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Research into the educational attainment of children in Find-a-Family, NSW. New testing allows agencies to monitor outcomes. NAPLAN testing began in 2008 Literacy and numeracy- Year levels- 3,5,7,9 Educational needs assessment based on NAPLAN Entry to school testing- Best Start etc BUT
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Research into the educational attainmentof children in Find-a-Family, NSW.
New testing allows agencies to monitor outcomes • NAPLAN testing began in 2008 • Literacy and numeracy- Year levels- 3,5,7,9 • Educational needs assessment based on NAPLAN • Entry to school testing- Best Start etc BUT • How can we get the information? • What will it tell us about individuals? • What will it tell us about the program? • How should we be routinely collecting this?
Experimental Study asked the following questions: • How are children in Find a Family NSW program doing in terms of educational attainment? • Are particular children doing better or worse? • Are the current practices of spending on remedial education adequate?
Study undertaken in Find a Family • Children only after final orders: babies to 18 years • Parental Responsibility held by agency head • High level of behavioural disturbance • Bridging placements used until permanent carers found • One half of children ultimately adopted
Getting started- what information was available • Casework records- NAPLAN Department of Education routinely supplies band results to carers • Not all results getting to agency files • Negotiations begun to get results from DET • No centralised information from Catholic and Independent schools • No automatic info from DET • No capacity to routinely get scores • No information for entry to school tests. • More DET information is possible- ie educational reports
Method of the study • DET gave special access to scaled scores for some children in FAF • Identified minimum and average standards • Compared individual’s scores and characteristics of the child • Averaged literacy components- reading, writing, spelling, grammar- to compare with numeracy • Analysed individual literacy components • Looked at FAF children as a group
Study question 1 • How are children in FAF doing educationally?
Literacy Numeracy
Literacy Numeracy
Reading Comparison over two tests Naplan scores Child
Numeracy comparison over two tests Naplan score Child
Study Question 2 • Are there particular children doing better or worse? • Children’s behaviour • Children’s experience of placement breakdowns • Children’s length of time in current placement • Children experiencing exclusion and suspension
Example of children in program • Into care at 6 mths, now 11 years of age, year 6 • Care level is now 2+ • 13 known placements • Current placement 2 years 5 months • 3 changes in school incl suspensions, currently in ED placement. • Multiple diagnosed disorders incl PTSD, ADHD, ODD & DID. • Above NMS for 2 years of NAPLAN • Tailored and specific educational interventions
Children de-identified: * denotes child with a diagnosed disability I/C denotes child who attends Independent or Catholic school respectively
Casestudy 1 • Came into care at 10 yrs of age, long history abuse and neglect. Low school attendance • No diagnosed disabilities • 1 placement change – planned intake to permanent • 9/10 NAPLAN below NMS • Introduce literacy & numeracy tutoring • Continues to struggle, enjoys school and is improving • “feels secure with everything around her, feels she doesn’t have to worry’
Placement changes NAPLAN achievement • No correlation in our study : • Some with less than two placement changes were below minimum • One with 18 placement changes was above minimum • Limited data showed unplanned changes had impact
Length of time in current placement and NAPLAN achievement • No correlation in our study • 8 years in placement still below minimum • Numeracy and literacy showed similar trends
Impact of suspensions on NAPLAN scores • No clear correlation in this study • Those with no suspensions were still ‘below minimum’ • No ‘above average results’ with high number of suspensions
Study Question 3 • Are the current practices of spending on remedial education adequate?
N.B: This only includes the 25 original children included in the study.
Findings of study • Most children below average but above minimum- many need help • Higher proportion below minimum than whole Australian population • Care levels, placement changes, suspensions not clearly associated with scores • Need for better data on $ spent for each child
Recommendation on use of NAPLAN • Caseworkers • Attention to collecting and analysing NAPLAN scores for individual children from schools/carers • Greater awareness of educational reports from NAPLAN • Agencies • Need to lobby for better information sent from Education Departments on scores • Need to investigate entry to school testing • Need to improve internal recording of educational expenditure • Incorporation of NAPLAN into Looking After Children Electronic system (LACES) : lowest 20% and average as key indicators
EXTRA SLIDES • For reference only
Number of Suspensions n = 30
Change in individual children’s literacy and numeracy results for those who have sat two NAPLAN in Barnardos care NAPLAN Scores Child