FLEMING, Katarzyna (2021). Exploring inclusive partnerships: parents, co-production, and the SEND code of practice (2015). Doctoral, Sheffield Hallam University. [Thesis]
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Fleming_2021_PhD_ExploringInclusivePartnerships.pdf - Accepted Version
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Fleming_2021_PhD_ExploringInclusivePartnerships.pdf - Accepted Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives.
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Abstract
The Special Educational Needs and Disability (SEND) Code of Practice (2015)
sets out principles for partnership working to address the historical power
imbalances and ineffective communication between services and parents;
however, it remains unclear how these partnerships could be formed in practice.
Although co-production was proposed as an enabler of effective partnerships on
the local government level, the institutional or individual levels where parents
are most likely to experience partnerships were not discussed. Therefore,
firstly, this study aims to explore parental contributions to decision-making
processes in partnerships following the implementation of the Code, and
secondly, to investigate whether co-production could become a vehicle for
inclusive partnerships between parents and practitioners in public services.
A Mixed Methods Research, utilising an explanatory sequential design,
comprising an online survey followed by interviews, was conducted between
November 2017 and June 2018. The study was situated within the theoretical
framework of pragmatism and employed the ‘appreciation’ and ‘dream’
elements of an Appreciative Inquiry structure. 144 survey responses from
parents/carers were analysed through descriptive analysis and formed the
foundation for the second stage of the study – the interviews. Three group
interviews and eight individual interviews with 25 parents were analysed using
thematic analysis (Braun and Clarke, 2006). The following main themes
emerged: parental lived experiences of partnerships; practitioners’ attributes,
attitudes, and knowledge; discrepancies between the Code and parental
experiences; practices enabling inclusive partnerships; and systemic barriers to
effective partnerships.
Participants reported that they continue to be mostly positioned as unequal
contributors to decision-making for their children and young people following the
changes in legislation. Despite the lack of guidance on co-productive
partnerships at institutional and individual levels, this study reveals how co-production could empower parents to become equal and valued contributors to
decision-making within partnership working. Furthermore, connections among
the principles of co-production, the desired by parents approaches to equal and
contributory partnerships, and the Code’s guidance on partnerships, demonstrate the potential co-production could offer to inclusive partnerships
with parents. A framework that illustrates these connections culminates the
discussion in this thesis.
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