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SEND Review Consultation Guide: What to include in your response

ALLFIE’s latest SEND Review campaign briefing includes a useful guide for answering the Government consultation survey.

1. Background

Accessible versions of the green paper:

2. What you can do: Responding to the Government consultation

We need your assistance to help ALLFIE make the strongest case for why and how the SEND system must change, to recognize and realize Disabled children and Young peoples’ rights to inclusive education. The Department for Education (DfE) needs to hear from you about the impact the proposed SEND reforms will have for Disabled children and Young people’s right to inclusive education. We encourage our Members to submit their own response to the Government’s SEND Green Paper consultation survey.

We recognise that answering all 22 questions or selecting which questions you should answer in the SEND Review Green Paper may be a daunting task. We hope we have made this task easier to do by providing a suggested list of questions and areas to cover in your answers. Please feel free to answer one or more questions. If possible, it’s helpful if you can draw upon your personal experience and ideas as a Disabled student/person, parent, education practitioner, or in another professional capacity. As discussed in our members’ briefing for this SEND Review Green Paper, we ask that any responses focus on the following areas:

Question 1: What key factors should be considered when developing national standards to ensure they deliver improved outcomes and experiences for children and young people with SEND and their families? This includes how the standards apply across education, health, and care in a 0-25 system.

Focusing on Chapter 2 on the Green Paper, this question allows you to tell the Department for Education why a list of appropriate placements for disabled children and young people with different needs is wrong and will increase disability discrimination in education. Instead, what is needed are National Inclusive Education standards so that all children and young people can be included within mainstream educational settings. Some suggested areas to cover within your answer are:

  1. Personal experiences of Disabled children and Young people being sent to a specific school or college just because they are said to be good by the local authority.
  2. Any incidences where you believe Disabled learners are being sent to a special school or specialist college on disability-related grounds by the local authority.
  3. What is needed are national inclusive education standards covering all aspects of the SEND framework.
  4. The need for a legal right for all Disabled children and young people to be included within mainstream education settings, as well as the need to end segregated education.
  5. Inclusive education standards need to include a definition of inclusive education practice.

Question 4: What components of the EHCP should we consider reviewing or amending as we move to a standardised and digitised version?

Again, focusing on Chapter 2 of the Green Paper, this question allows you to tell the Department for Education how EHCAs and EHCPs can be improved so that they can be used to support disabled children and young people within mainstream education settings. Some suggested areas to cover within your answer are:

  1. The EHCA and EHCP formats must be accessible and inclusive of Disabled children and young people.
  2. The EHCAs should be carried out independently from the local authority responsible for the funding and arrangement of SEND provision/school placement.
  3. EHCAs and EHCPs must be underpinned by the social model of disability to remove ableist barriers and intersectionality (around your gender, race, etc)
  4. Identify not only the needs, but also the barriers and solutions needed to support the Disabled child/young person within a mainstream education setting.
  5. Cover all aspects of the school/college student experience such as friendships, extra-curricular activities, residential and day trips, and the like.
  6. Clear roles on who is legally responsible for the funding of the provision set out in the plan.

Question 12: What more can be done by employers, providers, and government to ensure that those young people with SEND can access, participate in, and be supported to achieve an apprenticeship, including through access routes like traineeships?

Focusing on Chapter 3 of the Green Paper, this question allows you to tell the Department for Education whether the focus should be on providing inclusive apprenticeships from the outset. The apprenticeship schemes should be flexible enough to accommodate any reasonable adjustments needed in performing the job role and undertaking the course (including curriculum differentiation) and assessment arrangements. Apprenticeships provide more choices and broader opportunities on completion than traineeships and internships. Some suggested areas to cover within your answer are:

  1. Experience and ideas on how to make the apprenticeships more inclusive of Disabled apprentices. Consider work experience, entry requirements, the interview process, and the like.
  2. Experience of internships and traineeships leading to or not leading to apprenticeship placement offers.
  3. Access to mainstream courses which allow Disabled young people to enter higher education, apprenticeships, or other life-long learning.

Question 15: To what extent do you agree or disagree that introducing a bespoke alternative provision performance framework, based on these five outcomes (effective outreach support, improved attendance, reintegration, academic attainment and successful post-16 transitions), will improve the quality of alternative provision?

Focusing on Chapter 4 of the Green Paper, this question allows you to tell the Department for Education that alternative provision such as Pupil Referral Units, Hospital Schools and Alternative Provision schools are just other forms of segregated education where Disabled children and young people leave with poorer outcomes than their non-disabled peers.   Some suggested areas to cover within your answer are:

  1. Impact of being in alternative provision as a result of being moved out of mainstream education for whatever reason.
  2. From your experience, why alternative provision is no different from segregated education.
  3. Rather than having Alternative education, what should schools be expected to do with what kind of support for Disabled children and young people at risk of exclusion?

Question 17: What are the key metrics we should capture and use to measure local and national performance? Please explain why you have selected these.

Relating to Chapter 5 of the Green Paper, this question allows you to tell the Department for Education which key measures should be used to assess the quality of inclusive education provision. Some suggested areas to cover within your answer are:

  1. Policies and procedures are underpinned by the social model of disability and the principles of inclusive education.
  2. Evidence of the inclusivity of lessons, break-times, and extra-curricular and residential/day trips.
  3. Evidence of the quality of relationships between teachers and Disabled students, Disabled and non-disabled students, and between Disabled students themselves.
  4. Evidence of representation of Disabled students in democracy and roles of responsibility (school council, head ** MD pupil).
  5. Evidence of Disabled students’ progress and wellbeing
  6. Evidence of reflecting and learning from experience to create stronger inclusive education practices.

Question 18: How can we best develop a national framework for funding bands and tariffs to achieve our objectives and mitigate unintended consequences and risks?

Again, referring to Chapter 5 of the Green Paper, this question allows you to tell the Department for Education the barriers that funding policies create and how they prevent Disabled students from being supported in mainstream placements. Some suggested areas to cover within your answer are:

Question 22: Is there anything else you would like to say about the proposals in the Green Paper?

This question allows you to tell the Department for Education what key proposals are missing that will support Disabled children and young people’s rights to inclusive education. Some suggested areas to cover with your answer are:

  1. Reconsider the purpose of education, to develop an inclusive society that welcomes all Disabled people.
  2. How the rights of Disabled people are being discarded, particularly those outlined in UNCRPD Article 24.
  3. How there is no definition of inclusive education.
  4. How intersectional experiences are not covered by the paper.
  5. How there is no reference to the implementation of the UNCRPD (on inclusive education) Monitoring Committee’s recommendations
  6. How there is no recognition of increasing respite services is a form of segregated provision that breaks a family setting.
  7. How none of the principles of the social model of disability were included to recognise the removal of disabling barriers
  8. How there is no reference to making inclusive education mandatory part of teacher training
  9. How there is no reference that segregated education needs to end if the Government wants increasing numbers of Disabled children and young people in mainstream education.

More information

ALLFIE’s SEND Review campaign homepage

Inclusion Now 62 | SEND Review supplement 2022

Welcome to Inclusion Now 62 SEND Review supplement- an extra edition of the magazine with news about Special Educational Needs and Disability (SEND) reforms, and the Government’s Green Paper consultation.

Welcome to the 62nd edition of Inclusion Now magazine. Text and audio versions are in the articles below, or you can read it in magazine format on Issuu.

To receive three issues of Inclusion Now a year, on the publication date, you can subscribe here. Subscribing supports our work and helps us plan for the future.

Inclusion Now is produced in collaboration with ALLFIEWorld of Inclusion and Inclusive Solutions

In 2019/2020 a number of highly critical reports were published on the UK Government’s approach to education for Disabled children and Young people, and those with Special Educational Needs (SEN). These highlight the extent to which things have got worse under the Conservative government, as well as due to COVID-19. They include:

  1. The Audit Commission report, ‘Support for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities in England’, published September 2019, stated:

    “Some pupils with SEND are receiving high quality support that meets their needs, whether they attend mainstream schools or special schools. However, “the significant concerns that we have identified indicate that many other pupils are not being supported effectively, and that pupils with SEND who do not have EHC plans are particularly exposed. The system for supporting pupils with SEND is not, on current trends, financially sustainable. Many local authorities are failing to live within their high-needs budgets and meet the demand for support. Pressures – such as incentives for mainstream schools to be less inclusive, increased demand for special school places, growing use of independent schools and reductions in per-pupil funding – are making the system less, rather than more, sustainable. The Department needs to act urgently to secure the improvements in quality and sustainability that are needed to achieve value for money.

  2. The Parliamentary Education Select Committee Report on SEND, published in October 2019.
    In 2014, Parliament legislated with the intention of transforming the educational experiences of children and Young people with special educational needs and disabilities. The report makes clear this has not happened:

    “Let down by failures of implementation, the 2014 reforms have resulted in confusion and at times unlawful practice, bureaucratic nightmares, buck-passing and a lack of accountability, strained resources and adversarial experiences, and ultimately dashed the hopes of many… Implementation has been badly hampered by poor administration and a challenging funding environment in which local authorities and schools have lacked the ability to make transformative change.” (Page 3)

    The Select Committee argues for:
    – More rigorous inspections and a direct route to enable parents to contact Ministers
    – An easing of restrictions on local authorities’ abilities to establish special schools and resource bases
    – Much greater opportunity for Young Disabled people, such as supported internships and apprenticeships

  3. An article in SEN Jungle in September 2019 warned a further SEND Review risked kicking the issue into the long grass:“Ministers know that the reforms haven’t worked as intended in many areas, and that children with all types of needs are losing out on an education, with long-term consequences for their wellbeing and life-chances. They know that families are struggling and having services withdrawn; they know that more than 8,000 children with SEND have no school place; they know that requests for children to have their needs assessed are routinely refused; they know that local authorities find endless inventive and unlawful ways to put up barriers to children receiving support; and they certainly know that education, health and social care services often simply fail to work together in any meaningful way.”

Lack of Action and COVID-19

Since these publications, there has been no review published. The COVID-19 pandemic has massively impacted on all children’s learning, but especially Disabled children and Young people. COVID-19 has led to a worsened mental state for a majority of Disabled children, according to a survey of the Disabled Children’s Partnership in March 2021, which found that 29% of Disabled children were shielding, and 54% of parents (of 507 responders) felt that their Disabled child had lost confidence over the previous 12 months. This included life skills, such as being out and about (53%), communicating with others (49%), interaction with strangers (47%) and familiar people (38%).

The government has talked about ‘catch-up’ but, as we can see from the reports above, the system was not working well for the majority of Disabled children and their parents before lockdown. Now the review, when it comes in late spring, will need to address building back better for the whole SEND system.

Funding

The SEND Review appears to be led by the HM Treasury looking for quick wins to claw back money, rather than providing long-term solutions to the chronic under funding of SEND. There are now 390,109 pupils and students with an Education Health and Care Plan (EHCP), (an increase of 10% on 2019 and 62% on 2015), far more than anyone anticipated. Because the system cannot cope with the increased number of pupils with EHCPs, greater numbers are being educated in inappropriate settings.

In the past year there has been a 15% rise in the number of pupils with EHCPs attending independent schools, which are not independent special schools. National Education Union analysis indicates that, in order to address the shortfalls, the ‘High Needs Block’ should be £2.1 billion a year higher (assuming the 2020/21 number of EHCPs were funded at the 2015/16 rate). The government has acknowledged the issue and increased funding, (from £350 million for 2019-20, £780 million for 2020-21, to the announced £730m for 2021-22). But this isn’t enough, given the scale of need. The government needs to increase funding in the planned Comprehensive Spending Review for 2023-24. The COVID-19 pandemic has worsened the financial situation for many schools, who have incurred additional costs. The failure to keep up in real expenditure terms is putting increasing pressure on school budgets (non-ring-fenced), leading to widespread cuts in vital inclusion support, and subsequently impacting the 1.1 million Disabled students on SEND school support.

The NEU Conference at Easter 2021 voted strongly for policies supporting inclusive education, including restoring funding, and was a great day for the NEU, Disabled people, parents of Disabled students and education in general, to achieve unity on such a wide-ranging motion. It highlighted how a range of government policies on curriculum, assessment, privatisation, real-term funding cuts, disproportionate exclusion rates, and failure to implement disability equality duties under the Equalities Act, has meant Disabled children and Young people have been let down by the mainstream school system. When combined with other intersectional identities, for instance class and gender, these outcomes have led to multiple failures. Meanwhile, the growth in local authorities (LAs) placing Disabled children in expensive independent schools is causing a great financial strain on LA budgets. The Conference agreed to, “build a widespread campaign for better treatment of Disabled staff and students and to achieve a well-resourced mainstream inclusive education system, sufficiently funded with trained staff, where all can thrive.”

Demands for when the SEND Review goes out to consultation

We know the money and solutions exist. This is a political issue and we have set out the following demands for the UK Government to implement in the SEND Review:

  1. Full government funding: Meet the growth in students with SEND on EHC Plans and school support – ring fenced so these students benefit directly from the current notional £6000.
  2. Develop government policies in line with Article 24 of UN-CRPD: Explicitly support mainstream schools in developing inclusive education instead of omitting it from policy.
  3. Stop building free special schools: An injection of resources to develop and increase mainstream provision to halt the large increase in placements in special schools, phasing out the use of expensive independent special schools by LAs.
  4. Improve training on SEND and inclusion: Initial and continuing professional development with mandatory in-service whole staff training and disability equality and human rights training for all.
  5. Reform the Curriculum and Assessment system: Build a flexible, child friendly system, including (new) non-exam-based accreditation, including creative, vocational, interpersonal and social skills, and moderated teacher assessments, which have worked during lockdown.
  6. End exclusions and ban zero tolerance behaviour policies (for instance, Behaviour Hubs): Empower Disabled students, end disablist bullying and introduce/enhance peer support/collaboration and buddy systems.
  7. Fully implement the School Access Planning Duty within 5 years, by which time all schools must be accessible.
  8. Empower all Disabled children and parents to know and exercise their rights to fully resourced inclusive education, requiring an inclusive ethos and strong person-centred approach.
  9. Government policy to create a more relaxed and stress-free environment in schools: Including amental health counsellor in every school and increased funding for CAMHS.
  10. Reasonable Adjustments: Government to enforce a public duty to Disability Equality and fully implement Reasonable Adjustments throughout the education system.

To achieve the above demands and reorient the English education SEND system toward inclusion, parents, teachers, school students, trade unions and the community need to work in solidarity over the coming months. Please get involved and do all you can to spread these ideas.

World of Inclusion

In September 2019 the Government announced a major review into the Children and Families Act – the legal framework for children and young people with special educational needs. This was in response to the various investigations into the systematic failures of the implementation of people with learning difficulties.

This review has been on-going without a publication date because of the Covid-19 pandemic. We will keep you informed of any updates.

Alliance for Inclusive Education’s submission to the Government’s SEND Review

April 2020

Alliance for Inclusive Education (ALLFIE) is the only national organisation led by disabled people working on educational issues and, in particular, working to promote the rights of disabled students (including those with SEND) to be included in mainstream education. Inclusive education benefits everyone; it is only through disabled and non-disabled people playing, learning, working, growing up together, and establishing relationships that we will achieve an inclusive society that welcomes all.

SEND Language

ALLFIE uses the term ‘disabled children and young people’ because many of them will fall under the definition of disabled persons in the Equality Act 2010.[1]

Special Schools

‘Special school’ is an umbrella term used to include alternative provision, pupil referral units and secure schools where the majority of their pupil intake are those with either diagnosed or undiagnosed disabilities.

SEND Review

ALLFIE welcomes the SEND review of the actual operation of the Children and Families Act 2014 (CFA). Our submission will use the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD) Independent Monitoring Committee’s concluding observations and recommendations to review the progress of SEND reforms, including the correct balance between inclusive mainstream and specialist places, better assistance for parents in making decisions around support for their child, making sure support in different local areas is consistent, joining up health, care, and education services across the country, and ensuring that public money is spent in a sustainable manner, placing a premium on securing high quality outcomes for disabled children and young people.

The UNCRPD Monitoring Committee expressed concern at:

UNCRPD Monitoring Committee’s first observation is the increasing number of children with disabilities in segregated education environments

The Department for Education datasets consist of numbers and percentages of disabled pupils with and without an Education, Health and Care Plan (EHCP) being educated in different educational settings. Between 2010 and 2018, the percentage of children in England with an EHCP attending maintained special schools increased from 38.2 per cent to 44.8 per cent, while those attending state-funded ‘mainstream’ secondary schools declined from 28.8 per cent to 20.9 per cent.[2] These figures do not include disabled pupils in home education, residential special schools, and specialist psychiatric inpatient units. Additionally, the numbers do not include disabled children placed in segregated settings whilst being educated in mainstream schools. Thus, the statistics severely underestimate the true extent of segregated education experienced by disabled pupils within the UK.

The Department for Education’s statistics reported the following: pupils with SEN support had the highest permanent exclusion rate and were almost seven times more likely to receive a permanent exclusion than pupils with no SEN. Moreover, pupils with an EHCP had the highest fixed period exclusion rate and were almost six times more likely to receive a fixed period exclusion than pupils with no SEN. Children with SEN accounted for almost half of all permanent and fixed period exclusions.2

UNCRPD Monitoring Committee’s second observation is the persistence of a dual education system that segregates children with disabilities in special schools, including segregation based on parental choice.

The CFA’s presumption of mainstream education should not exclude any group of disabled children based on their impairments or health conditions. However, the Academies Act states that schools must admit pupils from a broad rather than a full range of abilities.[3] As a result, the Academies Act has encouraged disability discrimination in schools as part of the SEND reforms; this parent explains:

“The CFA supports parents’ right to choose a mainstream education but it doesn’t say anything about what to do when mainstream schools show little or no interest in educating our children. Is it any wonder, then, that the number of children with severe learning disability[ies] educated in special schools has increased?” (ALLFIE Case Study 2018)

With more maintained nursery schools shutting down or having reduced funding, councils are reporting that head teachers are reducing their intake of disabled pupils[1] or closing resource bases.

“The majority of headteachers said that, if they did manage to stay open, this would only be by accepting fewer children with SEND, or significantly reducing the support available for these children.”[4]

“Miles was settled into a good mainstream school with a well-resourced impaired hearing unit. After the school’s unit closed down as a result of cuts, the parents had to move him three more times from one school to another before settling for a residential special school for deaf children.[5]

The Local Government Association has warned the government that:

“We are concerned that if councils do not receive sufficient funding to cover [the high] cost [of] SEND, they will not have the resources to allocate extra funds to highly inclusive schools above the national SEN budget. The concern is that unless funding reflects needs, mainstream schools may be reluctant to accept or keep pupils with SEND because they cannot afford to subsidise the provision from their own budgets.”[6]

Despite the Schools Admissions Code being updated as a result of the SEND reforms prohibiting state-funded schools from discriminating on the grounds of disability, there has been a steady decline of disabled pupils placed in all forms of mainstream schools.[7]

The SEND reforms are not only adversely affected by individual school autonomy but also by local authorities’ strategic role in championing inclusive education practice. A local area approach allows authorities to use their knowledge about disabled pupils to plan, coordinate, fund, and monitor school admissions and their SEND provision in their own educational settings. As a result, disabled pupils do not receive specialist support from experienced practitioners employed by the local authority for mainstream schools[8] (Save Our Schools Campaign conference, 2018).

“I lost the local authority’s learning support assistant who specialises in working with pupils with dyslexia.”

Cuts are not limited to SEN; health and social care provision is also being heavily cut by budgetary reforms. Mainstream Schools are unable to access mental health services, physiotherapy, speech and language therapy, and occupational therapy. For many disabled pupils requiring coordinated education, health and care services, parents have a fight on their hands to secure such provision within mainstream educational settings, as this parent has experienced with his son.

“Around forty mainstream schools were contacted about a place for Finn and all except one refused. The local authority did not support our preference for Finn to attend a mainstream school, claiming it wasn’t suitable and that children like Finn do better in a special school.”[9]

Inadequate funding for coordinated education, health, and care services in local areas has meant that local authorities are being forced into commissioning expensive independent special school placements.5 Additionally, 6,000 disabled pupils/students are being educated in 334 residential special schools and colleges in the state, non-maintained, and independent sectors; these residential placements cost an estimated £500m per annum, or £88.333 per pupil.5

“Families were often forced to make difficult choices, in some instances be apart so that they could receive all the support they needed.”

Individual councils such as Hertfordshire, Swindon, and Waltham Forest are paying over £100,000 per pupil attending an independent special school placement.[2] We have been told by parents that an independent residential special school placement can cost up to £250,000 per pupil placement.5 As a result of the SEND reforms, local authorities are no longer adopting a proactive role, but are instead reacting on a case-by-case basis where individual disabled children’s needs cannot be met locally and are therefore required by SEND to pay for more expensive segregated education provision.

The priority of education funding is driving children into segregated education; during 2017, the Government created 1,600 new special free school places across 19 local authorities to deal with the predicted growth of disabled pupils. Bradford and Newham are planning to create more special school placements whilst reducing the availability of mainstream school provision.[10]

Currently, a dual education system is creating bias towards the funding of segregated education whilst reducing resources for mainstream education. In 2019, the National Audit Office observed

“Funding pressures limiting mainstream schools’ capacity to support pupils with high needs effectively… Pressures – such as incentives for mainstream schools to be less inclusive, increased demand for special school places.”[11]

The majority of mainstream and segregated education provision has reported insufficient funding to fully cover the cost of SEND provision required for all their disabled students. On a broader note, the National Audit Office also concluded that a dual education system is not sustainable as all types of schools are failing to secure sufficient funding to provide high quality SEND provision for their pupils.

The Department for Education’s desire to achieve the correct balance between state-funded inclusive mainstream and specialist places cannot be achieved. Disabled pupils/students do not consistently receive high quality support in either mainstream or segregated education settings and therefore business as usual is not affordable. The National Audit Office concludes that having a dual education system is no longer sustainable. The only way forward is to heavily financially invest in the UK mainstream education system.

UNCRPD Monitoring Committee’s third observation is the fact that the education system is not equipped to respond to the requirements for high-quality inclusive education, particularly reports of school authorities refusing to enrol a student with disabilities who is deemed to be “disruptive to other classmates”

UNCRPD Article 24 and Comment 4 sets out unequivocally that every disabled pupil/student has a right to mainstream education. UNCRPD Article 24 requires the Government to have legal, financial, management, and monitoring systems in place that uphold disabled students’ right to mainstream education.

The CFA is a vital piece of legislation in that, for the first time, there was a presumption of mainstream education for SEN children and young people. Their right to education, health, and social care provision in various school, educational, and training settings were brought together in one statute. However, in practice, the Act has often been ineffective in achieving the stated aim of promoting the presumption of mainstream education for all disabled students; this is because the Act fails to provide a strong framework of inclusive principles within the meaning of the presumption of mainstream education which can also be used to effectively guide education legislation. Currently, there is no legal definition on what constitutes the presumption of mainstream education. Furthermore, the Act allows for students to be placed in segregated educational provision against the wishes of the child and their family.

Disabled students and their parents can lose their right to mainstream education if they request an EHCP. Clause 35 of the CFA states that local authorities are not required to place a child in a mainstream school if it is incompatible with the wishes of the child’s parent or the young person, or the “efficient education of other pupils”. A case worker for the Communities Empowerment Network explains that having an EHCP would mean that if this child started school today, he would be forced down the segregated education route:

“S is an increasingly rare breed – as a young man with an EHCP requiring a flexible and bespoke approach to his education you would expect now to find him in the special school enclosure as most mainstream schools and academies are shutting their gates at admission stage or excluding students with significant needs once they are in school, often using unlawful and underhand routes.”9

Clause 35 of the CFA allows local authorities to place disabled students with an EHCP in a special school if no reasonable steps can be taken to remove their incompatibility with the “efficient education of other pupils”. Education caseworkers for various organisations have reported a steady increase in disabled pupils being rejected by mainstream schools and declining support from local authorities. Too often this test is a theoretical one based on prejudice, as illustrated by the parents of two disabled children with significant impairments in separate London boroughs:

“The Council is not catering to all children; for example, there are currently no options for children with severe learning disabilities in mainstream secondary schools in the borough.” (ALLFIE case study 2018)

The “inefficient education of other children” caveat allows the same disabled children to be treated differently by different schools and local authorities and is informed, in ALLFIE’s opinion, by prejudice and is a source of social injustice.

“A parent of a disabled son found that inclusion in a mainstream school was possible within the borough the family was living in but not the one they were moving to.”9

The Joint Committee on Human Rights (JCHR) highlighted the concerns they had when the Inclusive Schooling guidance accompanying the Special Educational Needs and Disability Act 2001 and the Education Act 1996 was not replaced with any specific guidance under the CFA, which would have set out the principles of inclusive education and what is expected from them in terms of taking reasonable steps to remove the incompatibility with the “efficient education of others” for local authorities and schools. This point supports ALLFIE’s argument that, without guidance, it will be for individual local authorities, schools and Special Educational Needs & Disability Tribunals to decide for themselves on a case-by-case basis whether the child will be allowed to be educated in mainstream schools. The JCHR expressed the view that the uncertainty around the implementation of the “efficient education” clause should be removed to achieve compliance with Article 24 of the UNCRPD.

A key message from the UNCRPD’s Monitoring Committee is that inclusion is not simply about disabled pupils/students’ attendance at a mainstream school or further education college; their guidance in Comment 4 clearly specifies that segregation occurs when disabled pupils/students’ education is provided in separate environments, such as SEN units and segregated courses designed or used to respond to particular or various impairments, in isolation from their non-disabled peers whilst enrolled at a mainstream school or college. Disappointingly, the CFA does not comply with Article 24 standards because the presumption of mainstream education only covers disabled pupils/students’ right to get through the door of a mainstream school or college.

Clause 35 of the CFA sets out the duty for schools to arrange SEN provision in a manner that will promote the child’s engagement in mainstream activities such as lessons. However, schools can rely on the exemptions of Clause 35 to segregate disabled children and students as the presumption of mainstream education clause does not entitle them to anything, as this parent explains:

“The removal of children from subjects is a bespoke package that the school have for children they do not think will pass GCSE. These assessments are all done in the first term of year 7 and are never done again. This option is designed for the SEN children of the school, none of whom get any reasonable adjustment support. My son was taken to a classroom they called learning support…”9

Segregation is endemic in the further education sector, as we found from freedom of information requests made to London further education colleges in 2016, two years after the implementation of the CFA. The overwhelming majority of disabled students with learning difficulties were placed on preparation for independent living and employment courses.

The failing of having inclusive education principles set out in the presumption of mainstream education has meant nothing more than expecting disabled students to fit into the education structures designed both by and for non-disabled people.

In the Education Act 2002, Section 52(1) allows head teachers to exclude a pupil due to a single serious breach or persistent breaches of the school’s behaviour policy that would seriously harm the education or welfare of the pupil or others in the school. Many school behaviour policies take a zero-tolerance approach, with children expected to behave in a prescribed manner in an environment which does not cater for disabled children. For example, one couple claimed that the school discriminated against their son Hayden by failing to make disability-related reasonable adjustments under the Equality Act 2010:

“His breaches of the rules seem fairly minor but there was an accumulative effect – wearing socks that were the wrong colour, eating food in an area of the school where it was banned and ‘gross defiance’ against staff… In the end he was excluded seven times in total, on the final occasion for five days…. After a two-day hearing, a judgment issued last month criticised the school for applying its behaviour policy rigidly and failing to make reasonable adjustments for Hayden because of his disability.”[12]

The presumption of mainstream education clause in the CFA does not sufficiently protect disabled students’ right to mainstream education. Whilst withdrawing the Inclusive Schooling Guidance and the “incompatibility of efficient education of other pupils” has undermined the practical implementation of the presumption of mainstream education in the CFA, other educational legislative changes and policies cannot be ignored. Some examples are:

Whilst the SEND review is centred around the SEND reforms, this cannot be done without examining how mainstream education legislation and policies are undermining the core principle of the presumption of mainstream education under CFA Clause 35 for disabled students.

The greatest source of social injustice is that disabled children do not have an unqualified right to mainstream education. Disabled students are the only group of people who can be segregated and excluded because of their “protected” characteristic, as defined by the Equality Act 2010, which UNCRPD’s Monitoring Committee said is a breach of UNCRPD Article 24 standards.

The Department for Education wants to better help parents to make decisions about the kind of support their children require when tied to a specific type of schooling and improve coordinated education, health, and care services; parents wanting such services for their children will risk losing their right to a mainstream school placement whilst engaging with the EHCP system. This is because local authorities can place disabled pupils into segregated education if specific conditions are met. Parents are often forced to weigh up a mainstream school’s offering and the education, health, and care support available in special schools.

UNCRPD Monitoring Committee’s fourth observation is the fact that the education and training of teachers in inclusion competences does not reflect the requirements of inclusive education.

In the UK, there is no requirement for school leaders (i.e. governors and head teachers, SENCO) or teaching staff to have undergone any specific inclusive education training or have prior experience of working in inclusive educational and childcare settings as part of the NQHT, PGCSE Qualified Teacher Status (QTS), and other qualifications. School trainees rated SEN training as one of the poorest aspects of their courses, as this trainee teacher reported:

“The thing that has let me down most with the training was not knowing enough about intervention strategies and dealing with SEN. We had three major sessions at college but it wasn’t practical enough in helping you deal with six SEN children with very different needs in a class of 29 with very little TA support!”[13]

What was shocking is that some trainee teachers did not expect to be teaching disabled pupils in mainstream education settings.

“One afternoon per week at a special needs school; excessive as most had no intention of teaching SEN.” (SCITT School-centred Initial Teacher Training], postgraduate)[3].

With a shrinking qualified workforce, there are insufficient resources to develop inclusive educational practices. Approximately three quarters of SENCOs stated that they do not have enough time to ensure that pupils needing SEN or EHCP-related support are able to access the provisions that they need, or that their workload requires working beyond contractual hours. As a result, learning support assistants, teaching assistants, and other support staff are increasingly being expected to undertake tasks such as curricula, lesson planning, moment-to-moment teaching, and learning decisions that should be provided by qualified teachers.[14]

Many of the recent SEND resources are impairment-specific and include suggested interventions underpinned by the medical model of disability, reinforcing the view that children cannot fit into mainstream educational settings. This is at a time when there has been a steady decline in up-to-date resources around the promotion of inclusive education. The recent SEND commissioned resources have not updated resources such as the Implementing Reasonable Adjustments in Schools pack.[15]

The Department for Education wants to align incentives and accountability for schools, colleges, and local authorities to make sure they provide the best possible support for children and young people with SEND. Only the right people with the right kind of training and experience can provide the best possible support for their pupils. Schools are relying upon teaching and learning support assistants, who are performing tasks that ought to be done by qualified practitioners such as speech and language therapists, occupational therapists, physiotherapists, and qualified teachers. Further, teachers can only deliver the best possible support in mainstream educational settings if they are provided with inclusive education training.

The incentives and accountability of schools and colleges must centre on the quality of their inclusive education practice against appropriate measures and indicators that promote inclusion. The Department for Education performance indicators must therefore focus on inclusivity instead of academic attainments.

What needs to be done?

Whilst the UNCRPD’s Monitoring Committee was highly critical of the Government’s SEND reforms, they nevertheless provided recommendations that should be implemented to ensure full compliance with securing disabled people’s human right to inclusive education, as outlined in Article 24, Comment 4 requirements. Indeed, the UNCRPD’s Monitoring Committee made several strong recommendations on what the SEND Review could start to implement.

“Provide sufficient, relevant data on the number of students both in inclusive and segregated education, disaggregated by impairment, age, sex and ethnic background, and on the outcome of the education, reflecting the capabilities of the students.”[16]

ALLFIE recommends that the Government commissions independent qualitative research into the drivers behind the increasing rates and range of segregated education provision and the impact it has upon disabled student’s academic, emotional, and social outcomes. The aim is for the Government to have a full understanding that parental choice is meaningless given that there is no alternative, but also to identify the strategic changes required to have a fully inclusive education system that works for all.

ALLFIE’s inclusive education manifesto consisting of six demands would move us from the present situation to a fully inclusive education system, as recommended by UNCRPD’s Monitoring Committee. We believe disabled people have the right to:

For a full copy of our manifesto, click here.

As the UNCRPD Monitoring Committee has recommended, the Government should work with organisations of disabled people like ALLFIE to develop a fully inclusive education system. We would like to work with the Government to fulfil its Article 24 obligations around inclusive education.

For more information, contact: simone.aspis@allfie.org.uk 

Footnotes

[2] Staufenberg J. (2017). “Private Special School Places Cost £480 million per year”. https://schoolsweek.co.uk/private-special-school-places-cost-480-million-per-year/

[3] National College For Teaching and Leadership.(2014).”Newly Qualified Teachers Annual Survey”

References

[1] Equality Act. (2010). Retrieved from https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2010/15/contents

[2] Department for Education. (2018). Special educational needs in England: January 2018. Retrieved from https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/729208/SEN_2018_Text.pdf

[3] Academies Act. (2010). Retrieved from http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2010/32/contents

[4] London Councils. (2019). Financial situation. Retrieved from https://www.londoncouncils.gov.uk/our-key-themes/children-and-young-people/education-and-school-places/hidden-value-report-exploring-2

[5] The Alliance for Inclusive Education. (2017). Submission to the Lenehan Review of Residential Special Schools and Colleges. Retrieved from https://www.allfie.org.uk/news/briefings/submission-lenehan-review-residential-special-schools-colleges/

[6] Local Government Association. (2017). Local Government Association response to the Department for Education’s stage two consultation on high needs funding formula and other reforms. Retrieved from https://www.local.gov.uk/sites/default/files/documents/Stage%202%20LGA%20High%20Needs%20repsonse%20FINAL.pdf

[7] Hutchings, M. (2015). The impact of accountability measures on children and young people. London, England: National Education Union. Retrieved from https://www.teachers.org.uk/files/exam-factories.pdf

[8] Send Gateway. (2018). SEN Policy Research Forum paper. Retrieved from https://www.sendgateway.org.uk/resources.sen-policy-research-forum-paper.html

[9] The Alliance for Inclusive Education. (2018). Submission to the Education Select Committee Special Educational Needs and Disabilities Inquiry. Retrieved from https://www.allfie.org.uk/news/briefings/submission-education-select-committee-special-educational-needs-disabilities-inquiry-june-14-2018/

[10] Department for Education. (2017). Applications open to create 1,600 new special free school places. Retrieved from https://www.gov.uk/government/news/applications-open-to-create-1600-new-special-free-school-places

[11] National Audit Office. (2019). Support for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities in England. Retrieved from https://www.nao.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Support-for-pupils-with-special-education-needs.pdf

[12] Weale, S. (2018, March 20). ‘It was heartbreaking’: Family wins tribunal after special needs pupil excluded. The Guardian. Retrieved from https://www.theguardian.com/education/2018/mar/20/family-wins-tribunal-special-needs

[13] National College for Teaching and Leadership (2014) Newly Qualified Teachers: Annual Survey 2014 Research report https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/430783/Newly-Qualified-Teachers-Annual-Survey_2014.pdf

[14] UCL. (2017). Education of secondary pupils with special needs too dependent on teaching assistants. Retrieved from https://www.ucl.ac.uk/ioe/news/2017/jun/education-secondary-pupils-special-needs-too-dependent-teaching-assistants

[15] World of Inclusion. (2014). The Reasonable Adjustment Project. Retrieved from http://worldofinclusion.com/res/rap/RAP_management.doc

[16] The Alliance for Inclusive Education. (2017). November 2017 Briefing: The UN. Retrieved from https://www.allfie.org.uk/news/briefing/november-briefing/

Supported by

ALLFIE’s campaign for Inclusive Education as a human right is backed by funders and donors who reject the systemic segregation of Disabled people from society.