Blog post
Exclusion and the strategic leadership role of special educational needs coordinators (SENCOs) in England: Planning for Covid-19 and future crises
Disproportionality (the overrepresentation of specific social groups) in school exclusion data is well documented (DfE, 2019). Similarly, time and funding pressures faced by special educational needs co-ordinators (SENCOs) in English schools, and their varying capacity to influence school culture, are recognised (Pearson, Mitchell, & Rapti, 2015). Imbalances in Covid-19 provision for students with 鈥榮pecial鈥 needs between private and state-maintained schools in affluent areas and those in less-affluent areas are also evident (Montacute, 2020). Pandemic conditions highlight such issues 鈥 hence the granting of a 娇色导航 grant to researchers focusing on the SENCO role in areas of high social deprivation. It is unclear how SENCOs have influenced Covid-19 planning and provision in these areas, or whether exclusionary pressures have been exacerbated and how SENCOs have responded to this. Such pressures include formal exclusion and 鈥榦ff rolling鈥 鈥 defined by Ofsted (2019) as a 鈥榞aming鈥 of academic performance data.
Current statutory guidance requires SENCOs to strategically lead change within their settings to ensure an inclusive school ethos and provision for all children according to need. However, not all SENCOs are in senior management teams and their capacity to influence decision-making may be limited. Anecdotal reports suggest pandemic conditions have exacerbated exclusionary pressures and led to SENCO preoccupation with managerial and administrative duties. Our study wishes to generate evidence on whether, and how, SENCOs have participated in Covid-19-induced school planning for lockdown, provision for 鈥榲ulnerable鈥 pupils, and full school reopening, and explore SENCOs鈥 experience around exclusionary pressures during this time. The researchers teach SENCOs through university-based training and wish to ensure that the SENCO 鈥榲oice鈥 is heard. Given the sensitivity of the research topic, participants in the qualitative phase are invited to contact the researchers to learn more about the ethical protocol that will guide reporting practice.
鈥楢necdotal reports suggest pandemic conditions have exacerbated exclusionary pressures and led to SENCO preoccupation with managerial and administrative duties.鈥
Our study comprises a national quantitative survey of SENCOs, focus groups and in-depth interviews with SENCOs in south-west England. It sits within a multi-stranded project researching exclusionary pressures and practices in English schools from the perspectives of senior school leaders (Done & Knowler, 2020a, 2020b), SENCOs, parents (Done, Knowler, Pickett-Jones, & Warnes, forthcoming), pupils, and educational professionals. The researchers describe their overall research strategy across multiple strands as a 鈥榳avelength鈥 methodology as the objective is not a unified analytical narrative but, rather, a 鈥榯uning in鈥 to particular 鈥榲oices鈥 and the making visible of varied experiences in a field characterised by complexity.
Findings will contribute significantly to research around social justice in education given disparities in exclusion rates between social groups affecting the disadvantaged, those with additional needs or from specific ethnicities (DfE, 2019). It is hoped that findings will support calls for additional funded research into the SENCO role in areas of social deprivation.
The following link will take practising SENCOs to the survey:
For more information about this research contact Elizabeth.done@plymouth.ac.uk, or visit:
References
Department for Education [DfE] (2019). Timpson review of school exclusion. London.
Done, E. J., & Knowler, H. (2020a). Painful invisibilities: Roll management or 鈥榦ff-rolling鈥 and professional identity. British Educational Research Journal, 46(3),516鈥531.
Done, E. J., & Knowler, H. (2020b). A tension between rationalities: 鈥極ff-rolling鈥 as gaming and the implications for head teachers and the inclusion agenda. Educational Review (in press).
Done, E. J., Knowler, H., Pickett-Jones, B., & Warnes, E. (forthcoming). Think piece on parents, 鈥榦ff rolling鈥 and wavelength methodology: Issues for SENCOs. Support for Learning.
Montacute, R. (2020). Social mobility and Covid-19: Implications of the Covid-19 crisis for educational inequality. London: Sutton Trust.
Ofsted. (2019). The annual report of Her Majesty鈥檚 Chief Inspector of Education, Children鈥檚 Services and Skills 2017/2018. London. Retrieved from
Pearson, S., Mitchell, R., & Rapti, M. (2015). 鈥業 will be 鈥渇ighting鈥 even more for pupils with SEN鈥: SENCOs鈥 role predictions in the changing English policy context, Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 15(1), 48鈥56.