Learning Disability Today
Blue Sky Offices Shoreham
25 Cecil Pashley Way
Shoreham-by-Sea
West Sussex
BN43 5FF
United Kingdom
T: 01273 434943
Contacts
Alison Bloomer
Managing Editor
[email protected]
[email protected]
Blue Sky Offices Shoreham
25 Cecil Pashley Way
Shoreham-by-Sea
West Sussex
BN43 5FF
United Kingdom
T: 01273 434943
Contacts
Alison Bloomer
Managing Editor
[email protected]
[email protected]
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The government has today unveiled sweeping educational reforms to improve SEND support for children with special educational needs and learning disabilities.
Plans put forward by the government will, it is hoped, address a number of problems, including:
The government plans to:
Children’s minister Sarah Teather, who unveiled the Green Paper, called Support and aspiration: A new approach to Special Educational Needs and disability – A Consultation, said: “We have heard time and time again that parents are frustrated with endless delays to getting the help their child needs, and by being caught in the middle when local services don’t work together.
“Parents and voluntary organisations have given us overwhelming examples where they have felt let down by local services. At the moment there is an appalling situation where public money is being wasted as children are growing out of equipment, like wheelchairs, before they even arrive. The new single assessment process and plan will tackle this issue and mean that parents don’t feel they have to push to get the services they are entitled to.” While the proposals have been broadly welcomed, some have questioned how the proposals will be implemented.
Srabani Sen, chief executive of Contact a Family, said: “Many of the principles such as giving parents more control are to be commended. But there are questions that need to be answered on how these proposals would work in practice. The consultation provides a very useful starting point for discussion. “We welcome, for example, plans to give families greater control and co-ordination of their child’s care through personal budgets. However we need to see if enough funding will be available to families through personal budgets to meet the needs of their child.
“The introduction of a simplified assessment process has the potential to make lives less stressful for families. However the Green Paper is not clear about where responsibility lies to ensure that a joined up package of support is delivered for disabled children and their families, and that those carrying out assessments have the right skills and knowledge.
“Professionals must be made accountable if they do not deliver and there is no clear indication of how this would work in the Green Paper. Our own research What Makes My Family Stronger found that 60% of families have a poor or unsatisfactory experience of being listened to by the professionals involved in their child’s care. “We applaud the government’s continued commitment to funding parent forums which play a vital role in shaping services to meet the needs of families with disabled children.”
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