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| [senco-forum] dyslexia - screening/testing/assessment | |
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julie cozens
juliecozens at yahoo.co.uk
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| Article: [senco-forum] dyslexia - screening/testing/assessment | |
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Biff - I found your posting really thought-provoking. Thank you for 'wrestling with my statement' - I have done the same with many of yours!
I agree absolutely that assessment has to identify needs - I just dont think it has to be about labels.
The question I am still wrestling with is just how, exactly is 'dyslexia' a good starting point? How would this label in itself inform what you do, - what would you do differently for a 'dyslexic' pupil as opposed to another struggling pupil who had presented similarly but who didnt get the label? For me, the label just isnt important - certainly not when there is still no one agreed definition of dyslexia, and when it does not in itself highlight a particular path of intervention.
By 'assessment through teaching and appropriately targeted support..' I meant that there is no one- off testing that EPs come in and do to 'assess for dyslexia' . Its a process of promoting of high quality teaching, and a careful evaluation of the pupil's response to it, and to increasingly refined and individualised interventions over time. EPs and specialist teachers support schools with this in many ways - and individual asssessment is still likely to be one of them.
I agree that 'qualifying' rather than needing is a horrible notion - but I sometimes think this construct is maintained as much by the very process of labelling as it is by mean LEAs.
Julie
Biff Crabbe <ba at biffc.vispa.com> wrote:
'My point was that this is assessment to inform intervention - not
assessment with a purpose of identifying 'dyslexics', or a special group of
students who qualify for a particular type of support.'
Julie - I have wrestled with this statement, but still hate it. In order to
inform intervention, assessment has to identify needs. And the notion of
'qualifying' for support (rather than simply 'needing' it) is definitely an
LEA construct that schools have been forced to embrace.
A few days back, Martin (Miles) asked the forum about ways in which SENCOs
seek to use and deploy the EP resource.
In my first few years as a SENCO I hoped to draw on the expertise of the EP
in identifying the nature and scope of a child's needs, and we would then
put our heads together to identify the type of support interventions that
would meet the needs. The EP knew stuff that I didn't about the nature of
children's learning difficulties; I learned to devise individual, small
group and curriculum-based support interventions. But it started with the
EP making an assessment of the individual child's difficulties and needs,
and this always involved (her) spending some time in the child's company.
The more completely I could describe the child's difficulties initially, the
more refined and focused the EP's assessment could be (and it might only be
an observation of and a chat with the child).
In later years (and with different EPs) more of the EP time came to be
allocated (by the LEA) to 'systemic' bits - assistance in understanding and
completing the latest new whizz of a paperwork scheme for 'monitoring',
looking at 'criteria' for placement at a particular support stage,
moderation processes etc. There was more discussion about longer lists of
children (and the longer the list, the shorter each segment of the
discussion). Inexorably, less and less time was spent by the EP with
children.
You say that, 'we promote a careful process of assessment through teaching
and appropriately targeted support for any pupil who needs it.' And therein
lies a summary of the change in the role. What is 'assessment through
teaching', and who is carrying out the assessment that the EP is
'promoting'?
As to your previous message about the usefulness of 'dyslexia' as a label
(long discussion issue that has cropped up often on the forum), I'd still
find it more useful as a starting point than 'shares some of the same
difficulties as the common or garden poor reader'.
Regards
Biff Crabbe
----- Original Message -----
From: "julie cozens"
To: "senco forum"
Sent: Tuesday, March 04, 2008 9:11 PM
Subject: Re: [senco-forum] dyslexia - screening/testing/assessment
Hello Phillipa
I have a copy of your book and I have heard about your successful work in
Dubai.
I am also aware of Martin Turners work.
I certainly didnt mean to give the impression in my posting that we never
assess children in Devon! I did say in my email that we promote a careful
process of assessment through teaching and appropriately targeted support
for any pupil who needs it.
My point was that this is assessment to inform intervention - not
assessment with a purpose of identifying 'dyslexics', or a special group of
students who qualify for a particular type of support.
Hope this clarifies
best wishes
Julie
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