Index for Inclusion: developing learning and participation in schools

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Transcript Index for Inclusion: developing learning and participation in schools

Index for inclusion: a values-based resource for school improvement

Inclusion as a shared value

Launch conference of project “One School for All” Thursday 6 December 2012 Dr Artemi Sakellariadis Director, Centre for Studies on Inclusive Education (CSIE) www.csie.org.uk

Welcome!

“Едно училище за всички”, BG051РО001-7.0.01-0069 Проектът се осъществява с финансовата подкрепа на Оперативна програма „Развитие на човешките ресурси”, съфинансирана от Европейския социален фонд на Европейския съюз

Index for Inclusion:

developing learning and participation in schools

(Booth & Ainscow 2011)

Introduction

What are schools for?

Who benefits most from today’s schools?

How do schools change?

Becoming agents of change...

Index for Inclusion:

developing learning and participation in schools

(Booth & Ainscow 2011) 

A values-based resource for school improvement

Removing barriers to learning and participation.

Mobilising resources for support

Encouraging a participatory approach

Welcoming diversity as a rich resource for learning

Index for Inclusion:

developing learning and participation in schools

(Booth & Ainscow 2011) • • • • • • • •

Some back stories

Idea born in 1993 “Index team” 22 schools, 3 years, 2 draft versions First published in 2000 (28,000+ copies) 2 nd edition 2002 Early years version 2004, 2006 40

translations

3 rd edition 2011

Index for Inclusion:

developing learning and participation in schools

(Booth & Ainscow 2011) • • • • • •

Third edition, substantially revised and expanded

User-friendly, includes CD New section on values

Proposes new curriculum

Builds

alliances

Revised indicators and questions Flexible use

next

back

Comparing curriculum headings

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The three dimensions of the Index

The 3 dimensions of the Index

• • • Creating inclusive

cultures

• Building community • Establishing inclusive values Producing inclusive

policies

• • Developing the school for all Organising support for diversity Evolving inclusive

practices

• Constructing curricula for all • Orchestrating learning

The 70 indicators of the Index

Statements of aspiration to guide school development. For example:

A1 Building community

A1.1 Everyone is welcomed.

A1.2 Staff co-operate.

A1.3 Children help each other.

A1.4 Staff and children respect one another.

A1.5 Staff and parents/carers collaborate.

A1.6 Staff and governors work well together.

A1.7 The school is a model of democratic citizenship.

The 1,000+ questions of the Index

Questions help define the meaning of each indicator in ways which invite schools to explore it in detail. For example: A1.1 Everyone is welcomed.

a) Is the first contact that people have with the school welcoming?

f) Do staff, children, parents and governors make an effort to learn each other’s names?

i) Is the school welcoming to all children from its local communities, irrespective of financial circumstances, family arrangements, heritage and attainment?

j) Is the school concerned to welcome those who may have faced exclusion and discrimination such as travellers, refugees, asylum seekers and children with impairments?

o) Does the entrance hall reflect all members of the school and its communities in signs and displays?

Index for Inclusion:

developing learning and participation in schools

(Booth & Ainscow 2011)

Working with the Index

• A participatory approach • Questionnaires

Feedback on using the Index:

• • • • • • “ The discussion on values is the key to inclusion .” “ Thought provoking, incredibly useful, challenging document.” “ Easy to dip into or read all the way through.” “ It’s your self-evaluation done for you, but in a far better way.” “ It made us think more clearly about things we had assumed were in place.” “ It makes people feel valued.”

40 Index translations May 2011

Albanian (Kosovo)

Arabic

Armenian

Basque

Bosnian

Bulgarian

Castilian

Catalan

Chinese (Hong Kong)

Croatian

Czech

Danish

Dutch

Finnish

French (Quebec)

German

[German (for S. Tyrol)]

[Hebrew]

Hungarian

Italian

Japanese

Latvian

Maltese

Norwegian

[New Zealand adaptation]

Polish

Portuguese (Brazil)

Portuguese (Portugal)

Romanian & Hungarian

Russian

Serbian

[Sinhala (Sri Lanka)]

[Spanish (Mexico)]

Spanish (S. America)

Spanish (Spain)

Swedish

[Tamil (Sri Lanka)]

Ukrainian

Vietnamese

Welsh

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