Implementation of the SEND reforms Progress and challenges

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Implementation of the SEND reforms – Progress and challenges Annual Conference, Birmingham Tuesday 30

Implementation of the SEND reforms – Progress and challenges Annual Conference, Birmingham Tuesday 30 June 2015 André Imich, SEN and Disability Professional Adviser, Df. E

Areas covered § § § § Key features of the reforms Progress with implementation

Areas covered § § § § Key features of the reforms Progress with implementation Local offer Education health and care plans Transition of statements to EHC plans Measuring success - accountability Early National Implementation Issues Actions for special schools

Successful implementation 1 Systems (planning) 2 Engagement (people) 3 The key areas (doing)

Successful implementation 1 Systems (planning) 2 Engagement (people) 3 The key areas (doing)

The new SEN system – Key features 1. Involvement of children, young people and

The new SEN system – Key features 1. Involvement of children, young people and parents 2. All duties apply to all state-funded schools, inc. Academies 7. Offer of a personal budget; more choice and control 6. Statutory protections for 16 -25 s; focus on preparing for adulthood 3. Coordinated assessment; 0 -25 Education, Health and Care Plan 4. LA, health and care services to commission services jointly 5. A clear, transparent local offer of services for all CYP with SEND

SEND Implementation Survey February 2015: Key findings Assessment Compliance: • 93% of LAs -

SEND Implementation Survey February 2015: Key findings Assessment Compliance: • 93% of LAs - extremely or very confident that their EHC pathways comply with the Code. 20 weeks: • 59% of LAs - extremely or very confident about meeting 20 weeks. New assessment requests: • 22% of LAs - same number of new requests in first 6 months of new system compared to a year ago; • 33% of LAs - more and • 45% - fewer. Local Offer: • 100% published – range of quality Year 1 priority transfers: • 40% of LAs - extremely or very confident that those expected to transfer to EHC plans will do so within the required timescale. How well practitioners are ensuring that families are experiencing person-centred review as part of EHC needs assessment pathways: • Extremely well – 36% • Quite well – 57% • Limited progress – 7% School systems – 91% of LAs say most schools have new SEN systems in place. 5

SEN 2 Data (Jan 2015) § 240, 000 have EHC plans or statements; §

SEN 2 Data (Jan 2015) § 240, 000 have EHC plans or statements; § Over 4, 000 children and young people have an EHC plan (1/3 new assessments) § Nos with a statement or EHC plan increased by c. 3, 000. § Significant increase in assessments for under 5 s; § 90% statements completed in time; 65% of new EHC plans were completed in 20 weeks; § 165 of EHC plans included a personal budget.

Purpose of local offer Improve choice and transparency for families Make provision more responsive

Purpose of local offer Improve choice and transparency for families Make provision more responsive to local needs and aspirations Clear and accessible information Transparent about responsibilities and decisions Comprehensive and up-to-date Directly involve CYP with SEND & families in development and review Joint planning with service providers Publish comments and LA’s action plan 7

What the Local Offer is Easily accessible information in one place Includes education, health

What the Local Offer is Easily accessible information in one place Includes education, health and social care services available to support CYP with SEND from birth to 25 Particularly important for those without EHC Plans Variety of formats – interactive website, apps, paper, phone and stands 8

Examples of EHC plans

Examples of EHC plans

A good EHC plan…. § Meets the requirements of the Act, regs and the

A good EHC plan…. § Meets the requirements of the Act, regs and the Code. § Describes positively what children and YP can do § Clear, concise, understandable and accessible § Is co-produced § Tells the child or young person’s story well/ coherently

Outcomes - Three key elements § What the C&YP needs to be able to

Outcomes - Three key elements § What the C&YP needs to be able to do after a given period of time § Personalised § SMART - specific, measurable, achievable, realistic and time related.

“The Golden Thread” – Example I Aspirations Needs Jenny (age She needs 14) wants

“The Golden Thread” – Example I Aspirations Needs Jenny (age She needs 14) wants to to improve get a job in her spoken travel language skills Outcomes Jenny can give directions to another pupil so they can walk to another classroom in the school at least 100 m away, successfully on 2 out of 3 occasions by the end of KS 4. Provision 30 minutes small group (up to 5 students) language development programme, 3 times a week, designed and monitored termly by SALT with reinforcement activities in class. Jenny will be provided with a 2 week work experience in a local travel agency during summer term 2017, organised by head of KS 4 in her school.

“The Golden Thread” – Example II Aspirations Needs Outcomes Provision (At age 8) Bob

“The Golden Thread” – Example II Aspirations Needs Outcomes Provision (At age 8) Bob wants to be better at reading and be able to “read stuff”. Bob needs to improve his phonic skills Bob will be able to read a list of thirty 3 -5 letter words with 2 and 3 consonant combinations, fluently, by the age of 11. A phonics programme, delivered in a small group, 4 times a week, for 30 mins each time. Teacher to co-ordinate, with individual support from a teacher assistant to monitor progress at least every 5 minutes and provide prompts as needed.

It’s an EHC needs assessment For statements, max 16 weeks The LA is responsible

It’s an EHC needs assessment For statements, max 16 weeks The LA is responsible The Transition /Transfer process For LDAs, max 20 weeks Where agreed, can use existing advice No child to lose out Schools play a key role ISs can help families and YP YP with LDA can ask for an assessment Statements by April 18, LDAs by Sept 16

Early National Implementation Issues Ensuring there is genuine, continuing, co-production Moving towards the full

Early National Implementation Issues Ensuring there is genuine, continuing, co-production Moving towards the full vision of the local offer. Leadership and developing the workforce Transition - statements to Education Health Care Plans Ensuring all agencies play their role

Measuring success - accountability • Success measured across 3 broad areas – positive experience

Measuring success - accountability • Success measured across 3 broad areas – positive experience of the SEND system; – improved outcomes; and – effective preparation for adulthood • Combination of (a) local accountability measures, (b) data analysis and (c) independent inspection will show the system is performing. • Key challenge - developing set of key indicators which will enable progress and impact to be monitored at local and national levels. https: //www. gov. uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/416 347/Accountability_Publication. pdf

Accountability model – improved outcomes and experiences for family and CYP. EXTERNAL INSPECTION (Ofsted,

Accountability model – improved outcomes and experiences for family and CYP. EXTERNAL INSPECTION (Ofsted, CQC)

Family experiences of the new system § “I was very impressed with the meeting

Family experiences of the new system § “I was very impressed with the meeting last week, it’s probably the first time I've walked out of a meeting with someone from the LEA and actually felt my child's views were listened to. ” § “We felt very included in the whole process and as if everyone was really interested in the best outcome for (name of child). I particularly appreciated having phone calls and contact with a named person. ” § “We were able to discuss and value the positive side of my son” § “Having opportunity to meet with key people together rather than many separate meetings. Support from parent partnership was immense and school and others worked well together”

The journey towards further improvement. . . … § § § § § Co-production

The journey towards further improvement. . . … § § § § § Co-production – individual and strategic Local offer, including publishing comments Developing post-16 provision Wider school improvement agenda and SEN support Quality assessment leading to quality EHCP Advice, guidance and support Measuring impact/ accountability Workforce development Leadership Feedback, feedback………. . 24

In conclusion……… § Challenges are evident – commitment to finding solutions § Advice, guidance

In conclusion……… § Challenges are evident – commitment to finding solutions § Advice, guidance and support is available and continuing § Need to maintain focus on co-production § Many families already reporting improvements § Development of accountability framework § Evolution not revolution