SEND Co-ordinator - Miss Ashcroft
Responsible for:
Ensuring that you are:
Liaising with all the other people who may be coming into school to help support your child's learning e.g. Speech and Language Therapy, Educational Psychology etc.
Updating the school's SEND register (a system for ensuring all the SEND needs of pupils in this school are known) and making sure that there are excellent records of your child's progress and needs.
Providing specialist support for teachers and support staff in the school so they can help children with SEND in the school achieve the best progress possible.
Class teacher
Responsible for:
Headteacher - Mrs Roberts
Responsible for:
SEN Governor
Responsible for:
Making sure that the necessary support is made for any child who attends the school who has SEND.
The four areas that can affect a child's ability to learn are categorised as:
Some children may enter school with a complex physical or medical need identified by the local authority. These children will have an Education Health Care Plan.
For all children we use our ongoing assessment for learning strategies and termly pupil progress meetings to discuss and monitor each individual pupil's progress and attainment.
All assessments seek to identify pupils making less than expected progress given their age and individual circumstances. This can be characterised by progress which:
Children will be given support according to their need. It will be characterised by some children needing 'some support'; 'lots of support': or 'extensive support'. Parents/ carers will be informed about any support your child receives (this will be at parents evening)
All support will follow a cycle of Assess-Plan-Do-Review and will provide information about your child and their barriers to learning. Where interventions or booster sessions have not had significant impact, children may require ongoing level of 'some support' or to progress onto 'lots of' or 'extensive support'. This will be decided upon by using assessments will be made to decipher, what are the barriers to learning and agencies may be called upon.
A Individual Education Plan (IEP) will be completed with the SENCo, class teacher and parent/carer, to set SMART targets to enable an evaluation of your child's needs and the best support needed. It is important that you attend meetings around the IEP as your input is valuable on meeting the needs of the child.
At Holy Family, social and emotional mental health (SEMH) is extremely important for all our children. Concerns from teachers and / or parents related to SEMH needs, can be raised with the class teacher, SENCo or the Headteacher. Some children may access the learning mentor for sessions to work on self-esteem, friendships, anger management and attachment issues. Referrals for counselling and other agency support can be accessed for those with severe mental health issues.
Children will be identified as having a SEN using the Code of Practice (2014), where their learning difficulty or disability is severe and calls for special educational provision, namely provision different from or additional to that normally available to pupils of the same age, requiring 'lots of support'. This will mean that your child is placed on the schools SEN register.
Teachers and staff can raise concerns at any point with the schools SENCo Miss Ashcroft
We have a policy of striving towards identifying learning difficulties as early as possible.
An Education Health Care Plan is written by the authority when a request is made. A request must show that your child is in need of 'extensive support' (above that which available in the school funds), in order to access the curriculum and meet their potential. Usually your child will also need specialist support in school from a professional outside the school. This may be from:
For your child this would mean:
This type of support is available for children whose learning needs are:
Pupils with medical needs -
How accessible is the school environment?-
Including all children in activities outside the classroom, including school trips.
Transition to a new class or key stage within school:
Transition between Year 6 and Year 7
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