A project working with young people who have been excluded from school is helping to prevent the downward spiral that can leave them with an education below their abilities, says Nicole Vettenburg.
Flanders is experimenting by putting into practice four time-out projects, financed by the departments of education and welfare. These are aimed at young people who, as a last resort, have been threatened with exclusion because of their behaviour.
Removal from school is no solution to the problems of such young people, and can often cause a downward spiral whereby they end up receiving an education far below their abilities.
The time-out projects try to meet these objectives through temporary out-of-school tuition and therapeutic guidance over a period ranging from two to 12 weeks.
The methods are diverse. They all involve individual work - such as teaching social skills or therapeutic work - as well as group work - for example, editing a magazine. The basic programme is made to fit the needs of the individual and the group.
The projects can be divided into stages: entry, intake, the programme and after-care. All this happens in collaboration with different partners: school, tutors, parents and social workers.
The supervisors and counsellors of the four projects meet about five times a year to discuss co-operation with parents, registration, the evolution of the goals of the project, after-care and so on.
In addition, a working group of policymakers considers options to make the projects more permanent and structural.
An early, limited evaluation of the time-out projects showed that the objectives outlined can be partly realised. Most of the young people did not return to the same class and school - mainly because of being kept back a year, or refusal by the school or the pupil - but they stayed in the regular education system.
Jersey: Simon Bellwood 'unfairly sacked' inquiry finds
Councils failing to implement government guidance issued in 2002, study says
Lone parents, disabled and drug users face tougher benefits regime
Children's homes and disabled people's services exempt from strike
Government Legislation
17 July 2008
Private Member Bills
17 July 2008
Details of government consultations
11 July 2008