© Crown Copyright 2005 1 Provision mapping School staff meeting.

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Presentation transcript:

© Crown Copyright Provision mapping School staff meeting

© Crown Copyright The content of this presentation may be reproduced free of charge by schools and local education authorities provided that the material is acknowledged as Crown copyright, the publication title is specified, it is reproduced accurately and not used in a misleading context. Anyone else wishing to reuse part or all of the content of this publication should apply to HMSO for a core licence. The permission to reproduce Crown copyright protected material does not extend to any material in this publication which is identified as being the copyright of a third party. Applications to reproduce the material from this publication should be addressed to: HMSO, The Licensing Division, St Clements House, 2–16 Colegate, Norwich NR3 1BQ Fax: Crown copyright statement

© Crown Copyright Provision maps An ‘at a glance’ way of showing the range of provision our school makes for children with additional needs Provision maps – what are they?

© Crown Copyright An example Consider the example from another primary school.

© Crown Copyright Why use provision maps? They allow us to audit the needs of children and plan systematically how best to use the school’s resources to meet those needs. They allow us to plan both the staffing and the skills that will be required to meet the needs of children. They help us all be clear what extra provision children can access.

© Crown Copyright Why use provision maps? They can reduce paperwork. They prevent over-provision in some classes and under-provision in others.

© Crown Copyright Why use provision maps? They provide good information for parents or carers and increase parents’ confidence that their child’s needs will be met. Provision for individual children can be highlighted, tracked and monitored. Children receive more coherent provision.

© Crown Copyright Activity Consider the case study that tracks the provision a child receives as she progresses through the school. In pairs, discuss the following questions: In terms of strengths and weaknesses what does this case study tell us about the school’s approach to provision? If Sarah came into this school again what would you like to see done differently in order to secure more effective provision?

© Crown Copyright Work in year group teams. Think of all the different things that already happen in your year group to provide for children with additional needs. Group your sticky-notes into categories that make sense to you. Activity: what are we doing already?

© Crown Copyright Waves of intervention

© Crown Copyright Waves model and ‘additional to or different from’ Wave 3 Additional highly personalised interventions Wave 2 Additional interventions to enable children to work at age related expectations or above Wave 1 Inclusive quality first teaching for all

© Crown Copyright Which of your sticky-notes describe provision that is additional to or different from everyday inclusive teaching? Activity : what are we doing already?

© Crown Copyright Everyday inclusive teaching Setting suitable learning challenges Responding to pupils’ diverse needs Overcoming potential barriers to learning Access Teaching styles Learning objectives

© Crown Copyright Provision mapping 4 pieces in the jigsaw Audit of need Evidence on what works Comparison with existing provision Planning in the light of available school budget

© Crown Copyright Planning effective provision Step 1: Audit projected need using must/should/could chart. Step 2: Compare projected year group needs with current pattern of provision and identify changes and staff development issues. Step 3: Identify available school budget. Step 7: Establish systems for evaluating the effectiveness of our provisions, involving parents or carers and children. Step 5: Plan for staff development. Step 4: Consider the evidence on what works and plan the provision map for the next school year. Step 6: Identify criteria and processes for tracking children’s progress and monitoring impact.

© Crown Copyright Planning effective provision Step 1: Audit projected need using must/should/could chart. Step 2: Compare projected year group needs with current pattern of provision and identify changes and staff development issues. Step 3: Identify available school budget. Step 7: Establish systems for evaluating the effectiveness of our provisions, involving parents or carers and children. Step 5: Plan for staff development. Step 4: Consider the evidence on what works and plan the provision map for the next school year. Step 6: Identify criteria and processes for tracking children’s progress and monitoring impact.

© Crown Copyright Complete a must/should/could grid for your year group. What does it tell you about the provision you would want to make for that year group? How does it match the provision that is currently in place? Activity

© Crown Copyright Planning effective provision Step 1: Audit projected need using must/should/could chart. Step 2: Compare projected year group needs with current pattern of provision and identify changes and staff development issues. Step 3: Identify available funding. Step 7: Evaluate the effectiveness of your provisions. Step 5: Plan the provision map for the next school year. Step 4: Consider the evidence on what works. Step 6: Track children’s progress and monitor impact.

© Crown Copyright Available school budget Other funding EiC, BIP, Children’s Fund EMAG funding Funding identified for meeting the needs of advanced bilingual learners Funding for Wave 2 literacy and mathematics interventions SEN funding (School Action, School Action Plus, Statements)

© Crown Copyright Planning effective provision Step 1: Audit projected need using must/should/could chart. Step 2: Compare projected year group needs with current pattern of provision and identify changes and staff development issues. Step 3: Identify available funding. Step 7: Evaluate the effectiveness of your provisions. Step 5: Plan the provision map for the next school year. Step 4: Consider the evidence on what works. Step 6: Track children’s progress and monitor impact.

© Crown Copyright What doesn’t work? Unfocused teaching assistant support Small reductions in class sizes Setting Large-scale ILS ICT schemes

© Crown Copyright What works Early intervention: nurture groups, social skills groups plus parenting support, National Pyramid Trust, early language and literacy intervention e.g Talking Partners, Reading Recovery Acceleread/write, Phono-graphix, Catch-up, Better Reading Partnership, Multi-sensory Teaching System for Reading (MTSR), Reciprocal teaching, Paired reading, THRASS, Family Literacy and Numeracy, Mathematics Recovery, Numeracy Recovery Peer tutoring Social skills groupwork e.g. anger management Stress reduction Some mentoring schemes and some learning support units

© Crown Copyright List the pros and cons of one type of provision map you have looked at. Plan how you will report back on your group’s views. Activity

© Crown Copyright We have considered: The many things we already do to help children with additional needs make progress in our school How we might plan our provision systematically through a provision map How this will help children, staff and parents The format we would like to use

© Crown Copyright Next steps What should our next steps be? Who could do what, and when? How can we build this into our school improvement planning?