implementation plan since 2006. What we need is for it to be implemented in full. The act puts forward a positive vision for special educational provision. It recognises the rights of people with special educational needs. The act provides that “people with special educational needs shall have the same right to avail of, and benefit from, appropriate education as do their peers who do not have such needs”. Again, who could argue with that? However, if you talk to a parent of a child with such needs you will find that this is all too often not the reality they or their child experiences. From the time a parent becomes aware that their child’s learning and development needs are more intensive than their peers, parents report the daily battle that they experience in trying to access assessments, supports and services. They report the negative impacts that this has on their child’s development, their own mental health and often other children in the family. This week we have heard that resource teaching hours for children with SEN may be cut. The circular from the Department of Education states that for the coming school year, an allocation of 90% of valid identified resource teaching allocations will be made to schools, which may or may not be increased in September. This decision has been made to ensure that the department can adhere to the Employment Control Framework established under the EU/IMF agreement. The EU/IMF deal is permeating all aspects of life. It seems to be a justification for all decisions, even this one affecting children who are already struggling with so many adversities. The cutting of resource teaching hours has added to the impact of the recent capping of Special Needs Assistant numbers. Can this all be blamed on our EU/IMF bailout? The quick-fix solution to spending less is always to cut what we spend money on. We know Ireland’s financial woes are not going to be ‘‘ While access to special needs assistants or resource teachers is important, greater co-ordination between education with health services could ensure children get the right resources for their needs. short in duration, we know that spending cuts are going to be long and protracted; we are talking years not months. These cuts will affect a whole generation of children. The EPSEN Act does not talk about numbers of Special Needs Assistants or the number of resource teaching hours. The act is child centred. It says children with SEN should be put at the centre of policy formation; this policy formation must include a child centred approach to the development of policies that are for the purpose of saving money. We need to develop systems that are not employment-based or system-based but children-based. We can make decisions about spending less that are also child-centred. One key feature of the act is the child with SEN’s Individual Education Plan. This is developed following an assessment of the child’s needs and sets out the measures that will provide for the appropriate education of the child. The plan outlines the services and supports necessary to enable the child to participate and benefit from education. The National Council for Special Education implementation plan highlights the necessity for the education and health sectors “to work collaboratively in the parallel processes involved in order to enhance the lives of those with disability and with SEN”. The National Parents Council Primary engages with parents of children who have SEN on a regular basis through its SEN special interest group. Parents who attend this group do not recognise this vision of collaboration and parallel processes. They and their children live a different reality. Parents talk about settling for the resource they can get rather than the one they need for their child. Resources provided by the Department of Education are often settled for because specialist health services such as speech and language therapy, occupational therapy and behavioural therapy are not accessible. Would we need the current level of educational and care supports if we had the appropriate specialist supports in place? There are models in other jurisdictions where specialist supports are part of the education structure. This ensures parallel processes, and also allows children to access supports in their own environment, the school, they do not need to miss significant periods of schooling due to travelling to and from clinics. The model also ensures on-site support to teachers and other members of the school community as specialist services become part of the school community. Implementing a model like this would need radical reform, but we already know this Government will make those reforms in the best interest of children. We have evidence of it with the new Department of Children and Youth Affairs and the development of the Child Welfare and Protection Agency. It is important that we look at what impact the different resources are having on the outcomes for children with SEN. We need to ensure resource decisions are made in a child centred manner, this does not necessarily mean more resources but that children with special education needs get the right resources for them. ■ Áine Lynch is chief executive of the National Parents Council-Primary Parents talk about settling for the resource they can get rather than the one they need for their child Change tack to win war on drugs T HE global war on drugs has failed, with devastating consequences for individuals and societies around the world. Fifty years after the initiation of the UN Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, and 40 years after US President Richard Nixon launched the US government’s war on drugs, fundamental reforms in national and global drug control policies are urgently needed. Vast expenditures on criminalisation and repressive measures directed at producers, traffickers and consumers of illegal drugs have failed to effectively curtail supply or consumption. Apparent victories in eliminating one source or trafficking organisation are negated almost instantly by the emergence of other sources and traffickers. Repressive efforts directed at consumers impede public health measures to reduce HIV/AIDS, overdose fatalities and other harmful consequences of drug use. Government expenditures on futile supply reduction strategies and incarceration displace more cost-effective and evidence-based investments in demand and harm reduction. Our principles and recommendations are as follows: The war on drugs has ‘failed’ and decriminalising marijuana may help curb drug-related violence and social ills, argue a group of prominent former world leaders in a new report on the issue regulation of drugs to undermine the power of organised crime and safeguard the health and security of their citizens. This recommendation applies especially to cannabis, but we also encourage other experiments in decriminalisation and legal regulation that can accomplish these objectives and provide models for others. that have proven effective in reducing transmission of HIV and other blood-borne infections as well as fatal overdoses. ■ Respect the human rights of people who use drugs. Abolish abusive practices carried out in the name of treatment — such as forced detention, forced labour, and physical or psychological abuse — that contravene human rights standards and norms or that remove the right to self-determination. ■ Apply much the same principles and policies stated above to people involved in the lower ends of illegal drug markets, such as farmers, couriers and petty sellers. Many are victims of violence and intimidation or are drug dependent. Arresting and incarcerating tens of millions of these people has filled prisons and destroyed lives and families without reducing the availability of illicit drugs or the power of criminal organisations. Direct drug control resources elsewhere. ■ Challenge rather than reinforce common misconceptions about drug markets, drug use and dependence. ■ Offer health and treatment services to those in need. Ensure that a variety of treatment modalities are available, not just methadone and buprenorphine treatment but also the heroin-assisted programmes that have proven successful in many European countries and Canada. ■ Invest in activities that can prevent young people from taking drugs in the first place and also prevent those who use drugs from developing more serious problems. Eschew simplistic “just say no” and “zero tolerance” policies in favour of educational efforts grounded in credible information and prevention programmes that focus on social skills and peer influences. The most successful prevention efforts may be those targeted at specific at-risk groups. ■ Encourage experimentation by governments with models of legal ■ Implement syringe access and other harm reduction measures ■ Focus repressive actions on violent criminal organisations, but ■ End the criminalisation, marginalisation and stigmatisation of people who use drugs but who do no harm to others. do so in ways that undermine their power and reach while prioritising the reduction of violence and intimidation. Law enforcement efforts should focus not on reducing drug markets per se but rather on reducing their harms to individuals, communities and national security. ■ Begin the transformation of the global drug prohibition regime. Replace drug policies and strategies driven by ideology and political convenience with fiscally responsible policies and strategies grounded in science, health, security and human rights — and adopt appropriate criteria for their evaluation. Review the scheduling of drugs that has resulted in obvious anomalies like the flawed categorisation of cannabis, coca leaf and MDMA. ■ Ensure that the international conventions are interpreted and/or revised to accommodate robust experimentation with harm reduction, decriminalisation and legal regulatory policies. ■ Break the taboo on debate and reform. The time for action is now. ■ This article is the executive summary of the Report of the Global Commission on Drug Policy. The Commissioners responsible for the report are: Kofi Annan, former Secretary General of the United Nations, Ghana; George P Shultz, former Secretary of State, United States (honorary chair); Richard Branson, entrepreneur, advocate for social causes, founder of the Virgin Group, co-founder of The Elders, United Kingdom; Asma Jahangir, human rights activist, former UN The policy calls for an end to the criminalisation, and stigmatisation of people who use drugs but who do no harm to others. Picture: Christopher Furlong/Getty Special Rapporteur on Arbitrary, Extrajudicial and Summary Executions, Pakistan; Carlos Fuentes, writer and public intellectual, Mexico; César Gaviria, former President of Colombia Ernesto Zedillo, former President of Mexico; Fernando Henrique Cardoso, former President of Brazil (chair) George Papandreou, Prime Minister of Greece; Javier Solana, former European Union High Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy, Spain; John Whitehead, banker and civil servant, chair of the World Trade Center Memorial Foundation, United States; Louise Arbour, former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, President of the International Crisis Group, Canada; Maria Cattaui, Petroplus Holdings Board member, former Secretary-General of the International Chamber of Commerce, Switzerland; Mario Vargas Llosa, writer and public intellectual, Peru Marion Caspers-Merk, former State Secretary at the German Federal Ministry of Health; Michel Kazatchkine, executive director of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, France; Paul Volcker, former chairman of the United States Federal Reserve and of the Economic Recovery Board; Ruth Dreifuss, former president of Switzerland and Minister of Home Affairs; Thorvald Stoltenberg, former Minister of Foreign Affairs and UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Norway. ● globalcommissionondrugs.org