Disability/Education/Theory of Change

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Click on each outcome in the Theory of Change to explore services, gaps and ideas.

To change anything in this page, feel free to contribute directly or to propose revisions and amendments in the Discussion page.

Theory of Change

Short-Term Outcomes

(skills, knowledge, attitudes)

Mid-Term Outcomes

(behaviours)

Long-Term Outcomes

(impact)

Social Impact
Educators are extensively trained PWDs are supported by qualified educators PWDs are equipped with skills for work and life (please reference the Employment page) Disabled people have access to an inclusive education which nurtures their varied potentials towards academic, occupational and social development
School infrastructure and learning environments meet accessibility standards PWDs can access and participate in different levels and types of education over the life course
Reasonable accommodations are made to meet the individualised, unique needs of different students
  • For inclusion - need to talk about social interactions w/ non-disabled kids too?

Educators are extensively trained → PWDs are supported by qualified educators

  • There are certification pathways for educators in SPED and mainstream settings in the area of SEN; however, the issue is whether certifications are adequate, and attracting people to take on this training and career in the first place.
  • For mainstream teachers, the compulsory 12-hour module on special needs does not offer in-depth learning, and there is no follow-up subsequently to ensure that teachers know how to manage practically.
  • SPED teachers face unattractive salaries and burnout.
  • The 500 allied educators hired by MOE are not adequately trained in terms of behavioural management and lack clarity on their roles and expectations vis-a-vis the teachers.
Programmes Gaps Ideas
New and TBC: A professional development roadmap to enhance special educational needs (SEN) training will be introduced in 2020 for all educators in mainstream schools which includes:
  • MOE will launch bite-sized online learning resources in phases from this year
  • provide more professional development opportunities for educators who “play a more specialised role in SEN support”, including allied educators in learning and behavioural support, teachers trained in special needs, as well as the school’s management team
Mainstream Teachers
  • NIE Pre-Service Training on Special Needs features a compulsory 12-hour module on special needs for all beginning teachers
  • NIE training does not offer depth of learning, particularly the practical learning and hands-on experience needed to prepare teachers to manage a class with students with disabilities[1]
    • Anecdotal: "The lesson is really only 4-6 hours, across 1-2 lessons"
  • TSNs in St. Anthony's Canossian Secondary School developed an in-house training module
Formal Education Certification
  • Low remuneration and occupational prestige, and high course fees deter many from entering the field of special education[2][3][4][5][6]
    • Entry requirements differ - becoming a SPED teacher does not require a degree[7]
    • Dispute: "Salaries of SPED teachers and MOE teachers are equal at the start, but diverge as MOE teachers have better progression pathways (hence higher pay)" - Social Service Sector Salary Guidelines[8]
    • Dispute: "There are salary adjustments every three years."
  • High turnover of SPED teachers[9]
    • Dispute: What is the actual data? Vs. mainstream schools? [Need statistics]
    • Lack of adequate training in the area of student behavioural management
    • SPED teachers do not have have the same progression opportunities as mainstream teachers[10]
    • [Are there enough/trained SPED Teachers to manage increase intake of students due to Revised Compulsory Education Act?]
  • Establish provisions for self-care for SPED professionals
  • Establish adequate training in the area of student behavioural management
  • Some professionals enter the field in pursuit of a perceived calling (rather than purely monetary aspects); can they be supported in realising their calling/aims? [11]
Allied Educators (Learning and Behavioural Support)
  • Provides support to students to meet their needs and behavioural challenges
  • All 190 primary schools and 69 secondary schools (40% of the total number of secondary schools) have at least one AED(LBS)[12]
  • Currently around 500 AED(LBS), set to rise[13]
  • [Need outcome information as to whether AED(LBS):SEN student ratio is sufficient]
  • High turnover of Allied Educators[14]
    • [What is the actual data?]
    • Due to unclear job scope, low remuneration and lack of career progression, as well as perceived lower work status relative to MOE teachers[15]
    • Lack of adequate training in the area of student behavioural management
    • [Are there enough/trained Allied Educators to manage increase intake of students due to Revised Compulsory Education Act?]
  • For students with disabilities who have experienced trauma, financial stress and who come from broken/dysfunctional families, they require intensive help. In addition to allied professionals, what of family, art and music therapists?
    • Only two SPED schools under Rainbow Centre have art and music therapists
Teachers Trained in Special Needs (TSN) Scheme
  • Certificate course for mainstream teachers to receive 108 hours of further training in learning disabilities and strategies to support SEN pupils in classroom teaching and learning
  • Comprise 10% of teachers in mainstream primary schools and 20% in secondary schools[16]

School infrastructure and learning environments meet accessibility standards → PWDs can access and participate in different levels and types of education over the life course

  • The Revised Compulsory Education Act will ensure that most children with special needs aged 6-15 attend school; however there are concerns about its implementation (e.g. affordability of SPED schools, caregiving and transport arrangements, readiness of schools and special needs educators to accept a higher intake).
  • There is a plethora of financial assistance and transport support from SG Enable, but the affordability of education remains a challenge to families more affected by costs involved in schooling a special needs child, especially those with severe conditions.
  • The Revised Compulsory Education Act — concerns about implications:
    • Are there enough teachers trained in special needs?
    • Are allied educators being adequately supported?
    • While primary school education is nearly free, SPED schooling can cost more – appears to go against UNCRPD Article 24, which call for “free and compulsory primary education”
    • Increased costs in schooling a special needs child—transporting a child needing a wheelchair to school, to other needs such as speech and occupational therapy, high fees for those with severe conditions 
    • Opportunity costs can be high for children with autism, such as forgoing Applied Behaviour Analysis therapy which would have better equipped children with behavioural and learning capabilities necessary for school in the first place 
    • SPED schools already have long waiting lists. Can they cope?
    • How would this implicate SPED school funding?
    • Will special needs students be assessed at the same level as mainstream students in certain areas?
    • Are there adequate caregiving and transport provisions availed?
Programmes Gaps Ideas
Mainstream Primary Schools
  • Deaf/Hearing Impairment
    • Mayflower Primary School (Signing)
  • Physical Disabilities
    • 57 primary schools have barrier-free accessibility (e.g., ramp and lifts for wheelchair users or those with limited mobility, wheelchair accessible toilets)
  • Learning Disabilities
    • DAS’ Main Literacy Programme
    • School-based Dyslexia Remediation (SDR) Programme
  • Teachers Trained in Special Needs (TSN)
    • 108-hour certificate course that equips teachers with a deeper understanding of learning disabilities and strategies to support SEN pupils in classroom teaching and learning 
  • Not all mainstream primary schools are fully accessible to all disability types. Few mainstream schools offer facilities for students with sensory impairments (VI/HI).
  • Recommendations from EM3 that MSF will consider[17]
    • Recommendation 5, Strategic Direction 3
      • To enhance capability of professional staff in mainstream schools to support students with SEN
      • To implement AT and resources for SEN students
Mainstream Secondary Schools
  • Deaf/Hearing Impairment
    • Beatty Secondary School (Signing)
    • Outram Secondary School (Oral)
    • St Anthony’s Canossian Secondary School (Oral)
  • Visual Impairment
    • Ahmad Ibrahim Secondary School
    • Bedok South Secondary School
    • Dunearn Secondary School
  • Physical Disabilities
    • 34 secondary schools have barrier free accessibility (e.g., ramp and lifts for wheelchair users or those with limited mobility, wheelchair accessible toilets)
  • Learning Disabilities
    • DAS’ Main Literacy Programme
    • School-based Dyslexia Remediation (SDR) Programme
  • Teachers Trained in Special Needs (TSN)
    • 108-hour certificate course that equips teachers with a deeper understanding of learning disabilities and strategies to support SEN pupils in classroom teaching and learning 
  • Not all mainstream secondary schools are fully accessible to all disability types
  • Recommendations from EM3 that MSF will consider[17]
    • Recommendation 5, Strategic Direction 3
      • To enhance capability of professional staff in mainstream schools to support students with SEN
      • To implement AT and resources for SEN students
Special Education (SPED) Schools
  • Serve students from 7-21 years of age
  • 19 SPED Schools funded by the government as of January 2018[18] , by APSN, Metta, PCS, MINDS, AWWA, Rainbow Centre, CPAS, ARC, AA, SAMH, Canossian Daughters and SAVH
  • Guided by the SPED Curriculum Framework
  • Limited number of SPED schools, with long waiting lists up to two years[19].
    • MOE has said that parents contribute to longer wait lists and waiting times for admission by fixating on a single school
  • Lack of pathways for SPED students to enter/re-enter the mainstream education system, or to access the mainstream curricula (e.g., Physical Education, Home Economics).
    • Some argue that the divergence of the SPED curricula right from the start makes it impractical to re-join the mainstream education format
Tertiary Institutions (Polys/ITEs/JCs/CI/Universities & Lasalle/NAFA)
  • Raffles Institution, ACS(I) and Milliennia Institute have barrier free accessibility (e.g., ramp and lifts for wheelchair users or those with limited mobility, wheelchair accessible toilets)[20]
  • Disability Support Officers @ Special Education Needs (SEN) Support Offices
    • Available at each publicly-funded university, polytechnic and Institute of Technical Education (ITE) College
    • Provides holistic support for students with special educational needs, including in-class learning assistance and access arrangements.
  • There are also more than 1,500 polytechnic and ITE staff trained in basic SEN awareness and support. All polytechnic and ITE academic staff will be trained similarly over the next five years.[21]
Special Student Care Centres
  • Provides subsidised before and after school care services for students with special needs aged 7 to 18
  • MINDS' First Special Student Care Centre to open in 2019
Community Educational Support Services
Financial & Transport Support
  • High transport costs[23]
    • Some students with disabilities have physical impairments which make independent utilisation of public transport problematic for them
    • Parent availability to transport students is not always possible, particularly where both parents work
    • Costs still high for lower-income people with disabilities
Increase the means testing of Assistive Technology Fund to cover more persons with disabilities from lower-middle income households

Reasonable accommodations are made to meet the individualised, unique needs of different students

  • A handful of specialised mainstream primary and secondary schools have facilities and support for those with sensory, physical and learning disabilities; however, educators in mainstream schools generally lack the ability to engage meaningfully with students with special needs, their students might discriminate or even engage in bullying, and their parents may even resent having a special needs child in proximity
  • Tertiary institutions have special education needs units, disability support offices or equivalent, though these services tend to be unstructured and unsystematic
Programmes Gaps Ideas
Mainstream Primary Schools
  • Deaf/Hearing Impairment
    • Mayflower Primary School
  • Physical Disabilities
    • 57 primary schools have barrier-free accessibility (e.g., ramp and lifts for wheelchair users or those with limited mobility, wheelchair accessible toilets)
  • Learning Disabilities
    • DAS’ Main Literacy Programme
    • School-based Dyslexia Remediation (SDR) Programme
  • Not all mainstream primary schools are fully accessible. Few mainstream schools offer facilities for students with sensory impairments (VI/HI).
  • Primary school teachers often feel overwhelmed and ill-prepared to handle too many children with special needs and/or disabilities in a large class.[24]
  • Mainstream educators and students lack understanding of how to engage with people with disabilities without ignorance, pity or aggression[25] 
    • Especially those without prior contact with PWDs or training in special needs [26]
Mainstream Secondary Schools
  • Deaf/Hearing Impairment
    • Beatty Secondary School (Signing)
    • Outram Secondary School (Oral)
    • St Anthony’s Canossian Secondary School (Oral)
  • Visual Impairment
    • Ahmad Ibrahim Secondary School
    • Bedok South Secondary School
    • Dunearn Secondary School
  • Physical Disabilities
    • 34 secondary schools have barrier free accessibility (e.g., ramp and lifts for wheelchair users or those with limited mobility, wheelchair accessible toilets)
  • Learning Disabilities
    • DAS’ Main Literacy Programme
    • School-based Dyslexia Remediation (SDR) Programme
  • Not all mainstream secondary schools are fully accessible to all disability types
  • Mainstream educators and students lack understanding of how to engage with people with disabilities without ignorance, pity or aggression[25] 
Shadow Teachers
  • Provides shadow support to a student with special education needs in mainstream school settings (kindergartens and primary, secondary and international schools)[27]
  • Inclusion Therapy
Special Education (SPED) Schools
  • Serve students from 7-21 years of age
  • 19 SPED Schools funded by the government as of January 2018[18] , by APSN, Metta, PCS, MINDS, AWWA, Rainbow Centre, CPAS, ARC, AA, SAMH, Canossian Daughters and SAVH
  • Guided by the SPED Curriculum Framework
  • Limited number of SPED schools, with long waiting lists up to two years[19].
    • MOE has said that parents contribute to longer wait lists and waiting times for admission by fixating on a single school
  • Lack of pathways for SPED students to enter/re-enter the mainstream education system, or to access the mainstream curricula (e.g., Physical Education, Home Economics).
    • Some argue that the divergence of the SPED curricula right from the start makes it impractical to re-join the mainstream education format
Satellite Partnerships
  • Provide opportunities for integration between SPED and mainstream school students (e.g., learn together in mainstream classrooms for selected academic subjects, and co-organising joint activities such as CCAs and camps) [28]
  • 16 SPED schools have been involved as of 2014[29]
  • MSF is considerning Recommendation 6 of EM3: To enhance opportunities for interaction between mainstream and SPED students in Recommendation 6, with satellite partnerships as a good model[17]
Tertiary Institutions (Polys/ITEs/JCs/CI/Universities & Lasalle/NAFA)
  • Disability Support Officers @ Special Education Needs (SEN) Support Offices
    • Available at each publicly-funded university, polytechnic and Institute of Technical Education (ITE) College
    • Provides holistic support for students with special educational needs, including in-class learning assistance and access arrangements.
  • Raffles Institution, ACS(I) and Milliennia Institute have barrier free accessibility (e.g., ramp and lifts for wheelchair users or those with limited mobility, wheelchair accessible toilets)[20]
  • There are also more than 1,500 polytechnic and ITE staff trained in basic SEN awareness and support. All polytechnic and ITE academic staff will be trained similarly over the next five years.[21]
  • Satelite Loan Libraries
    • Allows students to borrow assistive technologies at a library at Temasek Polytechnic, soon to be implemented at Singapore Polytechnic and Ngee Ann Polytechnic too
  • Disability services in Singapore’s Higher Education sector tend to vary in terms of structure and consistency, and is in need of alignment across IHLs[30]
ITE's Buddy’IN
  • Co-curricular activity which brings students of different abilities together[31]

PWDs can access and participate in different levels and types of education over the life course → PWDs are equipped with skills for work and life

  • Many mainstream preschools are reluctant to take in children with special needs because their facilities and their teachers are not equipped, and there are only a handful of inclusive preschools & ICCPs.
  • While private pre-schools are better in quality and accessibility, they may not be affordable to all parents.
Programmes Gaps Ideas
Inclusive Preschools
  • Lack of affordable pre-school options. Inclusive learning environments pose higher costs which can prohibit those from low/middle-income families. Private operators are costly and limited as well.[34] Kindle Garden raised fees fees from $980 to $1,880 a month for full-day childcare from January 2018 (Median fee for full-day childcare is $867 caa 30 June 2017[35])
  • Parents report difficulties enrolling children with preschools[36]:
    • Estimated that 70% of EIPIC students do not attend preschool due to severity of their needs and lack of readiness of preschools to take child in
    • Many parents feel their kids inadequately supported by inexperienced staff, an unsuitable curriculum and inadequate school facilities 
Integrated Child Care Programme (ICCP)
  • Select childcare centres that allow children with mild special needs to learn, play and socialise alongside their mainstream peers
  • 14 ICCP Centres caa 18 May 2018[37]

PWDs are equipped with skills for work and life → Disabled people have access to an inclusive education which nurtures their varied potentials towards academic, occupational and social development

  • Vocational training in SPED is structured with a Framework for Vocational Education in place, but it tends to under-emphasise soft skills required for employment, and has not kept up to date with automation and other market developments.
  • While SPED graduates typically learn how to be independent, those with developmental disabilities have a harder time retaining ADL skills upon exiting school. Newer living skills are also increasingly pertinent in a digital age, such as digital literacy and cyber-wellness.
  • Overlaps with the Employment page
Programmes Gaps Ideas
Special Education (SPED) Schools
  • Serve students from 7-21 years of age
  • 19 SPED Schools funded by the government as of January 2018[18] , by APSN, Metta, PCS, MINDS, AWWA, Rainbow Centre, CPAS, ARC, AA, SAMH, Canossian Daughters and SAVH
  • Pathlight School is the first local special needs school that has started to teach students how to code
  • Guided by the SPED Curriculum Framework
  • Level of vocational skill training across SPED schools is uneven[17]
  • "The SPED curriculum over-emphasises the acquisition of hard skills as opposed to soft, employability skills, e.g., attending an interview, anger management, effective communication with co-workers"
  • "The SPED curriculum has not sufficiently incorporated topics on digital media literacy (e.g., Facebook, Whatsapp, cyberwellness) necessary for daily living"
    • Dispute: "Cyberwellness is addressed among the SPED schools, and MOE Special Education Division has been working on this for the past 2 years."
  • "Need to help daily living skills and activities of daily living be retained even after exiting school"
    • "This is more applicable to people with developmental disabilities who are in DACs, to help increase independence and possibly reduce demand for disability homes in the future."
  • MSF is considering Recommendation 5 of EM3: To place greater focus on life skills in the SPED curriculum[17]
  • Society Staples is working on a digital literacy course for people with developmental disabilities, funded by the LearnSG Seed Fund
  • Cyber Wellness Toolkit for Special Needs Students[38]
  • IMDA is working on a pilot programme, to be introduced in special education schools, for students with disabilities on how to stay safe online
School-to-Work (S2W) Transition Programme
  • Jointly launched by MSF, MOE and SG Enable in 2014
  • Students with the potential to work are referred by SPED schools to SG Enable, who matches them to job training; students receive on-site job training from job coaches for up to one year after graduation leading to employment
  • EM3 = plans to scale the programme up
Vocational Certification Programmes
  • Metta School
    • Students who successfully complete the programme will receive the Institute of Technical Education Skills Certificate (ISC).
  • APSN Delta Senior School
    • Students who successfully complete the programme will receive the Singapore Workforce Skills Qualifications (WSQ).
  • Students who successfully attain the ISC or WSQ may apply for jobs in the open market or attend further advanced training (e.g., at ITEs to pursue the National ITE Certificate (NITEC) as long as they meet course pre-requisites)
  • Vocational training provided by SPED schools has not kept up with changing job market. Along with automation and digitalisation there is an increasing emphasis on specialist skills such as accounting, graphic design, teaching and administrative work, crowding out simple manual jobs[39]
    • SPD book binding orders and restoration services plunged by about 40% since 2010[40]
    • Bizlink lost contracts for printing and packing of red packets because businesses are outsourcing jobs to other countries in the region[40]
  • Review vocational training to ensure that skills and knowledge taught meet the changing needs of the job market
  1. http://www.dpa.org.sg/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/Incusion-in-Education2.pdf
  2. https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/singapore/more-support-for-allied-educators-help-special-needs-students-10053202
  3. https://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/professionals-working-with-special-needs-kids-face-burnout-poll
  4. https://www.todayonline.com/voices/retain-special-educators-cut-burnout-rate
  5. https://www.straitstimes.com/forum/letters-on-the-web/special-education-teachers-must-be-given-enough-support
  6. https://www.todayonline.com/singapore/big-read-mainstream-schools-children-learning-disabilities-still-face-challenges
  7. https://www.moe.gov.sg/careers/special-education-teachers
  8. https://www.ncss.gov.sg/NCSS/media/NCSS_SMD/Salary%20Guidelines/FY2018_SocialServiceSector_SalaryGuidelines.pdf
  9. https://www.straitstimes.com/forum/letters-on-the-web/special-education-teachers-must-be-given-enough-support
  10. National Volunteer and Philanthropy Centre (NVPC). (2017). Issues faced by people with disabilities in Singapore. Retrieved from https://www.nvpc.org.sg/resources/report-on-issues-faced-by-people-with-disabilities-in-singapore
  11. http://www.drryanduffy.com/uploads/3/1/7/2/31724447/duffy__dik_2013.pdf https://www.researchgate.net/publication/240280400_Calling_and_Vocation_at_Work http://faculty.som.yale.edu/amywrzesniewski/documents/Jobscareersandcallings.pdf 
  12. https://www.todayonline.com/singapore/big-read-mainstream-schools-children-learning-disabilities-still-face-challenges
  13. https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/singapore/more-support-for-allied-educators-help-special-needs-students-10053202
  14. https://www.todayonline.com/singapore/big-read-allied-educator-plays-school-mummy-special-needs-students
  15. National Volunteer and Philanthropy Centre (NVPC). (2017). Issues faced by people with disabilities in Singapore. Retrieved from https://www.nvpc.org.sg/resources/report-on-issues-faced-by-people-with-disabilities-in-singapore
  16. http://www.dpa.org.sg/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/Incusion-in-Education2.pdf
  17. 17.0 17.1 17.2 17.3 17.4 https://www.msf.gov.sg/policies/Disabilities-and-Special-Needs/Documents/Enabling%20Masterplan%203%20(revised%2013%20Jan%202017).pdf
  18. 18.0 18.1 18.2 https://www.straitstimes.com/politics/moe-doing-more-to-help-disadvantaged-students
  19. 19.0 19.1 https://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/easing-long-wait-at-sped-schools
  20. 20.0 20.1 https://www.moe.gov.sg/education/special-education/mainstream-schools
  21. 21.0 21.1 https://www.msf.gov.sg/policies/Disabilities-and-Special-Needs/Enabling-Masterplan-2012-2016/Pages/Education.aspx
  22. https://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/more-funding-help-for-polytechnic-ite-students-with-special-needs
  23. http://www.dpa.org.sg/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/Incusion-in-Education2.pdf
  24. http://www.dpa.org.sg/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/Incusion-in-Education2.pdf
  25. 25.0 25.1 National Volunteer and Philanthropy Centre (NVPC). (2017). Issues faced by people with disabilities in Singapore. Retrieved from https://www.nvpc.org.sg/resources/report-on-issues-faced-by-people-with-disabilities-in-singapore
  26. http://www.includ-ed.eu/sites/default/files/documents/e010101.pdf
  27. https://www.tnp.sg/news/singapore/shadow-teachers-help-kids-special-needs
  28. https://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/education/partner-schools-widen-gate-of-friendship
  29. https://www.msf.gov.sg/policies/Disabilities-and-Special-Needs/Enabling-Masterplan-2012-2016/Pages/Education.aspx
  30. https://higherlogicdownload.s3.amazonaws.com/AHEAD/38b602f4-ec53-451c-9be0-5c0bf5d27c0a/UploadedImages/CONFERNCES/2018_AHEAD/Poster_Handouts/Thursday_Proposed_Guidelines/SMU__-_Proposed_Guidelines_for_Disability_Services_in_Singapore_s_Institutes_of_Higher_Learning.pdf
  31. http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/singapore/subsidies-raised-for-poly-ite-students-with-severe-disabilities-9233082
  32. https://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/education/pre-school-takes-in-special-needs-kids-too?xtor=CS3-17
  33. https://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/education/sail-playhouse-offers-an-inclusive-preschool-environment
  34. National Volunteer and Philanthropy Centre (NVPC). (2017). Issues faced by people with disabilities in Singapore. Retrieved from https://www.nvpc.org.sg/resources/report-on-issues-faced-by-people-with-disabilities-in-singapore
  35. http://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/education/inclusive-pre-school-kindle-garden-set-to-double-its-fees
  36. http://lienfoundation.org/sites/default/files/Inclusive%20Survey%20Part%202%20-%20Press%20Release%20Lien%20Fdn%20Final%5B1%5D.pdf
  37. https://www.sgenable.sg/uploads/ICCP%20Service%20Matrix.pdf
  38. http://www.apsn.org.sg/singtel-introduces-cyber-wellness-toolkit-for-special-needs-students/
  39. http://www.dpa.org.sg/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/Incusion-in-Education2.pdf
  40. 40.0 40.1 https://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/people-with-disabilities-losing-jobs-to-technology