| S27
ENGAGING YOUNG PEOPLE I |
The Role of Institutions in Pathways from Educational to Social Exclusion:
Documenting the Life Course of 300 Marginalised Primary School Children
in Queensland
Bouhours T1*, Bryer F1
1. Griffith University, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Engaging social and professional communities around students with high
educational needs has come to be seen as an active protective process
for these students. This paper examines the role of state and local agencies
(education, health, families, communities, and criminal justice) in documenting
but not altering student trajectories towards life failure. When the most
marginalised and disadvantaged youth in our communities are the primary
target for exclusionary practice in education around the western world,
then there has been little impetus to coordinate service delivery between
school systems and other services in order to provide stable ongoing supports
for progress through education. A detailed investigation of the socioeducational
trajectories of 300 individuals excluded from Queensland primary schools
between 1973 and 2004 examined data gathered on these children before
and after a period spent in a special school setting for intervention
in behaviour and learning. This study has revealed extensive record keeping
of a downward spiral in the lives of these children but little sharing
of this information. Case-by-case treatment of information from child
to child, from time to time, and from setting to setting has been a barrier
to effective decision-making and to systemic support for a better trajectory
towards social inclusion.
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