Categories
Consultation NNPCF The Advanced British Standard

The Advanced British Standard

There has been a proposal to change A levels and T levels.

Recently, our cochair’s, accompanied by one of our London reps, went to see what it was all about at two Department for Education engagement events.

The Advanced British Standard is a new framework, expected to be introduced in about 10 years’ time, to bring together technical and academic routes into a single framework, replacing current A levels and T Levels.

The new framework intends to:

  • increase the number of taught hours for all students (minimum 1,475 hours over two years)
  • require students to study Maths and English to the age of 18.
  • offer greater breadth, increasing the average number of subjects students take post 16 (usually a minimum of 5), with students able to choose a combination of bigger and smaller subjects, called ‘majors’ and ‘minors.’

£600 million will be invested over the next two years to support schools and colleges in laying the groundwork for delivering the Advanced British Standard.

The engagement sessions were held with a wide range of stakeholder groups; from industry, further education settings, to those who run apprenticeships and more. There were lots of discussions in the rooms, and a keen interest to ensure that any new system is fit for purpose and will meet the needs of young people in 2034. Unfortunately, there was very little focus on SEND in the presentations, which we challenged, along with how inclusive and accessible these changes were going to be for all SEND pupils. We also raised concerns around training for new teachers/staff, delivery, including space for all students to be in college 4 days a week, with some work around infrastructure being promised pre-release of this programme.

You can find out more on the government website:

The Advanced British Standard: Everything you need to know – The Education Hub (blog.gov.uk)

Please share this information with your parent carers and encourage everyone to take part in the following consultation:

A world-class education system: The Advanced British Standard consultation – Department for Education – Citizen Space

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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.

 

Categories
Consultation Government

Consultation update

Our consultation update includes the current live government consultations, which can be completed by forums or as an individual parent carer.

More details on each consultation and parliamentary inquiry can be found below:

Working Together to Safeguard Children is the multi-agency statutory guidance that sets out expectations for the system that provides help, support and protection for children and their families.

It applies at every level from senior leaders to those in direct practice with families, and across all agencies and organisations that come into contact with children. It gives practitioners clarity about what is required of them individually and how they need to work in partnership with each other to deliver effective services.

Changes are being proposed to the section on the assessment of disabled children.

Working together to safeguard children: changes to statutory guidance Closes 6 Sept

    Information sharing advice for safeguarding practitioners.

    The DfE is gathering a range of views to help ensure that the information sharing advice provides more clarity, is easily understood, and instils confidence to share information appropriately amongst practitioners.

    This includes whether the changes will potential impact those who share protected characteristics such as disability.

    Information sharing advice for safeguarding practitioners Closes 6 Sept

    Oliver McGowan code of practice on statutory learning disability and autism training

    This Department of Health and Social Care consultation considers the extent to which the Oliver McGowan code of practice on statutory learning disability and autism training (the code) provides Care Quality Commission (CQC) registered providers with the necessary guidance.

    CQC registered providers are now required to ensure their staff receive learning disability and autism training appropriate to their role.

    Views and feedback from this consultation will inform the final version of the code to be laid to parliament.

    Oliver McGowan draft code of practice Closes 19 Sept

    Disabled people in the housing sector

    The Levelling Up, Housing and Communities Committee are examining the role of Government, local councils and developers in ensuring the delivery of suitable housing for disabled people and what the Government can do to support disabled tenants in the private rented sector in England.The Committee is seeking evidence on a number of points that may be relevant to parent carers who need access to accessible and adaptable housing in all sectors of housing. It is also looking at how the Disabled Facilities Grant supports housing adaptions, as well as how government can support disabled residents who do not live in new build homes.

    Disabled people in the housing sector Closes 21 Sept

    Safeguarding vulnerable claimants

    The Work and Pensions Committee is to examine how DWP supports vulnerable benefit claimants and whether its approach to safeguarding needs to change.

    The Committee is looking to hear from people with lived experiences of these issues, and their families.

    The Committee intends to hold a roundtable event with benefit claimants with additional needs to discuss the issues raised in this inquiry.

    Further information on how to register your interest will be published on the Committee’s website.

    The Committee is looking at the main challenges for vulnerable claimants when making a new benefit claim, as well as improving support for the process.

    Supporting vulnerable claimants Closes 13 Oct

    Categories
    Consultation Government Uncategorized

    March consultation briefing



    There are lots of opportunities for forums to represent the experiences of their members this month.

    More details on each consultation and parliamentary inquiry can be found below.


    The NNPCF is also looking for individual parents to help with our case studies, that we can use when working with the Department of Education and other partners, to evidence our shared experiences living with a child or young person with special educational needs and disabilities.
    In particular, this month, we have been asked to feedback on parent carers experiences of their child or young person with SEN being admitted to hospital because of poor mental health, and we would really value more case studies on this topic.


    Currently open inquiries and consultations that may be of interest to forums and included in this briefing:


    Reasonable force and restrictive practice in schools
    Department of Education consultation closes 11 May

    You can read the NNPCF response here:https://nnpcf.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/Reasonable-force-and-restrictive-practice-consulatation.pdf


    Accessible transport
    Parliamentary Transport Committee inquiry closes 20 March


    Court reform programme
    Parliamentary Public Accounts Committee inquiry into the roll out of the court reform programme closes 20 March


    Progress in improving mental heath services
    Parliamentary Public Accounts Committee inquiry closes 3 April


    Department of Education use of reasonable force and restrictive practice in schools

    The NNPCF is looking to respond to this government consultation and is looking for input from our wider membership to help inform the response.

    It would be really helpful for forum leads to share our survey on reasonable force and restrictive practice in schools.
    The survey can be found at https://www.surveymonkey.co.uk/r/7QGHVZ3


    Through this consultation the government is seeking to understand how reasonable force, restraint and restrictive practices are used in schools to inform revisions to guidance. The Government has committed to minimising the use of restraint in all schools and in instances where restraint is necessary and lawful, to support school to use it as safely as possible.


    Forum leads and parents are able to respond directly to the consultation themselves here:
    Use of reasonable force and restrictive practices in schools – Call for evidence – Department for Education – Citizen Space


    NNPCF Case studies

    The NNPCF is collecting case studies of parent carers and their experiences for use in meetings with various professionals and to inform our policy development.

    Please can forums let their members know about the opportunity to be involved in this vital piece of national work.

    All case studies will be anonymised and data held securely and confidentially.
    Case studies are currently open in the follow areas:

    Parental experience of children being in residential settings out of their community and about to embark on returning to their local community or now returned to their local community https://forms.office.com/r/A3GDjfnXbQ

    Parent carer views on children’s needs not be met in school, or where they are struggling in their educational setting, for those without an EHCP
    https://forms.office.com/r/Kks9BpB9Mx

    Parental views on children’s needs not being met or they are struggling because of COVID-19
    https://forms.office.com/r/3Urd5fXLWL

    Where school transport is affecting a child’s attendance at school or other educational setting https://forms.office.com/r/wAMjbuKt4F

    Taking a local authority to tribunal for placement issues
    https://forms.office.com/r/D1JY4dnbsL

    Where a child has been admitted to or is at risk of being admitted to hospital because of poor mental health: https://forms.office.com/r/AKAQFCDsxa

    https://nnpcf.org.uk/2022/10/25/case-studies-for-the-dfe-send-review-team/

    Court reform progress review

    Closing date 20 March
    The Public Accounts Committee will be questioning senior officials at the Ministry of Justice, MNCTS and the CPS on the progress HMCTS has made against its plans in the face of changing circumstance, and whether it has planned and rolled out its new digital case management system, Common Platform, effectively.
    The NNPCF has as yet to make contact with anyone who attended an SEND tribunal before the digital system and after its roll out, so we are currently unable to feedback how this has changed the experience for parents of children and young people with SEND. If your forum knows of anyone who
    is willing to share experiences of how the new digital management system for tribunals is working compared to the non-digital system, please contact our policy and consultation lead, Claire Fisher, at consultation@nnpcf.org.uk .
    https://committees.parliament.uk/call-for-evidence/3056/

    Accessible Transport Consultation
    Closes 20 March


    The Parliamentary Transport Committee is currently running an accessible transport: legal obligations inquiry into whether legal obligations on transport operators and local licensing
    authorities are being met across different modes of transport.
    The committee has also developed an easy read version of their terms of reference here.


    Forums and forum members may wish to give their views and experiences of accessible transport in their area.
    There are two ways to respond.

    Personal responses to the question “does public transport work for people with access needs?” can be answered through a survey here.
    The full call for evidence can be accessed here and has questions such as:

    • Are there specific transport modes or kinds of journeys where compliance with legal obligations is especially patchy?
    • Are there differences according to where in the country you are travelling?
    • What difficulties does this cause for travellers with access needs?
    • Do current legal obligations or guidance need to be strengthened?
    • What best practices should transport operators be following to improve their performance on access and inclusion for users?
    • How effective is the Government’s Inclusive Transport Strategy, and how well does it influence decision-making across transport policy?
    • How could it be improved?

    Please see the government website for more information:
    https://committees.parliament.uk/work/6805/accessibletransport-legal-obligations/

    Progress in improving Mental Health Services
    Closing date 6pm 3 April
    The Public Accounts Parliamentary Committee will be questioning senior officials at the
    Department of Health and Social Care and NHS England on whether the government has achieved
    value for money in its efforts to date to expand and improve NHS-funded mental health services.


    Questions will include whether the Department of Health and Social Care, NHS England and Health
    Education England:

    • have a clear understanding of how initiatives to date contribute to the longer-term goal of
      closing the gap between mental and physical health services;
    • have met ambitions to increase access, capacity, workforce, and funding for mental health
      services, and improve service standards;
    • are well placed to overcome the risks and challenges, including the impact of COVID-19,
      to achieve future ambitions.

    Forums can give submit their views on their area here.

    https://committees.parliament.uk/work/7315/progress-improving-mental-health-services

    Categories
    Department for Education Education Minister for the School System NNPCF work

    Academies Regulation and Commissioning Review

    Earlier this week, our co-chairs Tina Emery and Mrunal Sisodia met with the Minister for the School System, Baroness Barran, to discuss the Academies Regulation and Commissioning Review.

    The meeting covered the NNPCF’s input into the Academies Regulation and Commissioning Review . This group has been looking at the accountability framework for academies.

    The current accountability regime remains very unclear. The division of powers, responsibilities, regulation and enforcement between schools, multi-academy trusts, local authorities and the DfE Regions Group is confused. We hear too often about schools that do not make reasonable adjustments or promote inclusion that parents and local authorities are powerless to hold to account.

    We asked the minister to ensure that the Academies Regulation and Commissioning Review closed these gaps and enforce that schools, local authorities and Integrated Care Systems meet needs.

    The success of the SENDAP Improvement Plan published last week depends on whether the Academies Regulation and Commissioning Review can address these concerns.

    In particular, we raised three main issues with the minister:

    • The inability of individual families to seek redress when they believe that a school is not promoting inclusion. For example, if they are failing to make reasonable adjustments. In these cases, parents have to use the school or trust’s complaints process, something that a delegate at our 2023 conference described as “marking their own homework.”
    • The need to align the powers, responsibilities and accountability between schools, multi-academy trusts, local authorities, the DfE Regions Group and Integrated Care Systems. There are huge gaps which mean that no-one has the authority to effectively hold schools to account.
    • Greater clarity on what inclusive practice is and what good looks like. The Schools Bill defined a strong trust as being “inclusive”. We asked for clarity on what these means and how it will be assessed.

    Unfortunately, following the shelving of the Schools Bill, the ability to make regulatory changes may be constrained and we are concerned that the scope of change that the Academies Regulation and Commissioning Review may bring will be limited.

    The team promised to meet the NNPCF steering group to further develop these points.

    For our previous work on this area please see:

    NNPCF Steering Group meet with Minister on Schools White Paper – National Network of Parent Carer Forums C.I.C

    Initial NNPCF response to the Schools White Paper – National Network of Parent Carer Forums C.I.C

    Categories
    Department for Education Government NNPCF NNPCF work SEND Review SENDAP

    Special Educational Needs and Disability and Alternative Provision (SENDAP) Improvement Plan published

    Today, the government has published its long awaited response to the SEND Green Paper, the SENDAP Improvement Plan.

    The plan outlines the steps that the government will be taking over the next few years to address the problems in the SEND system that have resulted in poor experiences for many children, young people (CYP) and families. The plan follows the SEND Green Paper and the subsequent consultation conducted by the Department for Education (DfE) in 2022. Our NNPCF co-chairs Tina Emery and Mrunal Sisodia were part of the steering group that advised on and reviewed the Green Paper and drafts of this plan.

    On its publication, NNPCF Co-chairs, Tina Emery and Mrunal Sisodia said,

    ”There is much to welcome in the SENDAP Implementation Plan, in particular, we are pleased to see that national standards will form the basis of ordinarily available provision, have such a prominent role. The NNPCF argued for the need for national standards during the SEND review and 90% of respondents to our survey agreed that they were needed. If implemented well, national standards will form the basis of early intervention and clearly identify who is responsible for providing and paying for services.

    Similarly, we are pleased to see local inclusion partnerships and plans being taken forward. Linked to the new Ofsted / CQC local area inspection framework that includes an annual review of inclusion plans, these will drive the joined up working and commissioning that has so often been missing.

    Some of the proposals that the NNPCF disagreed with, notably the tailored list of settings, mandatory mediation and bandings and tariffs remain in the plan. However, we are pleased that these areas are being reviewed and piloted before implementation decisions are made.

    Unfortunately, in some areas, the plan does not go as far as we would want. In the absence of legislation, the accountability regime, the mix of responsibilities, powers and regulation between schools, multi-academy trusts, local authorities and the DfE Regions Group – remains unclear.

    We urge the ongoing Academies Regulation and Commissioning Review to address these gaps. In addition, we remain concerned about the pace of change. It will be 2030 before this plan is fully implemented and this is literally a childhood since the original SEND reforms in the Children and Families Act 2014.

    We, the NNPCF, will continue work with government and NHSE to ensure that urgency to address the problems in the SEND system remains a priority.”

    There are many things in the Implementation Plan that the NNPCF welcome:

    National standards to form the basis of ordinarily available provision. Properly implemented, national standards will drive early intervention and form the foundation of what families can expect from services, what services can expect from each other as well as who is responsible for delivering and paying. In our survey 90% of respondents were in favour of national standards. We have received assurances from ministers that national standards will not be a list prescribed or allowed services for a list of diagnoses. Also, national standards will not form a cap on what can be provided to meet needs, individual needs must still be met.

    SEND and AP partnerships and local inclusion plans will require local areas to have a clear and shared understanding of the needs of the local population and work together to address them. We are pleased that these will be reviewed annually as a part of the Ofsted / CQC local area inspection regime. In our survey, respondents were clear that education, health and care services needed to work together more actively and comply with national standards

    The sections on the development of the SEND workforce, both inside and outside of schools are very welcome.  In our survey, 97% of respondents said that teaching staff needed better training on SEND.

    We called for better data on SEND to drive inclusion and incentivise local areas to identify needs and provide early help. The inclusion dashboards proposed will do this if properly designed.

    The proposed Adjustments Passport to support disabled young people into work is something that the NNPCF has been asking for over the last five years

    We are pleased that some of the lessons of 2014 have been learnt. There will be a properly constituted change programme to systemically implement the plan with meaningful review and accountability through regional expert partnerships and a new National SENDAP Implementation Board.

    However, there are some areas included in the plan that we continue to have reservations about. We have noted that these areas are going to be piloted and tested through the regional expert partnerships:

    • The tailored list of settings remains in the plan despite being supported by only 20% of respondents in our survey.
    • Mandatory mediation has very mixed support – we have expressed concern about the mechanism for mandatory mediation and the risk that this denies or delays access to redress via the tribunal.
    • Similarly, our survey showed no clear support for bandings and tariffs with only 47% or responses in favour.

    Unfortunately, there are many areas that remain very worrying for the NNPCF, where more clarity is required:

    The accountability regime remains ambiguous. The division of powers, responsibilities, regulation and enforcement between schools, multi-academy trusts, local authorities and the DfE Regions Group remain unclear. We hear too often about schools that do not make reasonable adjustments or promote inclusion. Parents and local authorities are powerless to hold them to account. The ongoing Academies Regulation and Commissioning Review must close these gaps to ensure that schools, local authorities and Integrated Care Systems meet needs.

    When the SENDAP Green Paper and Schools White Paper were launched in March 2022 , the intention was to support both with legislation. Now, this will not happen. Without legislation, we are concerned that some of the measures critical to success can no longer be made mandatory (e.g. national standards and greater accountability for schools).

    Finally, the pace of change must not lose urgency. There are many areas of the plan that require further development and definition. We welcome the intention to coproduce key elements and we look to supporting partners to achieve this in the most expedient way. We must collectively ensure that this work is given the priority our SEND families deserve.

    The SEND system is in crisis now and we need urgent progress and action.

    For more background on the SENDAP implementation plan and the NNPCF input in the Green Paper and consultation please see:

    NNPCF response to the SEND Green Paper and Alternative Provision consultation. – National Network of Parent Carer Forums C.I.C

    Find out what parent carers have told us about the SEND Green Paper and coproduce the NNPCF consultation – YouTube

    SEND-review-results-NNPCF-2022.pdf

    Categories
    Department for Education Government Minister for Children, Families and Wellbeing NNPCF NNPCF Steering Group NNPCF work

    Meeting the Minister for Children, Families and Wellbeing

    On Tuesday 10 January 2023, The NNPCF Steering Group (SG) met with the Minister for Children, Families and Wellbeing, Clare Coutinho, via Teams.

    This was the first time the minister had met the SG and we wanted to inform her what we had been hearing from our forum membership.

    It was an excellent opportunity to give an overview of the work that the SG has been involved in, what the challenges are to the SEND system, but also the good production work that has been happening.

    We know that in order to make the change to the SEND system, it has to be done in coproduction.

    We gave the minister a brief overview of the NNPCF, our membership and the number of forums that we have, their locations and how they are split into regions.

    We then spoke to her about the top issues forums have been raising via our regional meetings.

    The subjects included:

    Access to community-based health services – including access to speech and language therapy (SALT), Autism and ADHD pathways and paediatricians.

    Cost of living – how this affects parent carers differently. Not being able to work more hours due to caring responsibilities, the need to use electricity for live saving equipment, the need to keep the heating on constantly as some of our children cannot move independently or regulate their temperatures.

    SEN Support and EHCPs – this included the lack of reasonable adjustments in school that can lead to the rise of low attendance, and the need for EHCPs. EHCPs taking longer than the statutory 20 weeks and having to wait months for annual reviews to be completed.

    We then talked about the coproduction examples we have in our annual report

    In Cornwall they were the first year of the key work project that is now in it’s 3rd year. They have just completed their evaluation. There have been no negative responses to the evaluation. Parent carers, young people and practitioners agree, that the keyworker project is not only needed, its life changing. We have cases of families who are risk of being admitted into tier 4 beds and families who are at risk of going into crisis- this project has saved them. We have children and young people who could have gone into tier 4 beds who are now at university.

    In Telford & Wrekin – PODS Parent Carer Forum identified a gap in provision for families whose child was awaiting an assessment on neurodevelopment pathways.  They worked together with Educational Psychologist (EP) team and ran support sessions (in person and online) for families to support them with ‘Challenges at Home’.  These were based on feedback from families via Annual Surveys.  The sessions covered support around anxiety, routines, behaviour and wider concerns within the family. Further evidence was identified, and they have also ran 1:1 sessions.  Funding was agreed for two years for the project and this was made available from health

    In West Sussex they have established a relationship with Chichester University where they train teachers and SENCo’s. They regularly join sessions and talk through what good practice looks like and what parents carers have encountered. Bringing real life stories to the classroom has had a huge impact on the trainees. They have now been asked to do the same with trainee social workers too.

    The session concluded with a discussion on the next steps for the green paper. There is concern, not just in the system, but with parent carers too about what happens next. There is much anticipation for the green paper response and there is concern.

    The minister fully engaged with the conversations and reassured the SG that SEND was a priority for her, as was the green paper response.

    We are in communication with her office, and hope that she will join us in person at our conference, in Bristol on 28 February.

    Categories
    Department for Education Education Government NNPCF work

    SEND Reform update

    Earlier today Tuesday 29 November, NNPCF Co-chair Mrunal Sisodia spoke with Minister Clare Coutinho about the plans for the DfE response to the SEND and Alternative Provision Green Paper. The Minister informed Mrunal that the Department’s response will not be published before Christmas as originally planned. Instead, they are targeting publication for early in the new year – no specific timeline for this has been agreed.

    The delay was resulting from the recent Ministerial changes in government and the desire of the new Ministers to get to grips with the agenda and to allow sufficient time to engage with parent carers.

    We received the following update from the DfE;

    Today the Department for Education (DfE) has published a letter from the Rt Hon Gillian Keegan MP, Secretary of State for Education, sent to those working across the Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND) and Alternative Provision (AP) sector. 

    In the letter, the minister clarifies her commitment to improve the experiences of children and young people with SEND or in AP, within a fairer, more inclusive, and sustainable system across education, health and care. 

    She sets out plans for publishing a response to the SEND Review consultation, working alongside the new ministerial team to understand the extensive feedback, before publishing a full response, in the form of an improvement plan early in the new year.   
     

    Ahead of the improvement plan being published, the Education Secretary has confirmed that children and young people with SEND will benefit from wellbeing and technology support straight away, with new funding announced for educational psychologists and assistive technology. This money will continue to support the system to deliver change and continue to improve the outcomes and experiences of children and young people with SEND and those who need alternative provision.  

    You can find a link to the communications from the Department for Education here which includes a letter from Gillian Keegan, the Secretary of State for Education.

    Categories
    Department for Education Government Minister for children and families NNPCF NNPCF work

    New Children and Families Minister

    Our NNPCF Cochairs meet with new Children and Families Minister

    10 November 2022

    On Monday, NNPCF cochairs Tina and Mrunal met with the newly appointed Undersecretary of State for Children, Families and Wellbeing, Clare Coutinho.

    This meeting took place before Ministerial portfolios were officially announced – an indication of the importance of the NNPCF in the work being done by the Department for Education.

    The Minister stated that she was very passionate about SEND and that the SEND agenda, along with the Independent Review into Children’s Social Care would be her biggest priority. At this early stage, she was unable to provide a detailed update on the immediate next steps for the SEND and AP Green Paper and the Schools Bill, she promised to keep the NNPCF informed and understood the interest in these items.

    This was a short, introductory meeting and the Minister promised to continue to work with the NNPCF and parent carer forums. Tina and Mrunal invited the Minister to attend the national conference in Bristol on 28 February and to meet with the NNPCF board. We will keep you informed of further contact.

    You can read more about Clare Coutinho, the new Parliamentary Under Secretary of State Minister for Children, Families and Wellbeing on the government website.