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Blog posts exploring the importance of effective education partnerships, collaboration and communication within and beyond schools when developing and maintaining high-quality policy and practice for more able learners, and challenge for all. Includes examples of effective school-to-school collaborations, and opportunities to get involved in education partnerships and collaborative initiatives involving fellow NACE member schools and NACE partner organisations.

 

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Supporting your child with high ability: guidance for parents and carers

Posted By Hilary Lowe, 26 April 2022
Updated: 21 April 2022
Hilary Lowe, NACE Research & Development Director, introduces the NACE Essentials guide on this topic – now freely available for all families.
 
Parents and carers have a lasting impact on their children’s lives. They can have a great influence on their children’s achievement and success through providing early experiences which encourage children to enjoy and develop their learning. By exposing their children to new experiences, by engaging with them through talk and discussion, by giving them encouragement and support, parents enhance their children’s ability to think creatively and critically, and stimulate their curiosity about the world.
 
Parental support is one of the most important factors in a child’s success in school. Children whose parents are interested and involved in their education – for example, by supporting their learning at home and working with the school – do better academically and socially. This is true for all children, but parents sometimes find it difficult to know how to best support a child who has a special need or exceptional abilities. What they can do, however, makes a big difference, and our NACE Essentials guide on this topic aims to help parents and carers provide that support.
 
This guide has been recently updated, and is now freely available to all families, alongside a new mini-guide aimed at parents and carers of children in the early years foundation stage.
 
Being the parent or carer of a more able or exceptionally able child can be both a delight and a challenge. In some cases that challenge can last well into adolescence, when peer pressure, personal identity crises and an exceptional intellect or precocious talent can lead to tensions and conflict.
 
Living with an able child can raise many questions for parents and the rest of the family. A parent’s responses to a child’s exceptional needs will, to a large extent, depend on the parent’s values, their own experiences of education, and what they believe about their own abilities. But it is important that parents and carers think through their response, in order to support their child to develop and express their ability, to find balance, emotional harmony and personal fulfilment – and to live as a child.
 
Our NACE Essentials guide for parents and carers aims to provide answers to some of the most common questions about caring for and supporting a more able child:
  • What does it mean to be “more able”?
  • How do you know if you have a more able child?
  • How do schools identify children with special abilities?
  • What is the current approach to children with high ability?
  • What should schools provide for more able children?
  • What information about your child and the school’s provision can you expect to be given?
  • What questions could you ask of the school?
  • How do you overcome barriers and difficulties?
  • What can you do to help your child at home?
In addition, the guide includes a glossary of words frequently used when discussing the education of children with high ability.
 
The NACE Essentials guide for parents and carers is available to download now, free for all families. Get your copy.

Tags:  collaboration  early years foundation stage  enrichment  free resources  parents and carers 

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16 tips for effective collaboration with parents and carers – including those with DME children

Posted By Denise Yates, 25 April 2022
Updated: 21 April 2022

Denise Yates shares 16 tips for schools to work effectively with parents and carers – including some applicable to all, and some of particular relevance for families of children with dual and multiple exceptionalities (DME).

A positive relationship between pupils, parents/carers and professionals is essential for every child and young person in school to ensure they thrive and achieve their personal best. Research studies report time and time again that the benefits which can be realised in school from working well with families range from higher school attendance rates, better academic progress and more effective problem solving to secure solutions to challenges encountered along the way. 

Some practical suggestions for working effectively with parents and carers will apply to every child, regardless of where they live, the type of school they attend, their ability or special educational needs and/or disabilities. They are worth listing to remind professionals of the positive difference getting them right can make to a pupil’s school journey. 

In addition there are other suggestions which, whilst far from unique for families who have children with dual and multiple exceptionalities (DME) – meaning they have high learning potential as well as special educational needs and/or disabilities – can make a disproportionate impact on the positive education, learning and school experience of these pupils at all ages. 

These first eight suggestions are relevant for working effectively with the parents and carers of every pupil:

1. Treat all parents and carers with respect and take their concerns seriously, no matter what they are.

2. Have an open-door policy which recognises the flexibilities the school needs to make to address the different challenges parents and carers face in their day-to-day lives.

3. Be a parent-friendly school and regularly involve parents and carers to review how it can be made more parent-friendly. A named person for parents and carers to contact about specific issues? Easily accessible noticeboards for parents and carers? Parent reps for each classroom? Flexible meeting times? Use of technology? Alternatives to technology for those who cannot access it? Thinking out of the box to engage with parents and carers?

4. Have a jargon-free school or at least an approach which explains the jargon used. Few of us, even in school, understand all the abbreviations we use in our education life. Yet this jargon can exclude many parents and carers who may not feel confident asking what it means. Make it easy for everyone to be on the same page.

5. Develop appropriate meeting frameworks to give parents and carers confidence. Not every parent or carer is used to meetings. Without patronising, outline structures and ask everyone what they want to achieve. Having someone to make notes and circulate these, along with clarity on who will do what and when, can help everyone to understand the agreed action plan.

6. Remain calm and positively problem-solve any challenges parents and carers bring to you.

7. Develop honest relationships based on mutual respect and trust.

8. Involve parents and carers as much as possible as experts on their own child.

Some additional suggestions which are important to remember in working effectively with parents and carers of children with DME:

9. Keep an open mind. DME can present very differently at home than at school. A child who ‘flies under the radar’ or is badly behaved at school may be doing the most amazing things at home without the pressure of having to conform to others’ expectations. Conversely, a child who hits out or suffers from high levels of stress and anxiety at home may be the ‘perfect pupil’ at school and give no cause for concern. You and your pupil’s parents and carers need to work together to build a picture of the ‘whole’ child and then put in place a joint action plan to address areas of individual concern.

10. Listen and learn about DME, what it can look like and how to spot it. By the time many parents and carers come to talk to you about DME, they will have done some research for themselves. Even where they haven’t, some of the things they say may lead you to suspect a child may have DME. When a parent is trying to understand why they see their child’s abilities or ‘flashes of brilliance’ in some areas, whilst they struggle with even the most basic activities in others, your DME alarm bells should be ringing. Make a list of strengths and areas of struggle so you can navigate the DME maze together.

11. Provide parents with customised action plans which use their child’s areas of strength to support their struggles. Taking ‘off the peg’ activities for either pupils with high learning potential or those with SEND will not work. These will often not inspire the child to learn. Many parents and carers start their DME journey in the SEND world, due to such things as the legal structures and frameworks in place (now sorely lacking on a national basis in the gifted and talented world). But ignoring their need for higher-level work delivered at a faster pace can often make a child’s learning journey worse. Negative outcomes can include social, emotional and behavioural problems, school anxiety, phobia and refusal, and worse. Working with parents and carers to meet their child’s higher-level learning needs, whilst providing scaffolding support for areas of struggle, will help you to earn respect and develop positive relationships with parents and carers of DME pupils.

12. Understand that a pupil’s response to their DME may change over time. This will depend on a range of factors, including the child or young person’s levels of resilience, their sensitivities, their abilities and their SEND. For example, in early primary school (or equivalent), a child with DME may have no sense of self or awareness that they may be different from others. In secondary school, without like-minded others to understand, support and celebrate these differences, a child with DME may become isolated and develop social, emotional and mental health problems. These changes need to be recognised and support provided before they become significant problems in the classroom and beyond. 

13. Recognise and celebrate difference in the classroom and beyond. A pupil’s school journey can also be affected by the way they are viewed and treated in school and school philosophy towards such things as inclusivity and celebrating difference. A DME ‘champion’ or mentor for a child, along with a named person with whom parents and carers can consult openly about their concerns, can go a long way to building trust with parents and carers. 

14. Work with parents and carers AND pupils. Many pupils with high learning potential and DME have strong opinions on what they need and how they should be treated. This can make the pupil-parent-professional dynamic quite sensitive, particularly where there is disagreement in approach between, say, pupil and parent. Working effectively with parents and carers alone is not enough and there needs to be a three-way relationship. In such situations, it is important not to blame parents or carers or to identify them as the drivers of a situation, particularly where it is negative and/or getting worse. Behind closed doors, the dynamics may be very different indeed and parents/carers often report their children’s skills and capacity for leading or controlling situations themselves. 

15. Recognise that parents and carers with DME children may come into school as a last resort. They may be at their wit’s end trying to solve the problems they face and their language and behaviour may reflect this. Remember, you may not know what has been going on at home before you meet with the parent or carer. You may also not be aware of a range of things in the parent or carer’s mind before they came to meet you, including their own experiences of or attitudes towards education, their fear or nerves about meeting the professional working with their child and a whole range of other things. If we see behaviour as a form of communication (as many of us do when it comes to pupils) what is the parent or carer trying to communicate through their actions or language? Frustration? Anger at a problem unsolved or not heard? Fear? Listen calmly and see through this to problem-solve solutions which can be tested in partnership.

16. Be honest. Whilst solutions can be found – where there is a will – to most problems we face in education, sometimes the preferred option is not viable in a particular school setting. Where this is the case, although it may not seem like it at the time, honesty about what can or cannot be done to support a pupil is often the best policy. This gives parents and carers the chance to think about alternative solutions, including moving to another school where needs can be better met. This should not be seen by anyone as failure but as the mature outcome of a positive relationship between families and professionals. 

In the past, parents and carers were told what was going to happen to their child in school. Then they were consulted. Then, a few years ago we had parental engagement. We now have coproduction. Developing clear policies and practices about how parents, carers and pupils will have a voice and involvement in decision-making makes sense for all families (including those which have DME children), will benefit everyone and should be actively encouraged and supported.

Read more: 12 steps to maximise the potential of pupils with DME in the classroom

About the author
Denise Yates has worked in education and training for over 38 years with a focus on enabling all individuals to maximise their potential. After 10 years as CEO of Potential Plus UK, she left in 2017 to pursue her passion, which could be summarised as ‘hidden potential’ – focusing on supporting children and young people with DME, those with mental health problems and those who have been failed by the system, for whatever reason. Denise is currently a Board member of The Potential Trust, Nisai Education Trust and Potential In Me. She is also an adviser with Citizens Advice in her local area. 

Denise Yates is co-author with Adam Boddison of The School Handbook for Dual and Multiple Exceptionality, and author of the new book Parenting Dual Exceptional Children. You can follow her on Twitter @DeniseYates_

Special offer: To benefit from a 20% discount on Denise Yates’ new book, Parenting Dual Exceptional Children, enter discount code Yates20 when purchasing the book from the Jessica Kingsley website by 31 August 2022.  

Tags:  access  collaboration  dual and multiple exceptionality  identification  parents and carers  underachievement 

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9 ways parents can support their child’s education at home

Posted By Emma Tibbitts, 25 April 2022
Updated: 21 April 2022
Emma Tibbitts, NACE Curriculum Adviser (Early Years), shares nine ways parents and carers can support their child’s education at home.
 
This blog post is an excerpt from the new NACE Essentials guide for parents and carers of children in the early years – now freely available for all families. Get your free copy here.
 
The biggest contribution a parent can make to their child’s education is to be interested in and appreciate what they are doing, know what they are interested in, and support them in what they do.
 
Gentle encouragement, interested questioning, concern when you feel there is a problem, and a habit of showing curiosity about the world yourself are all very important. Talking with and listening to your child are among the most important factors in the development of language.
 
Specifically, you could: 

1. Support your child to develop language 

Read with and to your child as often as possible. Have a new word of the day or week at home. Puzzles, logic games, word games and board games all help to develop language.

2. Support your child to extend their knowledge of the world and encourage discussion 

Talk through your day and theirs, and encourage family discussions. Introduce an interesting fact of the week. Give them a broad range of experiences, e.g. exhibitions, music, food.

3. Support your child to develop a range of skills and a balanced perspective 

Do not always focus on their obvious skills – encourage them to sample new activities. Praise and value effort and persistence, not just achievement.

4. Support your child to experiment

Give them space and free time to play, experiment and develop hobbies and interests of their own.

5. Support your child to develop their social and emotional needs 

Children need to know that you are proud of who they are and not what they achieve. They need to be allowed to fail and make mistakes, and develop strategies to cope when they get it wrong.

6. Support your child by spending regular special time together

Setting aside special quality one-on-one time with your child will show them you value and appreciate them and will increase the connection between you.

7. Support your child by showing an interest in their activities

By playing with your child you show them you are interested in their activities. This will give them the confidence to explore and make mistakes and will give you an insight into what interests them.

8. Support your child by developing a warm, loving parent-child relationship

When you respond to your child’s needs in a warm, loving and consistent manner you strengthen the attachment you have with them. This provides a foundation to allow children to grow confidently and learn to manage their own feelings and behaviours.

9. Support your child to develop good two-way communication

Role modelling good communication skills is essential. Be an active listener, let your child voice their opinion and respond to any questions they may have. Ask questions to show them you understand their viewpoint.
 
This blog post is an excerpt from the new NACE Essentials guide for parents and carers of children in the early years – now freely available for all families, along with our full guide for parents and carers of children at all ages. Get your free copy here

Tags:  early years foundation stage  enrichment  language  parents and carers  wellbeing 

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5 steps to (re)build strong school-parent partnerships

Posted By Dr Kathy Weston, 25 April 2022
Updated: 21 April 2022
Dr Kathy Weston explores the importance of building parents’ capacity in schools in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, and shares five practical steps to achieve this.
 
If you are reading this, chances are that you care deeply about the pupils that you work with and the families within your school community. There is also a high chance you feel fatigued following what researchers refer to as the ‘Coronacoaster’ but are now actively considering the impact of the last two years on pupils and how best to support them moving forward.
 
You may have started to observe some things that concern you; a decline in pupils’ academic and social skills, a rise in low-level behavioural issues and general disregard for school rules, problems with attendance and a swathe of concerning signs of mental distress. Some ‘post-Covid’ issues that coincided with a return to school included: anxiety ‘tics’ in teen girls, self-harming behaviours, and a big rise in disordered eating behaviours and thoughts (among children of all ages). That is not to say some children didn’t positively thrive during lockdowns at home; there are plenty of examples within every school community of children insisting life at home, with learning online, was optimal. This was particularly the case for children who found the social side of school a struggle and the classroom environment stressful.
 
The home-school partnership necessarily reinvented itself during lockdowns; boundaries shifted, were redrawn and all parties became technically upskilled in an attempt to keep learning alive. Both parties were understandably relieved when schools returned, but this return has exposed new challenges that demand an effective partnership approach if we are to minimise the impact of the pandemic and remedy harms done.
 
In light of the above, here are five things your school can do, to get the home-school partnership back on track.

1. Recognise what worked well

Make sure your school community (in partnership with parents, pupils and staff) recognises how well you all coped during the pandemic. What skills did we learn? Which habits do we wish to upkeep? What did we learn about ourselves and others? Tip: create a wall memorialising the school’s experience during the pandemic and drawing out ‘Covid Keeps’. 

2. Reset expectations

Are online parents’ evenings staying or going? Will pupils ever be allowed to do online learning when poorly at home? When can parents email staff and expect a response? Draw lines regarding what has gone before and how things are now expected to be. Explain why you have taken these decisions and stick to them.

3. Check that parents know how to seek support

Be clear with parents that responsibility for monitoring and responding to children’s needs should be diffused. For example, parents have a powerful role to play in spotting signs of mental distress in their children, communicating those to the school and working together with school staff for the best outcome. Check that all parents understand the pathways to expressing concerns and seeking support within your setting.

4. Only use evidence-based approaches

Whether you are considering which new learning scheme to introduce to a class, optimal ways to raise pupils’ aspirations, or strategies that will reduce mental distress post-pandemic, ensure that you only use evidence-based approaches. Failing to do so may exacerbate children’s problems, sustain difficulty and inhibit pupils’ chances to thrive – as well as potentially reducing the confidence of all involved (pupils, parents, and staff) in any future initiatives.

5. Ensure that all staff and parents have access to high-quality information

In this fast-paced world with its evolving demands and pressures on children and families, it is imperative that staff are given access to as much research-informed, digestible and practical CPD as possible. Parents feel reassured knowing that staff are staying ‘on top’ of research evidence and are better able to support children as a result. Parents themselves should have access to evidence-based tips that will encourage and empower them, that help them feel supported on their parenting journeys, and that are easy to implement.
 
Schools should aim for a clear audit of ‘where we all stand’ post-pandemic, articulate the protective assets that a partnership approach between home and school brings to children’s lives, value parental ‘engagement’ over simple ‘involvement’, and aim to tackle any emerging mental health issues head-on, together. 
 
About Dr Kathy Weston
Dr Kathy Weston is the co-author of Engaging Parents: 100 Ideas for Primary Teachers and Engaging Parents: 100 Ideas for Secondary Teachers (Bloomsbury, 2018; 2020), part of the 100 Ideas Series for educators. She is a sought-after keynote speaker and the founder of Tooled Up Education, a digital hub of evidence-based information and advice for parents and teachers. 

Tags:  lockdown  parents and carers  remote learning  wellbeing 

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