Special Educational Need or Disability
A child has special educational needs if they have a learning problem or disability that makes it more difficult for them to learn than most children their age. They may have problems with schoolwork, communication or behaviour. Parents can get help and advice from specialists, teachers and voluntary organisations.
We can usually provide help and sometimes we use specialists. If your child has special educational needs, they may need extra help:
with schoolwork
reading, writing, number work or understanding information
expressing themselves or understanding what others are saying
making friends or interacting with adults
behaving properly in school
organising themselves
They might have sensory or physical needs that affect them in school.
Children progress at different rates and have different ways in which they learn best. When planning lessons, your child's teacher will take account of this by looking carefully at how they organise their lessons, classroom, books and materials.
The teacher will choose suitable ways to help your child learn. If your child is making slower progress or having particular problems in one area, they may be given extra help or different lessons to help. Just because your child is making slower progress than you expected or the teachers are providing different support, help or activities in class, this doesn't necessarily mean that your child has special educational needs.
Your child's early years are a very important time for their physical, emotional, intellectual and social development. When the health visitor or doctor makes a routine check, they might suggest that there could be a concern. If you have any worries of your own, you should ask for advice straight away.
You should ask your child's class teacher or our Inclusion Leader if you require any help or guidance. You could ask them if:
the school thinks your child is experiencing difficulties
your child is able to work at the same level as others of the same age
your child is already getting extra help
you can help your child at home
If we agree your child has special needs in some areas, we will use a step-by-step approach to meeting these additional needs.
There are some basic principles that everyone involved in your child's education at school will consider:
if your child has special needs, these will be met and they will receive a broad, well-balanced and relevant education
your views will always be taken into account and the wishes of your child will also be listened to
your child's needs will usually be met in a mainstream school, sometimes with the help of outside specialists
you will be consulted on all the decisions that affect your child
you have a vital role to play in your child's education
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