2. Robert J. Havighurst, educator
Conducted the Growing Up in River City
Study
Documented socioeconomic factors as
PREDICTOR of school success
The HIGHER the student’s economic
status, the GREATER the chance of
academic success.
3. Components that contribute/detract to
school success:
1. SOCIAL STATUS ( Economic Lifestyle )
2. LANGUAGE ABILITIES
3. LEVEL OF PARENTAL EDUCATION ( Attitudes toward
schooling )
4. PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT IN CHILD’S SCHOOLING
STUDENTS FROM LOW INCOME
AND UNSTABLE FAMILIES
ARE 4-5 TIMES MORE LIKELY TO
BE TARDY OR ABSENT.
4. STUDENTS AT RISK
PROBLEMS ARE MORE COMPREHENSIVE THAN SIMPLY BEING BORN
INTO A LOW INCOME FAMILY WITH POOR PERSONAL SUPPORT
FOR EDUCATION.
“students who are not experiencing success in
school
and are potential dropouts”.
http://www.specialeducationphilippines.com/2012/10/20/classroom-adaptations-for-students-at-risk/
5. STUDENTS AT RISK
o Low socioeconomic status
o Living in a single-parent home
o Changing schools at non-traditional times
o Below-average grades in middle school
o Being held back in school through grade
retention
o Having older siblings who left high school
before completion
o Negative peer pressure : DRUGS/EARLY
PREGNANCY
6. STUDENTS AT RISK
o Children with disabilities
o Children who are victims of armed conflicts
o Children displaced by calamities
o Children in conflict with the law
o Children who are sexually abused
o Street children : cigarette/sampaguita
sellers, etc.
o Exposed to hazardous working conditions
7. STUDENTS AT RISK
o Uncaring and untrained teachers and
counselors
o Passive teaching methods
o Inappropriate curriculum
o Lack of parent involvement
8. Characteristics of
Students at Risk
POOR GRADES
POOR LEARNING
ABILITY
LOW SELF
ESTEEM
HIGH ANXIETY
LACKS
MOTIVATION
WITHDRAWN
POOR PEER
RELATIONS
AGGRESSIVE
HOSTILE
9. The sooner at-risk students are identified, the
more likely that preventative "remediation"
measures will be effective:
remediation programs
tutoring
child care services
medical care
substance abuse awareness programs
bilingual instruction
employment training
close follow up procedures on truancy and absenteeism
10. Learning improvement goals AND
outcomes
Priority areas for improvement
engagement
attendance
behavior
11. WHAT KIND OF CURRICULUM DESIGN/ THINGS THAT
SHOULD BE INCLUDED FOR STUDENTS AT RISK
1: Prevention and early intervention –
Creating a positive school culture
Targeted response for individual students
Targeted response for parents and families
Creating a positive school culture:
Define and teach school-wide expectations for all.
Establish relevant school-wide prevention programs.
Establish consistent school-wide processes to identify students at risk of
disengagement from learning.
Establish consistent school-wide processes and programs for early intervention.
12. WHAT KIND OF CURRICULUM DESIGN/ THINGS
THAT SHOULD BE INCLUDED FOR STUDENTS AT
RISK
Targeted response for Individual students:
Establish an understanding of the life circumstances of the
child/young person and how they feel.
Establish data collection strategies.
Develop the plan for improvement based on data and review
regularly.
Explicitly teach and/or build replacement behaviors.
Determine strategies for the monitoring and measurement of
student progress.
Establish inclusive and consistent classroom strategies.
Establish out-of-class support strategies.
Establish a student support group.
13. WHAT KIND OF CURRICULUM DESIGN/ THINGS THAT
SHOULD BE INCLUDED FOR STUDENTS AT RISK
Targeted response for parents and families:
Close collaboration with the DSWD and school wide dissemination campaign
on the different programs available for at risks students.
(i) Systematic Training of Effective Parenting (STEP) —
includes counselling, training of parents and the youth, and
information dissemination.
(ii) Family Drug Abuse Programme — is a pilot community-based
programme of preparing families to protect their
members against the adverse effects of drug abuse. It further
aims to equip families with parenting and life skills towards
drug-free homes.
(iii) Night Care for Children and Working Mothers — is a
preventive measure to eliminate abuses and neglect against
young children while mothers are at work during night-time.
http://www.unafei.or.jp/english/pdf/RS_No68/No68_14VE_Leones2.pdf
14. WHAT SHOULD BE INCLUDED IN THE
CURRICULUM FOR STUDENTS AT RISK:
(iv) Empowerment and Reaffirmation of Paternal
Abilities (ERPAT) — is a preventive and developmental
intervention on enhancing parental skills
which gives importance and emphasis to the father’s
parental roles, responsibilities and abilities through
activities promoting effective performance of familial
tasks of Filipino fathers as well
achieving gender equality for women and men and
prevention of violence against women and children.
http://www.unafei.or.jp/english/pdf/RS_No68/No68_14VE_Leones2.pdf
15. WHAT KIND OF CURRICULUM DESIGN/ THINGS THAT
SHOULD BE INCLUDED FOR STUDENTS AT RISK
An integrated curriculum
Teachers learn to integrate all lessons
Better student engagement
Increased teacher collaboration
More opportunities to differentiate learning
Especially helpful to students-at-risk
Thematic : Connects multiple subjects to a unifying theme
ACTIVE TEACHING: INTERACTIVE TEACHING
EMPHASIS ON STUDENT ENGAGEMENT :
INTERACTIVE TEACHING WITH HIGH QUESTIONING
LEVELS INVITE STUDENTS TO PARTICIPATE
IN LESSONS.
Student-centered
Constructivist
Culturally relevant
Parent-community involvement
http://jaie.asu.edu/v31/V31S3ind.htm
16. WHAT KIND OF CURRICULUM DESIGN/ THINGS THAT
SHOULD BE INCLUDED FOR STUDENTS AT RISK
Greater structure and support.
Course expectations need to be clearly laid out
Assignments and grades need to be designed to encourage
achievement
More frequent FEEDBACK.
Student progress should be monitored frequently through
classroom questions, quizzes and assignments.
Smaller steps with more redundancy.
Content should be broken down into smaller steps
Student mastery should be insured before moving on to the next
step.
17. LATEST STATISTICS FOR
DISPLACED STUDENTS IN
ZAMBOANGA
As of September 9, 2013
Around 200,000 students
Elementary: 140,000+ students
High School: 48,000+ students
205 schools
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/489679/200k-students-affected-by-zamboanga-fighting-deped