Posts Tagged ‘O Keefe’

Here is the final programme for the Towards a Positive Future Conference

Friday October 14th 2011 

9.30 am – Registration and Refreshments

 9.45 am – Welcome to Mary Hare and the Arlington Arts Centre – Tony Shaw

 9.50 am – Welcome Address – Robert Ashton

10.00am – Keynote Presentation – Kevin Geeson – CEO, Dyslexia Action ‘The impact the SEN Green Paper could have on literacy and the long term economic and social problems that getting it wrong could cause’

10.45am – Presentation – Inez Brown legal implications for children with special needs, current funding arrangements and future funding arrangements

11.30am – Presentation – Louise Wilkinson the issues that children, young people and their families face following the devastation of childhood acquired brain injury ‘The Hidden Disability’,

12.15 am – Exhibition, Networking, and Lunch

1.00pm – Charlie Mead – how Acadamies can find ways to meet the needs of students with complex needs

1.45 pm – Presentation – Prof Heather van der Lely “The grammar and phonology screening (GAPS) test: quick, simple, affordable and accurate: so why isn’t there national screening?”

2.30 pm Refreshments

2.45pm – Ian Ross – Negotiation, Mediation and Conflict Resolution

4.45pm Robert Ashton/Janet O’Keefe/Ian Ross – Clarity Foundation

5.45 pm – Closing remarks from Janet O’Keefe and end of Day at 6pm.

Please book your place at http://towardsapositivefuture.wordpress.com

share save 120 16 Here is the final programme for the Towards a Positive Future Conference
 

PRESS RELEASE: NEW FOUNDATION LAUNCHED TO SUPPORT CHILDREN WITH SPECIAL EDUCATIONAL NEEDS

Educational psychologist warns that young vulnerable people miss out under present system

A new foundation which will enable practitioners to join together to provide multi-disciplinary specialist services for children with special educational needs is being launched next month – and could transform the present fragmented and bureaucratic system.

 The Clarity Foundation hopes to attract health and social care providers, as well as education specialists, to join as members who can be referred to families and local authorities as approved providers meeting statutory guidelines. 

 The foundation is the brainchild of speech and language therapist Janet O’Keefe and Robert Ashton, best selling business author, social entrepreneur and campaigner, who are passionate about providing a new joined-up efficient system which supports children and their families with educational support, while at the same time eliminating unnecessary duplication and bureaucracy.

 It will be launched at a conference entitled, Towards a Positive Future, aimed at parents and professionals, to inspire, share experiences and discover how they can achieve more for children with special needs. The conference is being held on October 14-15 at Arlington Arts Centre, Newbury, which is based at the Mary Hare School for deaf children.

 There are currently 1.7 million children with special educational needs in England who require support for wide ranging conditions, from dyslexia, dyspraxia and Down’s syndrome, to autism and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.

 Janet says: “We believe that having a one-stop shop is the best way to enable parents and local authorities find all the support services desperately needed by children with special needs, and that our foundation is the most practical and efficient way of ensuring that those services are integrated and coordinated.  We need to bring practitioners from health, education and social care together and plan for the future while the present guidelines for new contract arrangements is under review.  Our foundation will be a valuable database of all heath and social care providers, as well as education specialists.

 “Additionally, we can streamline time consuming and expensive administrative processes. For example, we can help with criminal bureau checks and professional indemnity insurance.  At the moment, if a practitioner is not directly employed by a school or local authority, every school they visit should conduct its own CRB check.  Many practitioners regularly visit 20 schools a week sometimes in several different counties and are therefore checked 20 times.”

 Robert says it makes good sense to become more efficient during the present changes:

 He says: “However you feel about the Government’s “Big Society” agenda, the fact is that the worlds of education, health and social care are undergoing massive change. The Clarity Foundation is being formed to help parents make sense of those changes, and in parallel to help practitioners create their own enterprises. That way both groups can connect, create opportunities and meet the needs of young people striving to overcome disadvantage.”

 Specialist speakers include educational psychologist and former head teacher Charlie Mead, who has worked with children with severe emotional and behavioural problems and special needs for 20 years. He has grave concerns about the present system and highlights failures he has observed, leading to neglect in some cases for vulnerable young people.

 He says: “Charities are afraid to stand up for their clients in case their funding is withdrawn. Academies are afraid of further failure by taking on exactly those students who would benefit most from their resources. Children and Family Services have neglected the vulnerable due to bureaucratic inertia and a lack of consistency. All these situations can be changed if the interests of the child are put first.

 “When working with highly vulnerable children in care, many of whom have been sectioned, it is clear that the recession is having a considerable impact on the young people and their families – especially those who cannot cope emotionally, are addicts, are sexualized early and have been abused.  They need expert consistent provision – not piecemeal services from organisations who are threatened by lack of funding.”

 Other key speakers are Kevin Geeson, CEO of Dyslexia Action, who will highlight the impact of the SEN Green Paper; speech and language specialist Prof Heather van der Lely, who will highlight her simple test for an early diagnosis of specific language impairment; and both Sandy Burbach and Alex Kelly, who will describe the importance of developing social skills and self esteem in children.

 Janet is also launching a book she has edited at the conference also called Towards a Positive Future which includes stories, ideas and inspiration from children with special educational needs, their families and professionals.

 Full details about the conference can be found at their website, Towards a Positive Future: http://towardsapositivefuture.wordpress.com/

 There is a range of ticket prices: parent £90 (one day) £155 (both days); second parent £60 (one day) £120 (both days); professionals £200 (one day) £385 (both days).

 Media requests can be made to press consultant Ellee Seymour on 07939 811961, email ellee.seymour@btopenworld.com

share save 120 16 PRESS RELEASE: NEW FOUNDATION LAUNCHED TO SUPPORT CHILDREN WITH SPECIAL EDUCATIONAL NEEDS
 

Special Educational Needs: A Guide for Inclusive Practice (2011)

40061 9780857021632 Special Educational Needs: A Guide for Inclusive Practice (2011)

With a Foreword from Baroness Mary Warnock, this book provides a comprehensive overview of the field of special educational needs (SEN). It contains chapters written by a range of experts on different aspects of SEN, and is full of practical suggestions for how to achieve effective, inclusive practice. Various research perspectives are considered, the value of labels is examined and the need to recognize the overlapping characteristics between different syndromes is highlighted. Chapters focus on translating theory into classroom practice, and include case studies covering the Birth to 19 age range.

There is coverage of:

- SEN and the state of research

- SEN and legal issues

- parents’ perspectives

- speech and language difficulties

- dyspraxia and occupational therapy

- dyslexia

- dyscalculia

- Auditory Processing Disorder

- Behavioural Optometry

- Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)

- Asperger Syndrome and Autistic Spectrum Disorder

- Tourette Syndrome

Ideal for those undertaking teacher education courses, as well as experienced teachers, therapists and policy makers, this book is a guide to understanding and supporting learners with additional needs.  Janet O’Keefe and janet Farrugia have contributed Chapter 6.

Paperback ISBN: 9780857021632 £23.99
share save 120 16 Special Educational Needs: A Guide for Inclusive Practice (2011)
 

What is Wordswell?

WW reports strap 02a 300x156 What is Wordswell?

 

 
Wordswell is a group of speech and language therapists improving the communication skills of children and adults in the Eastern Region from King’s Lynn and Peterborugh to St Neots and Cambridge, Bury St Edmunds and Stowmarket with an administrative base in Ely, Cambridgeshire. Therapists are available to work in a clinic base, schools or clients homes. Janet O’Keefe is available for assessment  and attendance in Court or SENDIST as an expert witness nationwide. We have special interests in hearing impairment, autistic spectrum disorder, dyslexia, dyspraxia and language disorder and feminisation of transgender voice.
 
We have a new logo and a new website.  Do have a look and let us know what you think.
 
WW comm strap w 300x51 What is Wordswell?
share save 120 16 What is Wordswell?
 

The Clarity Foundation is a multidisciplinary network of health, education and social care professionals who work with children with SEN.

 

 The Clarity Foundation is a multidisciplinary network of health, education and social care professionals who work with children with SEN.

Established 2011 by Janet O’Keefe and Robert Ashton

The benefits of being a member are:

  • A professional entry on an excellent website easily accessible to parents, other professionals and potential referrers
  • An office staff dedicated to helping you find clients and contracts to keep you busy providing therapy, teaching or other support services
  • Regular CPD, support and supervision opportunities
  • Back office facilities and services such as virtual secretarial services and telephone answering reception services

The benefits of contracting with a Clarity member professional or group of professionals to provide a service you need is:

  • A one stop shop to find people in your geographical location who have the skills you need rather than having to go to many different websites and organisations to find your team
  • All basic checks will have been done and references taken up so that the contract can be started immediately without delay
  • Services such as insurance and CPD can be provided to the member

The benefits to parents and children with SEN are:

  • A clear, easy to use website to find information relevant to your childs needs and professionals with the skills to provide the services your child needs including legal advice
  • Funding may be available to help with the cost of funding services directly or support and training from the Foundation to help your school or local community find a creative way to provide what your child needs
  • An organisation that listens to your needs and tries to find solutions to support you and your child reach their educational and life outcomes

Do come to the Towards a Positive Future Conference on 14-15 October 2011 and help shape what Clarity will be for its members and users.

The membership will attract recommendation by client review, evidence of CPD, and professional references which will enable those fund holders or clients to find easily those members or groups of members in their geographical locations to fulfill contracts and provide much needed services to children with SEN.

We will ensure that all members have jumped through the appropriate hoops of insurance, CRB and CPD training and be able to provide all appropriate back office support so that clinicians can concentrate on the provision of therapy, teaching or training being contracted.

Members will be able to buy into the level of support that they need to work as efficiently as possible. It is not a gatekeeper, professionals will still need to belong to their profession specific organisations and membership is voluntary. The details are not set in stone which is why we are inviting prospective members to be part of Clarity’s evolution. There will be an annual membership fee. In order to join people will need to prove they are who they say they are and be checked out. The membership fee will cover an excellent website, and an office staff who are dedicated to providing services to and for the members, encouraging and supporting networking, sharing skills and knowledge and promoting members to the public and fund holders/potential referrers. It will also provide a range of services which members may find helpful to them in running and developing their business.

It will be a social enterprise and any profit made on selling these services to members will go into a fund to pay for services or support projects for those individuals or groups who may not be able to get funding elsewhere. If members need a CRB we could be an organisation to apply for one, if members need insurance then we could provide it and if support or supervision is required then this could be facilitated. It needs to be flexible because each professional group will have different needs. We will encourage everyone who wants to to join. The only differentiation will be that website profiles can be enhanced by online recommendations and reviews and references along the lines of social networking sites but we would do our best to ensure that all reviews are genuine as many are posted falsely which is not helpful.

Potential referrers will continue to seek tenders from a range of providers but our network will actively seek potential contracts on behalf of members and help with the paperwork so that our members are represented in as many tenders as possible. There are many, many other ideas and support services which the network could provide to members at a cost accessible by sole traders, charities, support groups and small businesses. It will grow and evolve as the membership grows.

It will be UK wide for the network and membership. There will be an advertising and marketing strategy through local and national networking, direct contact with prospective referrers, talks, local and national media and website optimisation. Members will only stay members quite rightly if the organisation provides real measurable benefits to them as individuals, their business, their clients and the wider community. It aims to be both creative and innovative in finding ways that services can be provided and paid for in the current economic climate. All ideas to improve from the membership or other stakeholders will be listened to.

Make sure you book your place at the conference today. We look forward to working with you on this exciting future journey…

share save 120 16 The Clarity Foundation is a multidisciplinary network of health, education and social care professionals who work with children with SEN.
 

Medico-Legal Study Day for Parents and Professionals

One of my key roles at Wordswell is my work as an Independent Speech and Language Therapy Expert Witness appearing, usually with the parents of children with special educational needs, or commissioned by a specialist solicitor, at SENDIST or the High Court. 
 
Over the last 12 years I have worked with some excellent legal teams and am delighted to be speaking at this forthcoming study day. 
 
We would welcome parents or professionals to attend and share our experiences of the new regulations which came into being in November 2008.

“Update on Special Educational Needs and DISability Tribunal Regulations”

28th July 2009 at 9.30am – 4pm

Location: Anthony Collins Solicitors, 134 Edmund Street, Birmingham, B3 2ES, (within walking distance of New Street Train Station)

Speaking will be:

images1 Medico Legal Study Day for Parents and ProfessionalsJohn Friel, Barrister of Hardwicke Building

“…good technical knowledge.” – Chambers UK (2009)

“…achieves success in cases that may not appear so strong on paper.” – The Legal 500 (2008)

John is featured in Legal 500 and Chambers UK as an Education Law specialist.

Inez Medico Legal Study Day for Parents and Professionals

Inez Brown, Solicitor of Anthony Collins

Inez leads on the educational support for individuals. She has vast experience in educational matters providing support on statutory assessment of children with special educational needs and admission/exclusion issues arising from maintained schools.

melinda1 Medico Legal Study Day for Parents and ProfessionalsMelinda Nettleton, Solicitor of SEN Legal

Melinda qualified as a solicitor in 1980 working initially for a local authority and then for the Crown Prosecution Service. She specialized in litigation (evidence and advocacy).  Melinda has three children, one of whom has dyslexia, dyspraxia, and a severe language disorder.

Janet Medico Legal Study Day for Parents and Professionals

Janet O’Keefe, Speech and Language Therapist, Wordswell Ltd and Chair of the MLSIG

 Janet has specialised in working with children and adults with hearing impairment, autistic spectrum disorder and dyslexia.

 

If you would like to attend, please email MLSIG@wordswell.co.uk to register your interest.

  You can pay in advance by posting a cheque for £25, made payable to “MLSIG” to Wordswell, 82 Cannon Street, Little Downham, Ely, Cambs, CB6 2SS.

For further information, please do not hesitate to get in contact.

share save 120 16 Medico Legal Study Day for Parents and Professionals