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National
Government Policies
Coming
Soon:
Better Service Delivery For Disadvantaged People Who Move Frequently,
from
the DCLG that highlights the needs of Gypsy Travellers accessing
education.
"The Unit is currently working on a project looking at improving
service delivery for disadvantaged people who frequently move where
they live. Some of the groups the project will focus on are people
in transition,.......... as well as people who are traditionally mobile
or move to find work, such as Gypsies and Travellers and seasonal
workers"
http://www.socialexclusionunit.gov.uk/page.asp?id=588
Racist
Bullying, 2006
The
DfES has recently posted information on Racist Bullying which can
be accessed through the following link; http://www.teachernet.gov.uk/wholeschool/behaviour/tacklingbullying/racistbullying/introduction
Follow the link to <racism's various forms>:
Forms of prejudice and intolerance
"Anti-Traveller prejudice — it was pointed out that prejudice
towards Gypsy and Traveller people continues to be 'respectable' in
many quarters and that it is a significant factor affecting the lives
and life-chances of children and young people who are targeted by
it. A further negative consequence is that the task of winning the
trust of children and young people of Gypsy and Traveller backgrounds
is rendered even more difficult and sensitive."
"It was pointed out, with regard to cultural racism, that sections
of the print media frequently create, and then exacerbate, moral panics
amongst their readers. This makes rational discussion and deliberation
all but impossible, not only in the media themselves but also in wider
society, including schools.
It was recommended at the consultative conferences that, in recording
racist incidents, there should be distinct and separate categories
for those affecting people of Muslim heritage, Gypsies and Travellers,
and refugees".
Ethnic
Identity, Ofsted, 2006
FAQs from DfES website; http://www.standards.dfes.gov.uk/ethnicminorities/faqs/763517/#33
This outlines the use of "Gypsy Roma", rather than "Gypsy"
in ethnic monitoring, how Gypsies are identified and monitored at
school.
National
Curriculum Assessment, GCSE and Equivalent Attainment and Post-16
Attainment by Pupil Characteristics in England 2005 SFR 09/2006
Travellers
mentioned page 2 and page 6;
Page 2
Minority ethnic groups with lower achievement than the national average
Gypsy/Roma and Traveller of Irish Heritage pupils perform considerably
below the national average at all Key Stages and at GCSE and equivalent.
However, it should be noted that very small numbers of pupils were
recorded in these two categories.
- For example, at Key Stage 2, just over a quarter of Traveller of
Irish Heritage pupils and around a third of Gypsy/Roma pupils achieved
the expected level in KS2 English and Maths compared to at least three
quarters of all pupils on average (Table 5).
The attainment of these groups has improved since 2004 in some subjects
and Key Stages but declined in others. For example:
- Higher percentages of Gypsy/Roma pupils achieved the expected level
at every subject in KS2 in 2005 compared to 2004. The increases for
this group were the highest of any ethnic group.
- The percentage of Traveller of Irish Heritage pupils achieving the
expected level in each subject at Key Stage three has declined since
2004.
Page 6
The main differences between the old and new sets of codes are the
introduction of the following ethnic categories: four Mixed heritage
categories (White and Black Caribbean; White and Black African; White
and Asian; Any other mixed background); Traveller of Irish Heritage;
Gypsy/Roma.
Pupils in the Traveller of Irish Heritage and Gypsy/Roma ethnic groups
are known to be underrepresented in the Annual School Census and also
have a high proportion of absence during the tests/exams. Additionally,
numbers appear to decline with each Key Stage (only a third of the
number of Gypsy/Roma pupils are recorded at GCSE and equivalent compared
to Key Stage 1; and less than a half of Travellers of Irish Heritage
are recorded at GCSE and equivalent compared to Key Stage 1). Thus,
attainment by these groups is distorted. Pupils in these groups are
also disproportionately identified as presenting with Special Educational
Needs (SEN).
http://www.dfes.gov.uk/rsgateway/DB/SFR/s000640/SFR09_2006.pdf
Easier ways of returning library materials, 2006
The
Society of Chief Librarians have agreed that:
Children
and young people who are Travellers, looked-after or refugees/asylum-seekers
– and their parents or carers – can return library materials
to any library in the UK (also without any overdue charges being made),
and that the library will then make arrangements to return the items
to the originating library free-of-charge.
This
ground-breaking decision to remove one of the barriers to use of libraries
by people who are on the move came about through collaboration between
ASCEL, The Network, YASP and SCL, following the raising of this issue
by a number of library services.
This
decision also ties in to the work currently being developed by the Social
Exclusion Unit on “Disadvantaged people who move frequently”
(see above).
Race
equality in education: Good practice in schools and local education
authorities, Ofsted. Nov. 2005
This
survey report illustrates good practice in work on race equality and
education in schools and local authorities in England.
The survey
found that effective incorporation of matters on race and diversity
into the curriculum can contribute to teaching and learning and support
pupils’ attainment. It also noted that effective guidance and
strong leadership on handling race-related incidents in schools contributed
to better racial harmony within such schools. The survey also commented
that effective use of attainment data and other material contributed
to raising the attainment of minority ethnic groups.
http://www.ofsted.gov.uk/publications/index.cfm?fuseaction=pubs.summary&id=4095
Ethnicity
and Education: The Evidence on Minority Ethnic Pupils January 2005
Minority
Ethnic Pupils aged 5-16 Across primary and secondary schools some
11,600 pupils were recorded as Travellers of Irish Heritage or Gypsy/Roma
in 2006, compared to 10,330 in 2004 - a 12% increase in numbers.
This compares to a 1.4% decrease in the total number of pupils in
primary and secondary schools. However, as noted in the previous topic
paper, figures for these two minority ethnic groups are likely to
be unreliable and Ofsted have estimated much higher numbers of these
pupils in schools than are officially recorded.
Page10
High proportions
of Traveller of Irish Heritage and Gypsy Roma pupils are eligible
for free school meals. For example, two thirds of Traveller of Irish
Heritage pupils are eligible for free school meals in primary compared
to 18% of all pupils.
Page 16
The proportion
of Gypsy/Roma and Traveller of Irish Heritage pupils who have met
or are working beyond the Early Learning Goals is below average across
all of the scales, and is, on average, between 20-30 percentage points
lower than the average for all pupils. The percentage of pupils meeting
this threshold is especially low in the Communication, Language and
Literacy learning area. The proportion of pupils in the Traveller
of Irish Heritage group who have met or are working beyond the Early
Learning Goals is lower in 2005 than it was in 2004 and the gap between
this group and the average for all pupils has widened in all except
one of the scales (see Figure 21). In contrast, the attainment of
the Gypsy/Roma group has largely improved since 2004, and this has
resulted in a narrowing of the attainment gap for this group on all
but one of the scales. However, these results should be treated with
caution due to the small number of pupils in each of these groups.
Page 34
Gypsy/Roma
and Traveller pupils have extremely low attainment. Moreover, we estimate
that many children from these groups are not recorded in the Annual
School Census, are not present during Key Stage assessments, and/or
do not continue in education up until Key Stage 4.
Page 39
Gypsy/Roma,
Traveller of Irish Heritage and White & Black Caribbean pupils
continue to perform less well than similar White British pupils during
secondary school.
Page 43
Traveller
of Irish Heritage and Gypsy/Roma pupils also have lower value added
scores than White British pupils across primary and secondary, and
therefore make less progress than White British pupils with similar
prior attainment, across all the Key Stages.
Page 45
After
the transition to secondary school, between Key Stages 2 to 4 all
of these groups except the two Traveller groups and the White &
Black Caribbean group go on to make more progress than White British
pupils with similar characteristics and levels of prior attainment.
Page 47
White
British pupils identified in the low attaining group at Key Stage
1 in 2000 had a 30% chance of moving out of it 4 years later at KS2.
In comparison Gypsy/Roma and Traveller of Irish Heritage pupils in
the low attaining group at KS1 only had just over a 10% chance of
moving out of it 4 years later (11% and 13% respectively).
Page 48
A quarter
of White British who were low attainers at Key Stages 2 and 3 were
able to move out of the low attaining group at KS4 compared to around
10% of Traveller of Irish Heritage and Gypsy/Roma pupils.
Traveller of Irish Heritage and Gypsy/Roma pupils who were not low
attainers at Key Stage 1 had the greatest chance of moving into the
low attaining group at Key Stage 2 (33% and 29% respectively) compared
to White British, Indian and Chinese pupils who had less than a 10%
chance of becoming low attainers.
Page 49
The percentage
of pupils achieving 5+A*-C including English and Maths at GCSE and
equivalent in 2005 is shown in Table 8 in section 3.1 and in Figure
28 (alongside the equivalent figures for 2004). The percentage of
pupils gaining 5+A*-C including English and Maths has increased from
2004-2005 for every ethnic group, with the exception of the Traveller
of Irish Heritage group.
Page 57
The percentage
of boys and girls achieving 5+A*-C at GCSE has increased since 2003
for all ethnic groups apart from the two Traveller groups, as Figure
35 shows.
Page 65
Apart
from the Gypsy/Roma and Traveller of Irish Heritage groups, White
British FSM boys are the lowest attaining group of FSM boys in every
year, followed by Black Other and Black Caribbean FSM boys.
With the exception of the two Traveller groups, the lowest performing
group of FSM girls is the White British group, followed by the White
& Black Caribbean group.
Page 67
The
Gypsy/Roma, Traveller of Irish Heritage and White & Black Caribbean
pupils make less progress than similar White British pupils across
all phases of education.
White British FSM pupils are less likely to achieve 5+A*-C at GCSE
than FSM pupils from other ethnic groups (with the exception of the
two traveller groups).
Page 69
In 2002/03,
permanent exclusion:
-Rates among Gypsy/Roma and Traveller of Irish Heritage pupils were
around four times the rate for all pupils - Page 87
-The
highest rates of fixed period of exclusions are for 5 groups: Gypsy/Roma,
Traveller of Irish Heritage, Black Caribbean, Mixed heritage White
& Black Caribbean and Black Other pupils - Page 89
- The
permanent and fixed period exclusion rates for Gypsy/Roma, Traveller
of Irish Heritage, ............... pupils are a lot higher than the
average for all pupils, and have increased since 2002/03.
Page 91
Traveller
of Irish Heritage and Gypsy/Roma pupils are over-represented among
many categories of SEN, including Moderate, and Severe Learning Difficulties,
and BESD. The literature suggests a number of factors ranging from
those associated with school such as negative teacher attitudes, racism
and bullying, and a curriculum perceived as lacking relevance, to
factors associated with Traveller cultures, such as high mobility,
poor attendance and early drop out from school. However, the research
base on this group is limited and therefore these conclusions are
indicative only.
Page 94
http://www.standards.dfes.gov.uk/ethnicminorities/links_and_publications/EandE_RTP01_05/
The
Education of Gypsy Traveller Learners: A survey of provision made
by schools and local authorities to meet the needs of Gypsy Traveller
learners, Wales, 2005
Main
Findings:
• Many LEAs provide support to schools through a Traveller Education
Service.
The quality of this support is mostly good and in some cases very
good.
• Gypsy Traveller learners generally have poor attendance rates
and very few
Gypsy Traveller learners attend a secondary school.
• Most of the teaching of Gypsy Traveller learners is of good
quality, particularly
in primary schools.
• The Welsh Assembly Government allocates funds to LEAs and
schools based
on learner numbers and historical allocation, without sufficient emphasis
on
the needs of learners.
• The figures used to allocate funds to LEAs do not always accurately
reflect the
number of Gypsy Traveller learners within the LEA.
• Many Gypsy Traveller learners have low levels of basic skills
and often few
social skills.
• Many schools and LEAs do not have policies in place to address
the specific
needs of Gypsy Traveller learners.
• Very few schools have identified opportunities within the
curriculum to promote
the positive aspects of Gypsy Traveller culture.
• LEAs and schools generally lack awareness of good practice
and strategies to
support Gypsy Traveller learners.
• Few Gypsy Traveller learners complete homework.
Recommendations:
LEAs and schools should:
• find ways to improve attendance and increase the numbers of
Gypsy Traveller
children attending secondary schools;
• ensure that they have policies that address the specific needs
of Gypsy Traveller
learners; and
• ensure that the curriculum promotes the positive aspects of
Gypsy Traveller
culture.
The Welsh Assembly Government should:
• should collaborate with local authorities to identify and
put in place appropriate
arrangements to enable staff, with responsibilities for Gypsy Traveller
learners,
to discuss common issues and share best practice; and
• should ensure that data collected is accurate and consistent
and consider ways
in which funding can be allocated so that it places a greater emphasis
on the
needs of learners.
Read the PDF document at: http://www.estyn.gov.uk/publications/Remit_8_04_05_Education_Gypsy_
Traveller_Learners_Report.pdf
Every
Child Matters: Learning to Listen, 2005
P.13
Children and young people have equal opportunity to get involved
" •Children and young people are not discriminated against
or prevented from participating effectively on grounds of race, religion,
culture, disability, age, ethnic origin, language or the area in which
they live.
•Departments and agencies take a proactive approach in targeting
those facing greatest barriers to getting involved (for example, ...............
traveller children...)
• Where necessary support and opportunities for training and development
are provided to children and young people so that they can contribute
effectively.
• Relevant information is available to children and young people
in good time and in appropriate formats, is jargon free, culturally
appropriate and accessible."
P.18 Involving more marginal groups and those with quiet voices
"The most excluded are, almost by definition, the hardest to reach.
No one body can bring the full range of children’s views to any
one table. Departments will need to decide which specific groups of
children and young people to involve, and whether there are particular
organisations that can help to identify children and young people willing
and able to take part. Special care should be taken to include children
and young people not traditionally involved, for example, ........ traveller
children...."
http://www.everychildmatters.gov.uk/_files/1F85704C1D67D71E30186FEBCEDED6D6.pdf
'Youth
Matters' DfES Green Paper 2005
Page
13 of 'Youth Matters' DfES Green Paper acknowledges;
" 49. There are significant differences in educational attainment
across different ethnic groups. Some groups, including Chinese, Indian
and Irish pupils, are consistently above the national average at all
ages, while others, including Black- African, Black-Caribbean, Pakistani,
Bangladeshi, and Gypsy Roma pupils and Travellers of Irish heritage,
are consistently below the national average."
http://www.dfes.gov.uk/consultations/downloadableDocs/
Youth%20mattters%20pdf.pdf
Ethnicity &
Education: The Evidence on Minority Ethnic Pupils
DfES Research Topic Paper (RTP01-05) published January 2005.
http://www.dfes.gov.uk/research/data/uploadfiles/RTP01-05.pdf
This Research
Paper includes evidence about Gypsy/Roma and Travellers of Irish Heritage
pupils.
- It acknowledges;
"The figures for the two Traveller groups, Gypsy/Roma and Travellers
of Irish Heritage, are probably the least reliable." (page 3)
- "Over half of pupils recorded as Traveller of Irish Heritage
and Gypsy/Roma are eligible for free school meals compared to 16 percent
of all pupils." This is the highest of any ethnic group. (page
6)
- The Foundation Stage Profile consists of Early Learning Goals; "...the
lowest performing are Travellers of Irish Heritage and Gypsy/Roma
children." (page 8)
- "Both Gypsy/Traveller groups have extremely low attainment.
Although it is estimated that many children from these groups are
not recorded in the Annual School Census, are not present during key
stage assessments and/or do not continue in education up till Key
Stage 4, for those that have a recorded result, attainment is very
low:
* At Key Stage 1, 28 percent of Travellers of Irish Heritage and 42
percent of Gypsy/Roma pupils achieved Level 2 or above in Reading
compared to 84 percent of all pupils.
* At Key Stage 4, 42 percent of Travellers of Irish Heritage and 23
percent of Gypsy/Roma pupils achieved 5+ A*-C GCSE/GNVQs compared
to 51 percent of all pupils." (page 9)
-Table 2 shows a widening attainment gap for Gypsy/Roma and Travellers
of Irish Heritage. (page 12)
- The research acknowledges there is no national data on school attendance
by ethnicity. (page 17)
-"Travellers of Irish Heritage were the ethnic group most likely
to be permanently excluded in 2002/03. Though actual numbers were
small, their rate of exclusion was nearly four times that of overall
rates." Gypsy Roma were third most likely; 0.01 point below Black
Caribbean pupils. (page 19)
- The
research shows differences in SEN identification; "...Traveller
groups more likely to have identified SEN...Gypsy/Roma, Travellers
of Irish Heritage and Pakistani pupils being more likely to be attending
a special school..." (page 21 & 22)
- "Travellers
of Irish Heritage and Gypsy/Roma pupils are more likely to be over-represented
in nearly all SEN types." (page 24)
- The
research quotes Parsons et al. who analysed schools' compliance with
the Race Relations Amendment Act. "A number of factors were identified
that could help support fulfilment of the schools' race equality duties:
* Public commitment through regular review of policies.
* Training for curriculum content for a multi-ethnic society; for
classroom management; specifically for governors on their role in
relation to minority ethnic issues and exclusions.
* Specific projects such as mentoring, counselling, youth work and
preventative initiatives for vulnerable groups.
* Constructive links with minority ethnic community organisations."
(page 20)
Copies
of the Research Paper are available free of charge from:
DfES
Publications, PO Box 5050, Sherwood Park, Annesley, Nottingham NG15
0DJ.
Tel: 0845 6022260
http://www.dfes.gov.uk/research/data/uploadfiles/RTP01-05.pdf
New
Community Cohesion Standards - 2005
Schools
have a central role to play in breaking down barriers between young
people and helping to create cohesive communities. Some Standards
have been produced to provide schools with a framework for promoting
community cohesion through tackling discrimination, promoting good
race relations by breaking down barriers whilst also focusing on helping
to raise attainment levels. These Standards are framed by four aims:
* Close the attainment and achievement gap
* Develop common values of citizenship based on dialogue and mutual
respect and acceptance of diversity
* Contribute to building good community relations and challenge all
types of discrimination and equality
* Remove the barriers to access, participation, progression, attainment
and achievement.
The grid specifically includes Gypsy Travellers;
- Governors and SMT have drawn up a plan, including resource implications,
for encouraging the development of activities specifically aimed at
pupils with particular needs (refugees, Gypsy Travellers and underachieving
ethnic groups, including white pupils)
The
Standards can be downloaded from
Every
Child Matters, Green Paper 2003
Although the Green Paper does not
mention Gypsy Traveller Young People directly, the effects of
the paper are multi-agency and have a direct impact. The subsequent
anaylsis of the paper, saw the use of "hard-to-reach"
young people, which Gypsy and Traveller Young People are often
categorised as (see Every
Child Matters: Learning to Listen, 2005 above)
The Paper:
Every Child Matters: Change for Children is a new approach to
the well-being of children and young people from birth to age
19. The Government's aim is for every child, whatever their
background or their circumstances, to have the support they
need to:
* Be healthy
* Stay safe
* Enjoy and achieve
* Make a positive contribution
* Achieve economic well-being
This means that the
organisations involved with providing services to children - from
hospitals and schools, to police and voluntary groups - will be
teaming up in new ways, sharing information and working together,
to protect children and young people from harm and help them achieve
what they want in life. Children and young people will have far
more say about issues that affect them as individuals and collectively.
Over the next few
years, every local authority will be working with its partners,
through children's trusts, to find out what works best for children
and young people in its area and act on it. They will need to
involve children and young people in this process, and when inspectors
assess how local areas are doing, they will listen especially
to the views of children and young people themselves.
For more visit: www.everychildmatters.gov.uk
Provision
and support for Traveller pupils
Office for Standards in Education, December 2003
Background
to the report
Ofsted visited 37 primary schools and ten secondary schools in
11 Local Education Authorities (LEAs) between autumn 2001 and
summer 2003 to evaluate provision and support for Traveller pupils.
The term "Traveller" here includes Gypsies/Roma and
Travellers of Irish heritage, fairground and circus families,
New Age Travellers, bargees and other families living on boats.
Some of the groups covered by the term have minority ethnic status.
Concerns
This report states that the access to education, and attendance,
by primary age Traveller children continues to improve, but that
not enough Traveller pupils attend or stay on at secondary school.
It estimates that 12,000 Traveller pupils of secondary age are
not registered at school; of those that do attend, the average
attendance rate is about 73%, and many pupils achieve at standards
well below the national average. Success in improving and maintaining
pupils' attendance depends on the quality of relationships between
schools and families.
The report adds that most of these pupils come from very caring
and protective families, who report fears of racist bullying and
the erosion of their community's moral code. They may also perceive
the secondary school curriculum as irrelevant, due to the strong
tradition of starting work in the family business at a young age.
The report's authors are concerned that unacceptable numbers of
children are missing out on opportunities to gain the skills needed
for full and equal participation in society, and that the warnings
in earlier reports have not yet been heeded.
Other points of concern are that the use of data from schools
and LEAs to track the progress and achievement of Traveller pupils
is very variable between LEAs (this is compounded by a lack of
guidance on improving the accuracy of reporting by Travellers
of their ethnic origin), and that the way in which too many authorities
deal with unauthorised Traveller encampments contradict their
public statements about the inclusion of all pupils in education.
Many Traveller pupils are educated at home, but the suitability
and quality of this provision is very uneven and there is also
a lack of guidance for LEAs on the subject.
Quotes:
“The average attendance rate for Traveller pupils is around
75%. This figure is well
below the national average and is the worst attendance profile
of any minority ethnic
group.”
“There is a growing trend among Traveller Families for secondary
age pupils, in
particular, to be educated at home. The adequacy, suitability
and quality of such
provision are very uneven and raise serious concerns.”
“The curriculum in many schools provides good opportunities
to celebrate and affirm
different cultures and life styles. Too often, however, attempts
to include those of
Traveller communities are purely incidental and often divorced
from the mainstream
efforts of schools to promote race equality for all pupils. In
too many schools, Traveller
pupils are an ‘unseen’ minority ethnic group.”
"The vast majority of Traveller pupils linger on the periphery
of the education system.
The situation has persisted for too long and the alarm bells rung
in earlier reports have
yet to be heeded.”
Achievements
However, the report also states that Traveller pupils make satisfactory
to good progress in the short term, and that most LEA Traveller
education services provide at least satisfactory and often very
good support to the schools and the Traveller families, particularly
with regard to literacy. The report highlights examples of good
practice, such as:
* In one school, a flexible programme of out-of-school sessions
covering literacy, maths, crafts and outdoor activities
* A school which arranged for Traveller pupils who had become
disaffected with the curriculum to complete courses in blacksmithing,
farrier work and game-keeping at the local agricultural college
* In one LEA, delivery and completion with Traveller families
of induction packs for children transferring from primary to secondary
school
* A social worker who volunteered to meet a secondary-age pupil
at the bus stop to see him on the way to his new school, and who
arranged for 'buddies' to meet him at the other end
There were also instances of collaboration with other agencies
including Connexions and New Start, and of teaching, planned in
conjunction with the Traveller education service, that celebrated
and affirmed the Traveller lifestyle - for example through texts
used in the literacy hour. The report recommends that schools
take greater responsibility for promoting and sustaining links
with Traveller families.
Link:
This report can be downloaded in full from www.ofsted.gov.uk/publications
Ofsted
Press Release on the report
Guardian Newspaper Article on report
Inclusive
Educational Approaches for Gypsies and Travellers (2003)
Schools
should be advocates for Gypsy and Traveller children while at the
same time "upholding the integrity of the family" according
to new guidance launched in January 2003 by Cathy Jamieson, Scotland's
education minister. The guidance also calls on local authorities to
be more innovative in their approaches and to reserve short-term pre-school
places "with rapid access arrangements".
The guidance, Inclusive Educational Approaches for Gypsies and Travellers,
was produced by the Scottish Traveller Education Programme (STEP)
supported by the Association of Directors of Education in Scotland,
Glasgow and Edinburgh Universities and Learning and Teaching Scotland.
It is available at www.scottishtravellered.net/resources/publications.html
(TESS, 24 January 2003)
Aiming
High: Raising the Achievement of Gypsy Traveller Pupils (2003)
Guide
to good practice produced by the Department for Education and Skills
in July 2003. It offers advice and guidance to schools and LEAs, including
practical guidance and examples that are shown to work to raise Traveller
pupils' achievement and ensure their inclusion in school life, and answers
to some frequently asked questions.
Quotes:
“Any school, anywhere, may have Gypsy Traveller pupils on roll.
Raising the
achievement of Gypsy Traveller pupils is the responsibility of everyone
within the
education system and significant measure of the effectiveness of polices
to combat
educational and social exclusion. Foisted has shown that Gypsy Traveller
pupils, mostly
Gypsy/Roma or Travellers of Irish Heritage, have the lowest results
of any ethnic
minority group and are the groups most at risk in the education system.”
The research and guidance is due to be updated in 2006.
www.standards.dfes.gov.uk/ethnicminorities/links_and_publications
For details as to how this guidance is used, visit Gypsy and Traveller
Achievement on Department of Education and Skills "The Standards
Site": http://www.standards.dfes.gov.uk/ethnicminorities/raising_achievement/
gypsy_travellerachievement/
The site also contains an excellent FAQ concerning raising the acheivement
of Gypsy and Traveller pupils: http://www.standards.dfes.gov.uk/ethnicminorities/faqs/gandtpupils/
Re-engaging
the hardest-to-help young people, 2002
Young Travellers
are among the hardest to help young people. This research report looks
at what is being done to re-engage this group in education, training
or employment (although the needs of Gypsy Travellers are not mentioned
specially).
Read Re-engaging
the hardest-to-help young people: the role of the neighbourhood support
fund, National Foundation for Educational Research (NFER), July 2002
at dfes.gov.uk
The
State of London's Children Report
December 2004
xi
Key groups of London children are more vulnerable to poverty-linked
inequalities in outcomes and access to services (including child refugees
and asylum seekers (RAS), runaways and homeless children, Gypsy and
Traveller children and disabled children).
xv
Gypsy and Traveller children have the lowest levels of attainment.
p15 It is possible that this measure may omit groups whose members
are particularly vulnerable to poverty (such as people in institutions,
travellers, disabled people, refugees, asylum seekers and homeless
people).
p20 Gypsy and Traveller children
The Office of the Deputy Prime Minister (DCLG) estimates that there
are about 5000 Gypsies and Travellers in London
Key groups include Romany Gypsies, and Irish and English Travellers.
As Gypsies and Travellers are not included in national or local ethnic
monitoring schemes, we cannot give an accurate estimate of the number
of children in London. Key issues affecting Gypsy and Traveller children
include a lack of site provision, a lack of basic amenities, sites
on polluted and hazardous areas, and a range of inequalities in health
and in education and within the youth justice system.
p28 There is some evidence to suggest that rates of infant mortality
are higher for children of Gypsy and Traveller groups than for children
in the settled community.
p70 Recent evidence from Ofsted suggests that children of Gypsies
and Travellers are less likely than more settled groups to take up
pre-school education.
p74 London schools have very high rates of pupil mobility, with rates
of 10 per cent, rising to 14.2 per cent in inner London, whilst the
average for England, as a whole, is 5.6 per cent. These rates are
linked to the high numbers of refugees and asylum seekers in London,
many homeless families in temporary accommodation and relatively high
numbers of Gypsy and other travellers.
p82 However, national data point to persisting gender and ethnic differences
in exclusion. Recent provisional data show that 82 per cent of all
exclusions were of boys. Black Caribbean pupils, those classified
as from any other black background and Gypsy and Traveller children
all had much higher than average rates (see Appendix Table 16).
p83 Travellers of Irish heritage, Roma Gypsies and black Caribbean
and black African children are all more likely than other groups of
children to have SEN statements.
p145 Young people from Gypsy and Traveller communities may often be
stereotyped as criminals, although the evidence suggests that criminality
is no higher than average in the Gypsy and Traveller population.
p146 Research carried out in the 1990s found that Travellers accounted
for 38% of admissions of all young people classified as white from
London courts to Feltham Young Offenders Institution.
Another report notes that this 'abnormally high figure reflects the
prejudice at court about the mobility of Travellers and the corresponding
risk that they will abscond'.
www.london.gov.uk/mayor/children/solc.jsp
Thanks to David Cannon - Chair of Advisory Council for the Education
of Romany and other Travellers (ACERT) - for his breakdown of the
report.
Commission for Racial Equality
Gypsies and
Travellers: A strategy for the Commission for Equal Equality, 2004-7
8.
Opportunities for progress: Education
"The
inclusion of Roma Gypsy and Irish Traveller as categories in the new
system for monitoring the racial groups of pupils in all schools in
England (PLASC) offers the opportunity to build up information about
Gypsy and Traveller pupils' experiences at school, and to take steps
to deal with any inequalities that emerge. In Wales, the new PLASC
system has been piloted in a number of schools and is now being used
everywhere. In Scotland, Gypsy Traveller, Occupational Traveller and
‘Other Traveller’ are now included as categories in the
Scottish School Census. It is important that the good practice being
developed in Scotland and Wales is shared with England, and that successful
developments in England are replicated elsewhere.
However,
it is crucial that the benefits of monitoring are explained to Gypsy
and Traveller parents and pupils, and that steps are taken to obtain
their full cooperation.
Aiming
High, a DfES strategy to raise the achievement of ethnic minority
pupils, offers another opportunity to make sure that concerns about
educational attainment among Gypsy and Traveller pupils form a distinct
strand within the strategy, and are not pursued as questions of educational
mobility. The DfES has also recently published a guide for schools,
called: Aiming High: Raising the attainment of Gypsy Traveller pupils.The
Scottish Executive has introduced similar guidance for all education
authorities and schools in Scotland – Inclusive Educational
approaches for Gypsies and Travellers within the context of interrupted
learning – and the Scottish Traveller Education Programme is
working with HM Inspectorate of Education in Scotland on measures
of quality, as part of the series How good is our School?."
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Cyber Pilot Project: Friends, Families and Travellers, Community
Base, 113 Queens Road, Brighton, BN1 3XG, 2006
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