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The Dynamic Career & Higher Education Navigator (DCHEN)

Guiding Success in Post-16 Pathways

Section 1: Introduction & Purpose

Welcome to The Dynamic Career & Higher Education Navigator (DCHEN). This tool is designed for post-16 educators and support staff to gain insights into a student's literacy profile (ages 16-18, Years 12 & 13) and its impact on advanced academic study or specific vocational demands.

Who is this Navigator Tool For?

This navigator is specifically for Sixth Form Tutors, Higher Education Support Staff, SENCos, Career Advisors, Students (for self-report), and Employers.

What Will This Tool Do?

The DCHEN will help to:

  • Identify dyslexia indicators relevant to A-Levels, vocational qualifications, higher education, or employment.
  • Leverage the student's adult strengths and self-advocacy skills for future success.
  • Facilitate access to appropriate support for advanced study or professional roles.
  • Guide discussions for Disabled Students' Allowance (DSA) applications and workplace adjustments.

Important Information:

It is vital to understand that the DCHEN is a screening tool, not a formal diagnostic assessment for dyslexia or any other learning difficulty. It is designed to inform support and identify the need for further investigation, not to label. However, its findings are crucial for informing applications for DSA and workplace accommodations.

Our Strengths-Based Approach:

We believe every individual has unique strengths and a developmental pathway. The DCHEN focuses on identifying and maximising mature strengths (e.g. independent learning, research skills, complex problem-solving, professional communication) to achieve advanced academic or career goals. This aligns with and is a foundational component of The Dynamic Development Plan.

Let us begin to explore the student's unique potential!

Section 2: Student's Background & Post-16 Profile

This section helps us understand the student's background and current post-16 educational or career context. Please complete all relevant fields or mark 'N/A' (Not Applicable).

Student's Details & Current Pathway

Family History & Prior Learning/Support

Current Academic/Vocational & Independent Study Observations

Section 3: Cognitive & Attainment Indicators (Professional Observations)

Observe the student during structured tasks. Note their performance and any specific patterns of difficulty or strength relevant to post-16 demands.

FOR TEACHER/PRACTITIONER USE ONLY: Administer these tasks and record observations/notes below.

1. Advanced Academic Reading Efficiency & Comprehension

Ask the student to read a short passage from an A-Level textbook or a relevant vocational document. Note accuracy, speed, and then ask comprehension questions requiring critical analysis, synthesis, or evaluation.

"The socio-economic implications of post-industrialisation are multifaceted, encompassing shifts in labour markets, evolving social structures, and the imperative for continuous skill acquisition. Policy responses must therefore be agile, fostering adaptive educational frameworks and robust social safety nets to mitigate transitional disparities."

2. Extended Written Expression & Spelling (Timed Task)

Ask the student to write a short essay paragraph (e.g. 7-10 sentences) on a complex topic from their A-Level or vocational studies. Give a short time limit (e.g. 7-10 minutes). Observe spelling accuracy, grammar, sentence structure, and organisation of arguments under pressure.

Example Topic: "Discuss the implications of globalisation on local economies."

3. Processing Speed & Information Retrieval

Present a timed task requiring quick discrimination of complex visual-verbal information (e.g. quickly identifying specific keywords in a dense academic paragraph, or rapidly sorting complex terms into categories). Note speed and accuracy.

Example: "Find all instances of 'paradigm' and 'correlation' in this paragraph in 45 seconds."

4. Working Memory (Complex Auditory & Visual) - Academic/Vocational Context

Auditory: Read a sequence of complex academic terms or multi-part instructions (e.g. "hypothesis, methodology, conclusion, bibliography"). Ask student to repeat. Visual: Show a complex diagram/blueprint for a short time, then ask detailed questions about its components, relationships, or sequence of operations.

Note any general observations during this section: signs of frustration, fatigue, effectiveness of compensatory strategies, visual tracking, engagement under pressure.

Section 4: Student's Strengths & Learning Preferences

Every student has unique talents! This section helps us celebrate what the student excels at and how they learn best.

(e.g. critical thinking, abstract reasoning, strong verbal fluency, visual-spatial skills for complex systems, creative problem-solving, strategic thinking)

(e.g. independent learning, resilience under pressure, strong self-advocacy, leadership, collaboration, empathy)

(Tick all that apply)

(e.g. advanced computing, complex engineering, scientific research, fine arts, entrepreneurship, specific trades)

Section 5: Academic/Vocational Impact & Self-Perception

This section explores how literacy challenges impact the student's confidence and overall well-being in their post-16 pathway and future aspirations.

(e.g. high stress around deadlines, withdrawal from written tasks, feeling overwhelmed by workload, impact on career aspirations)

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