sen policy reform england september 2014

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SEN Policy Reform England September 2014 VIEW Conference 13 March 2014 Christopher Robertson

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SEN Policy Reform England September 2014. VIEW Conference 13 March 2014 Christopher Robertson. Hard Hat Time. Steps to a new system. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

SEN Policy Reform England

September 2014

VIEW Conference

13 March 2014

Christopher Robertson

Page 2: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

Hard Hat Time

Page 4: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

Steps to a new system• Legislation introduced into Parliament early in 2013 and an Indicative

‘pin cushion’ draft 0-25 SEN Code of Practice published primarily for the Bill Committee (House of Commons) on 14 March 2013

• 2nd robust Reading of the Children and Families Bill in the House of Lords (2nd July 2013)

• Full draft Code published for consultation in October 2013. Consultation on the Code and transition arrangements ended on 9 December – ‘we are analysing your feedback’

• Royal Assent in Spring 2014 followed by a ‘lead in period’ to support an orderly transition before a new statutory framework is implemented from September 2014 …. Final Code in June 2014 ???

Page 5: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

Key principles in the Children and Families Bill

• Participation: the Bill promotes the participation of parents and young people in decision-making about SEN

• Outcomes: the Bill focuses on outcomes and improving progress for children and young people with SEN

• Collaboration: the Bill requires a joint approach across all agencies: cooperation and commissioning

Page 6: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

Stony Paths

Page 7: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

• Multi-agency working• Engaging with children, young people and families

(involvement, choice)• The local offer (information and choice)• Focus on school/college/setting responsibility• Education, health and care plans• Key working• Personal budgets• Preparing for adulthood

Tested by SEND (SEN) Pathfinders

Key components

Page 8: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

Against the four objectives for the evaluation

• make the current system more transparent, less adversarial and less bureaucratic

• increase choice and control and improve outcomes

• introduce greater independence into the assessment process by the voluntary sector

• demonstrate value for money

SQW September 2012 (Evaluation, Interim Findings)

‘Too early to draw conclusions’

Page 9: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

• SEND Pathfinder Programme Report (DfE, March 2013)

• Extension of Pathfinders > September 2014• Introduction of Pathfinder ‘Champions’ in all

regions of England (e.g. Bexley & Bromley in London, SE7 and Southampton in the South East, Solihull in the West Midlands; Wiltshire in the South West) to support non-pathfinder areas

• A further independent evaluation report (SQW) was published in June 2013 and another in October 2013

Further developments

Page 10: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

‘Broad Acceptance of thedirection of travel’

(June report)Resources invested in the assignment of key

workers, development of personal profiles, person-centred approaches, EHCP formats and procedures – reported positive impact

Changes to process and underlying ethos regarded as most important (rather than formal elements of a new approach)

Page 11: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

‘A glass half full?’

Increased choice and control (families)Collaboration with Parent Partnership

Services and Parent Carer ForumsSome evidence of joined up commissioning

and service provisionSuccesses reported in working with families

already in the system800 families recruited (March 2013)

Page 12: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

‘A glass half empty?’

• Development of outcome focused plans challenging (workforce development)

• Involvement of children and young people limited• Uncertainty about role of VCS (supporting families)• Impact of EHCPs limited (minimal evidence)• Key worker role demanding (confidence and training)• Limited testing with broader groups (19-25 age range)• Slow development of the local offer (uncertainty about

content and concerns about resourcing) • Limited take up of personal budgets and SEN direct

payments (use limited in scope > transport)

Page 13: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

‘Impact evaluation’ October 2013 report

Some encouragement – families’ satisfaction with processes (assessment, support, involvement)

Can changes to processes improve outcomes?

Can changes the overall approach be scaled up and be cost effective for the whole target population?

We won’t know until at least March 2015 (end of the SQW evaluation) but there are clearly going to be challenges ahead … the latest report noted that the EHCP process takes (on average) 42 hours compared with 30 hours for statementing (small sample)

Page 14: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

Extended pool of Pathfinder Champions (April 2014 – March 2015) with additional funding for the programme

By March 2014 current Pathfinders (x 31) expected to be early adopters of reforms offering EHC plans to all ne entrants to the system

Pathfinder dissemination through events and publications continues – information packs are being refreshed (March 2014)

Government has ‘acknowledged’ (9 December letter to Pathfinders) the need for further development work supported with specialist expertise (e.g. in relation personal budgets, high quality EHC plans and preparing for adulthood) – more SQW reports

Pathfinder extension activity

Page 15: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

• Eligibility – those with Statements eligible• Change in eligibility – most obviously 19-25 year olds• Planning pathways: referral; considering if assessment is

required; coordinated assessment; planning; sign-off• Approaches to some key elements differ in pilot areas• Differences to Statementing: more emphasis on

gathering information across services at referral; family more involved; plans more outcome focused

• Family-centred approach can lead to better plans

EHC planning: thematic report

Page 16: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

• Effective coordination and cooperation between services• Resourcing delivery of family-centred process – time for

EHC coordinator • Meeting the 20 week timeframe requirements• Sharing information between services and families• Increased paperwork (e.g. summary assessment)• Challenges involved in offering a comprehensive

personal budget offer• Ensuring all families have the capacity to engage• Negotiating between family members if conflicts arise

EHC planning: concerns

Page 17: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

• Need to cover 4 areas: coordination; planning and assessment; information and signposting support; emotional and practical support

• 2 models – single person and multi-person• Skill set required is broad ranging• Breadth and depth of knowledge varies according to key

working model used• Effective key working teams draw on knowledge and

experience from different backgrounds• ‘Co-producing’ can be challenging and time consuming• Training of different kinds is essential• Longer term plans for key working need consideration –

beyond the 20 week phase

Key working: thematic report

Page 18: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

• Danger through dilution – multi-person model• Over extending roles – on top of day job• Time to do things well within and beyond ‘20 weeks’• Key worker backgrounds – who is lining up?• Independent support workers – potential confusion• Level and quality of training• Key worker salaries• Working with young people – what’s involved?• Front end approach could lead to frustration

Key working: concerns

Page 19: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

SEN Pathfinder information

www.sendpathfinder.co.uk

Click on ‘information packs’ for resources

Page 20: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

Advice and Guidance

School Perspective

Page 21: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

Draft SEN Code of Practice for 0-25 years (October 2014)

1. Overview (statutory and non-statutory, who it is for)

2. Summary (principles)

3. A Family Centred System

4. Working together (education, health and social care)

5. The Local Offer (local authority / school +)

6. Early years, schools, colleges and other education and training providers

7. Assessments - Education, Health and Care (EHC) Plans

8. Children and young people in specific circumstances

9. Resolving disputes

Page 22: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

Code notes ...

• Longer than anticipated (could be longer still)• Detailed but technical and a little unclear regarding

statutory (must) and non-statutory (should / best practice) ‘best endeavour’ guidance

• Accessible to a range of audiences?• Makes assumptions about terminology (SEN or

SEND?) that may be unhelpful• Still subject to editing and other changes• Implementation lead in likely to be shorter than

anticipated

Page 23: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

Schools and the CodeSEND leadership messages

1.Outcomes not hours

2.Every teacher is responsible for meeting needs and the SENCO role is strategic

3.High aspirations – articulated through progress targets and preparation for next stage of education or and meetings adulthood

4.Work closely with parents - x 3 meetings a year

5.Clarity about what you can and cannot do – using the notional SEN budget

Page 24: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

Ready to Go?Schools working in accord with these messages are ‘well on the way’ to implementing the SEN reforms …

Page 25: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

Handout – SEN Reforms

What local authorities, schools and services need to know and what they need to do

An updated and edited version of an information leaflet published by the Council for Disabled Children. Julie Jennings will refer to this!

Page 26: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014
Page 27: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014
Page 28: SEN Policy Reform  England September 2014

Contact Details

Christopher Robertson

• School of Education, University of Birmingham

[email protected]