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DfE NNPCF work

DfE commissioning guidance

Academies regulatory and commissioning review

The NNPCF have recently been involved in the development of the DfE Commissioning Guidance in the academies regulatory and commissioning review which is available to read below

Commissioning High-Quality Trusts

The following publication explains how the Department for Education takes decisions about the creation, consolidation and growth of academy trusts

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DfE Minister for Children, Families and Wellbeing NNPCF work

Co-chairs meet the new Minister for Children, Families and Wellbeing



On 31 Aug 2023 we learnt that a new minister for Children, Families and Wellbeing had been appointed, David Johnston OBE.

Co-chairs Tina Emery and Sarah Clarke had an introductory meeting with the minister on 5 September.

The meeting went very well, giving Tina and Sarah a chance to highlight the importance of parent carer forums as well as the value that coproduction brings when working with parent carers who have lived experience.


They spoke about various subjects which included:

  • how vital it is to recognise the value of early intervention and the early identification of needs,
  • that behavioural and uniform policies, and the way they are implemented, often has a disproportionate impact on our children
  • the value of good inclusive school cultures
  • the ordinarily available offers that some schools already implement

The minister then asked our co-chairs to name one change that could make the biggest impact. This was a great opportunity to quote our school attendance case studies, where 81% of respondents had stated that the reason for their children not being able to attend school on a regular basis was, that their child’s needs were not being met. A further 89% of respondents felt if their school had recognised those needs and met them promptly it would have made a huge positive difference to their child’s life.

The meeting ending with an invitation for the new minister to attend a NNPCF steering group meeting, to meet with our parent carer forums from around the country, in their own regions, as well as an open invite to attend our next conference.

We look forward to working with David Johnston OBE, the new Minister for Children, Families and Wellbeing.

Below you will find our introduction letter to the minister , and his reply.

Categories
DfE Minister for Children, Families and Wellbeing SEND AP Implementation Board. SEND Review

Government announces more support for children with SEND

  • Over a thousand new special school places confirmed, as additional seven special free schools to be built
  • Local authorities in every region selected to be at the forefront of delivering transformational reform set out in the Special Educational Needs and Disabilities and Alternative Provision (SEND and AP) Improvement Plan
  • Reforms backed by £70 million to test what works to ensure children and young people get the best possible services

Over a thousand more children and young people with SEND are set to benefit from access to high-quality specialised learning, with seven new special free schools in Cambridgeshire, Kent, Merton and Norfolk selected to be built alongside the existing 83 already committed to opening, located across England from Devon to Darlington.

Once complete, this investment will almost double the number of special free school places available across the country – from around 8,500 to 19,000 – ensuring all children receive a quality education, tailored to their needs.

Today, local authorities across the country have been selected to deliver a ground-breaking new programme to test and refine the reforms to services for young people and families.

Backed by £70 million, the local authorities will help inform the development of new national standards to improve the consistency of provision across the country.  

Each area will also bring together education and health services, as well as parents and families to develop an inclusion plan that sets out how they will deliver local services in a co-ordinated way – for example making sure a child with special educational needs who is behind in reading is quickly assessed and given the right support. This addresses feedback from families that the current system is often fragmented with agencies not working together.  

This follows recent confirmation that high needs funding is increasing by a further £440 million for 24/25, bringing total funding to £10.5 billion – an increase of over 60% since 2019-20.

Minister for Children, Families and Wellbeing, Claire Coutinho said: “Making sure children with special educational needs and disabilities get a superb education is a priority.

Earlier this year our Improvement Plan set out systemic reforms to make sure every child and young person gets consistently high-quality support, no matter where in the country they live. “

Today we’re making sure that those reforms are informed by the experiences of real families, up and down the country, and creating the thousands of new places at specialist schools and in staff training courses that are needed to make sure our plan is a success.”

The Government is also confirming today an expansion in training for early years staff, adding an extra 2,000 training places for early years special educational needs co-ordinators on top of the 5,000 already announced. 

Measures confirmed in the Improvement Plan included:

  • a new leadership level National Professional Qualification for Special Educational Needs Co-ordinators (NPQ for SENCOs), ensuring SENCOs have the training they need to provide the right support to children. The NPQ will replace the NASENCO from September 2024 and will start in Autumn 2024. Further information on the transition to the new NPQ can be found here: Transition to national professional qualification for special educational needs co-ordinators – GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
  • a new approach to AP will focus on preparing children to return to mainstream or prepare for adulthood. AP will act as an intervention within mainstream education, as well as high-quality standalone provision, in an approach that meets children’s needs earlier and helps prevent escalation.
  • an extension until March 2025  to the AP Specialist Taskforces, which work directly with young people in AP to offer intensive support from teams made up of experts, including mental health professionals, family workers, and speech and language therapists, backed by an additional £7 million investment.
  • a doubling of the number of supported internship places by 2025, from around 2,500 to around 5,000, backed with £18 million of funding to help young people make the transition into adulthood.
  • £30 million to go towards developing innovative approaches for short breaks for children, young people and their families, providing crucial respite for families of children with complex needs – the programme funds local areas to test new services including play, sports, arts and independent living activities, allowing parents time to themselves, while their child enjoys learning new skills. 13 local authorities are taking part in the second year of the programme.

 

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Care Quality Commision DfE local area inspections Ofsted

Co-production and SEND Inspections

Messages from the eight Local Area SEND inspection reports published July 2023

We have received feedback regarding the eight area’s who have been recently inspected under the new framework.

The report highlights that co production is crucial and lies at the heart of everything that is going well.

There are two evaluation criteria in the inspection handbook that relate to co-production:

  • Leaders actively engage and work with C&YP and families.
  • Children, young people and their families participate in decision-making about their individual plans and support. This includes access impartial information, advice and support to make informed choices about their future and support to understand rights.

Key messages include:

A strong voice of the children and young people (C&YP) and them being at the heart of decision making is a common characteristic of local areas that have achieved most favourable inspection outcome.

Generally inspection reports have commented positively about co-production at strategic and service levels although there have been a couple of references to engagement with children and young people being in the early stages.

Co-production at all levels.  

Inspectors are looking for the voice of C&YP at all levels

  • Currently, how the voices of children and young people are heard and acted on at a strategic level is in its infancy. Area leaders have supported the development of the Shout Out for SEND (SOS) group, which is made up of a ‘small but mighty’ group of children and young people with SEND. However, their reach and impact are still growing.
  • The views of children and young people, and of parents and carers, are now being captured more systematically as part of the EHC planning and review processes.  C&YP’s voices matter they take part in decision making. Most reported a trusted adult who listens and acts on views.

Co-production and the Local Area’s Leadership

No local area, apart from one,  has this aspect of co-production as an area for improvement with most areas receiving positive comments

  • Co-production with parents and carers is a golden thread that weaves through new initiatives and service redesign. Leaders listen to and value the views of parents, carers, children, and young people. 
  •  The PCF are actively involved with many development projects. Leaders receive regular feedback from parents. They use this effectively when planning and evaluating services.
  • Strengthened work to engage C&YP and families to make improvements. The inclusion the PCF at a strategic level is central. Good evidence of true co-production. Leaders have developed roles for C&YP advocates and mentors for other C&YP to ensure their voices are heard.
  • Area leaders listen to and act on the views of parents and carers. For example, additional provision for young people with SEND was set up within an existing educational setting, following feedback from a parent group. Also, area leaders responded to concerns raised around transport by making relevant changes. Typically, parent groups believe that area leaders listen and respond to their views.
  • Co-production  is a strength. It is embedded in the local culture and is based on a relationship of trust and respect. The voices of parents, carers, C&YP influence strategic development and the commissioning of services. Parent voice is well represented in various panels across the city when considering access to services for individual families. There are many examples of strategic and operational co-production that are working well, for example the Social Communication Resources across primary and secondary school, the school transport policy, and the strategic plan for SEND. All resources that are being developed for the Dynamic Support Register (DSR) have been co-produced.
  • Work between the partnership and the parent carer forum is making a strong contribution to improving the experiences of children and young people with SEND and their families.
  • Careful thought and planning enable children and young people with a vast range of needs to communicate and be involved in service review and transformation. For example, inspectors met a group of young people who influenced the design of a leisure centre to ensure better accessibility and inclusivity

Nottinghamshire’s area for improvement related to the need for leaders to gather a wider range of views of children and young people and their families so that they can use these views to inform their planning for, and evaluation of, SEND services. Inspectors also commented that work to engage C&YP was in its infancy

Co-production and individual plans

Positive examples identified by inspectors of how C&YP and their families are supported to engaged in their individual plans include:  

  • Early help: Highly skilled family support workers know and understand children’s needs well. They act as advocates for C&YP, ensuring that their views inform the development of support plans.
  • Leaders make sure that young people receive effective advice and support as they enter adulthood. Practitioners, including social prescribers, ensure that young people are able to be active members of their community, accessing financial benefits, improving their independence skills and finding suitable accommodation to help them achieve good outcomes
  • The school’s well-being service gives advice to parents, carers and schools about how to meet the mental health needs of children and young people.
  • Young people  generally receive effective careers education information, advice and guidance. This includes useful proactive support for those at risk of being NEET
  • Social workers act as useful advocates to get the children and young people they work with the help and support they need, including at points of transition into adult social care
  • Co-produced direct payment pathway where family support workers help families to manage and review their direct payment package. This means that families receive the right help without the need for social work intervention
  • Area leaders provide parents and carers with useful support and guidance when applying for a personal budget. This works particularly well in the children with disabilities service. However, some parents would value more services to spend their budget on and do not find the process straightforward.
  • Children and young people are supported to share their voices and opinions. Their voices are particularly well reflected across all EHCPs.
  • The Special Educational Needs and Disabilities Information Advice and Support Service, help parents and carers to navigate the local offer and access the right support in a timely way.
  • SENDIASS is highly valued by families. The service helps parents and carers receive useful advice and guidance. This helps families to successfully navigate the SEND system and reduces their anxieties.
  • The SEND Information and Advice Support Service (SENDIASS) provides an effective service supporting children and young people with SEND and their families. SENDIASS practitioners have taken a thoughtful approach to making their service both accessible and impartial. Parents, carers, children and young people do not need to wait for support from the SENDIASS team, as practitioners get in touch straight away.
  • The help and advice provided by SENDIASS is also highly valued.

Area of concern identified by the inspectors related to the provision information to children and young people to help them help make choices include:

  • Insufficient and unclear access to support and guidance and misunderstanding from families and practitioners of how placements in alternative provision are commissioned.
  • Many parents lack confidence in how well their children are being prepared for adult life because they do not know what support is available.
  • Some children in mainstream provision do not receive clear advice to prepare for moving to their next stages of education so they do not always get the support they require in a timely fashion.
  • Many  C&YP are reliant on schools and families for social activities and to make friends. This is because they do not know what is available for them. This can leave some children and young people isolated.
  • Children and young people do not know enough about the clubs and facilities that are available for them to socialise with others out of school and during the school holidays.
  • Practitioners’ knowledge and expertise are insufficient to support and guide C&YP with SEND. A significant consequence of this is that the services of groups such as SENDIASS and PCF are in high demand. Although many highly regard these services, there is a limit to the level of support they can offer.
  • Parents, carers and professionals report problems with communication. Too often, professionals signpost parents and carers to other services. While this is enough for some families, other families struggle while they wait. A significant number of parents and carers who are waiting for their child to be assessed on the neurodevelopmental pathway reported that they are not updated often enough on wait times. This causes increased stress and worry.
  • Leaders do not promote personal health budgets well enough. This reduces the choice for parents and carers when they require bespoke packages of care.

The two recommended areas for improvement related to information and communication that need to be addressed in the local area’s updated strategic plan were:  

  • The local area partnership should make sure that parents and carers and professionals receive clear and reliable information about how to access the range of support and services that are available.
  • Leaders across the partnership should establish effective communication across the partnership to improve the experiences for children and young people with SEND and their families.
Categories
DfE NNPCF work SEND AP Implementation Board. SENDAP

SEND AP Implementation Board

Co-chairs Tina Emery, Mrunal Sisodia, with the incoming co-chair Sarah Clarke, recently met with SEND AP Implementation Board. Which was chaired by Minster Claire Coutinho. This was the first meeting to be held.

The Board will be jointly chaired by the children’s Minster Claire Coutinho and the mental health Minster Maria Caulfield. 

The Board is made up of various experts across the SEND sector to offer support, challenge and solutions to the work set out in the Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND) and Alternative Provision (AP) improvement plan 

The Board will be responsible for challenging the priority areas of work and supporting the rigor and pace that is required for progression of improvement plan.

The priorities of areas of work discussed at the meeting were:

  • The importance of Local Plans and Partnerships which determine the priorities of an area across all sectors to successfully deliver the plans for improvements. The NNPCF raised the need for Parent Carer Forums and the lived experience to be central to these discussions, so that improvements were coproduced.
  • National Standards and their role in reducing post code lotteries across education and health services ensuring consistent high quality support.  The need for a clear understanding of what ‘good’ looked like and importance of that shared national understanding was also discussed.
  • How workforce capacity and capability played a vital role in determining that there is sufficient workforce in the right areas to support change.
  • The standardisation and digitisation of the EHCP process and the requirements required to implement successfully.

National SEND and alternative provision implementation board – GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)

Categories
2023 Conference Contact DfE NHS NNPCF NNPCF conference

NNPCF & Contact joint conference 2023

Our 2022/23 conference this year was a two part event, with a digital offering as well as an in person conference in Bristol.

Face-to-face conference

Our face-to-face conference was held on 28 February 2023 at the Double Tree by Hilton in Bristol City Centre.

The day was jointly organised and facilitated jointly the Contact and NNPCF teams.

We were joined by PCF members from around the country, as well as representatives from the NHS and the DfE.

The conference was livestreamed for the first time and you can watch the sessions below.

Contact’s Carolyn and our co chair Tina, opened the conference with a very warm welcome to our attendees. Amanda Batten gave her last conference speech, as she has now stepped down from her role as Contact’s Chief Executive.

 https://youtu.be/2Ph61WMCdLw.  

You can download the opening presentation here.

Next came an Ofsted SEND inspection framework update from Dr Tina Pagett, HMI for Ofsted.  https://youtu.be/KqKKF14QFeo  

Our co chair Mrunal gave an impassioned address, asking the question ‘What next for SEND?’ highlighting that the time it was taking to put the 2014 SEND reforms into place was equal to an actual childhood.  https://youtu.be/8iQub582AXY  

Download Mrunal’s presentation here.

The Q&A panel, included Alison Ismail, the Director for SEND and Alternative Provision at the DfE, Amanda Allard, the Deputy Director for Health, at the Council for Disabled Children,Tina Pagett, HMI, for further education and skills at Ofsted and Sue Nort from National Health England who answered questions that had been submitted from our PCF members in advance. https://youtu.be/Phc7un-iZQI

The Eva Sharma, from the DfE gave a presentation about the National Standards, something that had been included in the SEND review. This led to a round the table coproduction session with our attendees, who explored what should be included in the national standards in each stage of a child’s development.  https://youtu.be/mwbvhSgwcm8 

Download the DfE coproduction session slides here

Finally we welcomed the minister for Children Families and Wellbeing, Claire Coutinho, who had joined us for the afternoon. She gave an address and hinted about the much anticipated SEND and AP green paper review response. The minister then answered questions from our co chair Tina.  https://youtu.be/10oR7_V8UI8

Virtual conference

Thank you to all those who joined us at our joint virtual conference which took place on January 31, February 1 and February 2.

Please see the links below to recordings of sessions, as well as the resources.

Planning the recovery in children’s community services

The NNPCF has heard throughout the year of the challenges faced by families accessing community based services including SALT, ASD / ADHD services and paediatricians in the wake of the covid 19 pandemic.

NHS England has created a new recovery team to address these issues around children’s services who have agreed to speak to NNPCF membership about what NHS data is telling them and the steps they are exploring to tackle the problems. Included was an opportunity to coproduce the latest thinking on what the model for recovery might look like. Watch the recording session here you can also download the presentation, the Menti survey results and Menti summary from the session.

NNPCF AGM

This session includes:

  • Review the first six months of our operation as a Community Interest Company from October 2021 to March 2022
  • A look at what has happened in the world of SEND since April 2022 and put it into the broader context of political turmoil, cost of living and the NHS.
  • Coproduce our priorities for the coming year 2023-24 that will form the basis of our business plan and longer term strategy.

You can watch the AGM recording here  and download the slides from the presentation too.

IPSEA SEND law

IPSEA, the SEND legal support charity, lead a session that outlines the major pieces of legislation that protect children and young people with SEND including the Children and Families Act, Equalities Act, Chronically Sick and Disabled Persons Act. They cover the tools that families (and forums) have at their disposal to seek redress if they have concerns. IPSEA also cover the services and support that they offer and how forums can seek further help and training.

View the recording of the session along with the presentation and a Q&A document from the session.

Delivering Better Value in SEND (DBV)

This interactive session provided an opportunity for parents and carers to understand the DBV programme, ask questions, and contribute to how it is set up for success. The session explores:

  • What the DBV in SEND programme is and how it sits alongside other DfE activities
  • The progress made and findings to date
  • How to best connect parent-carers into the work of the programme

See the following link to the local authorities participating in DBV – https://nnpcf.org.uk/2022/10/19/dfe-update-delivering-better-value-for-send-and-safety-valve/

You can watch the recording of the session and download the presentation

Developing the Parent Carer Forum handbook with Contact

Last year, Contact asked what forums wanted in the new forum handbook – In this session they share the survey results and discuss how to take things forward to develop a handbook that works for all parent carer forums.

View a recording of the session here.