From the BBC:
“SEND review: Children to
receive earlier support in new government plans”
(Natasha says getting extra
support for her son has been "an impossible battle")
Children with special educational
needs will receive better help at school from an earlier stage under a new
national system, the government says. The Department for Education plans for
England include digitising paperwork to help parents receive extra support for
their children more quickly. It is the result of a delayed review into support
for children with special education needs or disabilities (SEND). Critics say
too little urgency has been shown to address the "broken system". Last
year, 1.4 million pupils in England were identified as having special
educational needs - the proportion has been growing since 2017. Education Secretary
Nadhim Zahawi told BBC News early intervention was a "focus" of the
plans - and would be achieved partly by training 5,000 more early-years
teachers to be SEN co-ordinators (Sencos), who monitor and assess SEN
children's progress. The plans "will give confidence to families across
the country that from very early on in their child's journey through education,
whatever their level of need, their local school will be equipped to offer a
tailored and high-quality level of support", he said. New funding of £70m
would be used to back the proposals, the Department for Education said. But for
some families, the review - announced in 2019 - comes too late.
'It crushes your soul'
Natasha Balashova, from Norwich,
says securing extra support for her son has been "an impossible battle
that crushes your soul and takes all of your energy". Boris, seven, is
autistic and has not been to his mainstream school for a year because he had
too little support, she says. Children who need more help than is available
through SEN support - such as one-to-one teaching or a place in a specialist
school - must have an Education, Health and Care Plan (EHCP) in place. "Because
the system is broken, there are delays at every step of the process," Ms
Balashova told BBC News. While his EHCP was being processed, Boris did not
receive the support he needed. And by the time it was ready to be implemented,
he had become too anxious to go to school. Ms Balashova is
"sceptical" the government's proposals will improve the EHCP process
because "there is no quick fix of this state of shambles - it has to be
reorganised from the top to the bottom".
Geoff Barton, general secretary
of the Association of School and College Leaders trade union, welcomed the
government's focus on early intervention but said it was frustrating the review
had been delayed "and full implementation of the Green Paper is some way
off". "In the meantime, many thousands of children and young people
will continue to pass through a broken system, with schools left to pick up the
pieces without sufficient resources," he added. Paul Whiteman, general
secretary of school leaders' union NAHT, said the Green Paper had some
"sensible" ideas but he was "not convinced" the plans were
ambitious enough to tackle waiting lists for specialist services such as speech
therapy. Labour's shadow education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, said the
plans were "incredibly disappointing" and fell short of the
"transformation" needed to improve SEND support."Warm words on
early intervention are not good enough when affordable early childcare is
unavailable to most parents," she added.
(Nicola Roth's school has been
part of a trial using education and health data to identify children who might
benefit from early support)
But some children are already benefiting from
early-intervention projects. Lilycroft Primary School, in Bradford, has been
part of a trial where experts use data to identify children who might need more
support, at a much earlier stage than usual. Head teacher Nicola Roth told BBC
News it could take six years for a child in Bradford to be diagnosed as
autistic - which can delay the support for which they are eligible. "We
can just get on with treating the child and getting the best education for the
child as soon as possible," she said, adding she hoped every school could
benefit from the same model. Prof Mark Mon-Williams, a director at the Centre
of Applied Education Research, based at Bradford Royal Infirmary, who ran the
trial, said: "All the evidence is that acting early is good across the
board. "That child can then thrive in the educational setting, which means
that we then have less issues to deal with in terms of that child's long-term
physical and mental health."
Other proposals in the SEND
and alternative provision Green Paper include:
publishing local dashboards to
make it clearer to parents who is responsible for what part of the system
launching a national framework
for councils to make it clear what level of support is expected for children
with the greatest additional needs
spending £10m to train more than
200 more educational psychologists, who will graduate in 2026 and can give
advice and input into EHCP assessments and offer wider support.
approving up to 40 new special
and alternative provision free schools
Families are being invited to
share their views on how to shape the new system, in a 13-week public
consultation.
^ Anything that improves the
system and helps people faster is good. I hope this does that. ^
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