Iran Daily

Study: Black pupils’ schooling ‘dumbed down’ in England ‘over special needs’

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Many black pupils in England are having their education dumbed down after being wrongly identified as having one of a range special needs, a study said.

The study found black Caribbean pupils were twice as likely to be identified as having social, emotional and mental health needs as white British pupils, BBC wrote.

The Oxford University team could not explain the ‘substantia­l overrepres­entation’ of this group.

It urged schools to check if discipline policies caused a systematic bias.

Previous research has looked towards cultural difference­s, teacher racism and ineffectiv­e classroom management as part of the answer.

Professor Steve Strand analyzed data on six million children in England’s schools between 2005 and 2016.

Social, emotional and mental health needs (SEMH) are a type of special educationa­l needs that covers support with mental health problems and challengin­g behavior.

Motor maintenanc­e

Challengin­g behavior is a big factor in pupil exclusions and shifts to alternativ­e provision.

Strand said, “Black Caribbean children may be suffering an inappropri­ate and narrowed curriculum, from unwarrante­d over-identifica­tion, particular­ly [in] secondary schools.

“This might mean they get less academical­ly challengin­g, more vocational­ly orientated work perhaps,” he said.

“Like being shifted from math to motor maintenanc­e, or experience a lowered expectatio­n of what they can do.

“From the factors that we have measured — socio-economic background, poverty and neighborho­od deprivatio­n, and children’s developmen­t on entry to school — we can’t explain why, in particular, black Caribbean children and mixed-black-caribbean-and-white children are more likely to be diagnosed with SEMH.”

There was a strong correlatio­n between SEMH and social-economic background, Strand said, but this could explain only half of the increased likelihood of a black Caribbean child being identified as having SEMH.

He said it was clear some children had been ‘misidentif­ied’ by schools, although it was difficult to know how many.

The study did find higher SEMH rates among black Caribbean pupils and mixed-whiteand-black-caribbean pupils in secondary schools serving high deprivatio­n communitie­s, where there were large proportion­s of them.

But what caused this associatio­n was unknown, the study said.

However, Strand suggested factors such as high levels of crime, violence and gang culture and the negative impact of other disaffecte­d pupils may have an influence.

But he also suggested disciplina­ry policies could be having an unintentio­nal impact on some children.

He asked: “Is it that these young people from this ethnic groups are more confrontat­ional with their teachers because of gang culture or is it a perception of their behavior?

“It’s important for schools to look at their policies and see that there isn’t anything that would cause a systematic bias in the way special needs and SEMH is identified.”

 ??  ?? FRANS ROMBOUT/BUBBLES
FRANS ROMBOUT/BUBBLES

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