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Nursery teachers offered extra £4,500 to work in disadvantaged areas
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Recruitment and retention
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Nursery teachers are to be offered nearly £5,000 more to work in the poorest areas, Bridget Phillipson has announced. The education secretary confirmed the new tax-free £4,500 payment, aimed at securing 3,000 more early years teachers in the 20 most disadvantaged communities in the country, as part of a broader plan to join up early years and family services. Nurseries and other pre-school settings will also receive more regular Ofsted inspections under ministers' proposals. By Dominic Penna, The Telegraph.
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SEND reform and the future of EHCPs
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SEND
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There is widespread media coverage today of special educational needs and disabilities (SEND), with many outlets focusing on ministers' plans for reform ahead of a forthcoming white paper.
The government's reforms may require experts to see greater evidence of SEND before offering children support plans, according to The Telegraph, amid reports that ministers are considering scrapping education, health and care plans (EHCPs) due to rising costs. Speaking to the paper, a Whitehall source said the current system of obtaining an EHCP was not sufficiently "evidence-based" and that experts' time was being wasted filling out paperwork. However, charities have warned against any plans to make it harder to gain support or to remove the right to a tailored EHCP. Suzy Yardley, the chief executive of Child Autism UK, warned: "I’m sure that there is bureaucracy, but … you need to keep the legal rights for children in place while looking at how to streamline that." By Poppy Wood, Amy Gibbons and Ben Butcher.
As ministers consider increasing the number of places for children with SEND units at mainstream schools, disability campaign group Let Us Learn Too has vowed that parents will "not stop fighting" against the reforms. iNews takes a closer look at what ministers are planning, and profiles the Ontario SEND system, which is reportedly being held up as an exemplar given its well-resourced SEND provision in mainstream schools. The Canadian province's model sees the ministry of education allocating funding to district school boards via grants designed to help meet their responsibility to support pupils with SEND. Hayley Harding, a parent of two children with SEND and the founder of Let Us Learn Too, welcomed ministers looking towards the system in Ontario, which she says "puts children and its families at the centre". By Richard Vaughan and Connie Dimsdale.
In a letter to The Guardian yesterday, numerous SEND charities and campaigners warned against government changes to the SEND system that would restrict or abolish EHCPs. Helen Hayes, chairman of the Commons Education Select Committee, has also urged the government to commit to keeping EHCPs, in order to maintain the trust of families of children with SEND. "I think at this stage that would be the right thing to do," she told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme. Schools minister Stephen Morgan reiterated Ms Phillipson’s refusal to say whether the white paper would include plans to change or abolish EHCPs, telling Sky News he could not "get into the mechanics" of the changes at present. By Peter Walker.
David Blunkett, the former education secretary, has said ministers must use "incredible sensitivity" when making changes to the SEND system. Lord Blunkett, who attended a residential school for blind children, also urged the government to reassure parents that it was seeking "a meaningful replacement" for EHCPs. By Sally Weale and Peter Walker, The Guardian.
Speaking to The Independent, a mother from Hertfordshire warns that cuts to SEND support could be "devastating" for families, saying her son’s education and mental health were saved by specialist help. Renata Watts has two children who have EHCPs and tells the paper the support transformed the life of her eldest son, Elliot, who had become mentally unwell and isolated. Describing the impact of being given an EHCP, she says: "From zero per cent attendance, he went to 100 per cent. He got three A*s at A-level. He’s just completed a master’s in computer security. He will go on to be a massive asset to the UK. All of that would’ve been lost without that legal duty to support him." By Jabed Ahmed.
A feature in The Guardian outlines what EHCPs are and why parents and campaigners are concerned about the government's plans to reform the SEND system. By Sally Weale. A similar item, outlining how EHCPs work and the risks of removing entitlements from vulnerable groups, is published in The Times. By Chris Smyth and Georgia Lambert.
In this week's episode of The Guardian's Politics Weekly podcast, presenters Pippa Crerar and Kiran Stacey discuss the future of SEND support. Highlighting the anxiety of those impacted by the government's plans to shake up the system, Ms Crerar calls for ministers to "explain exactly what these reforms might be, before they get to the point of publishing the white paper in the autumn".
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This year's IB results see pupils scoring higher
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Examinations
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Tes outlines some of the key trends from this year's International Baccalaureate (IB) results. Globally, pupils secured an 81.26 per cent pass rate (compared with exactly 80 in 2024), against 95.51 per cent for the UK (94.57 last year). Established in Geneva, Switzerland, in 1968, the IB is a model of study for those aged 3-19. Its Diploma Programme and Career-related Programme offer alternative qualifications to the English A level and its vocational equivalents. By Henry Hepburn.
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The Independent Schools Council (ISC) monitors the national and educational press in order to keep independent schools up-to-date with relevant education news. The DNS is a service primarily for schools in membership of ISC associations, although other interested parties can choose to sign-up. We endeavour to include relevant news and commentary and, wherever possible, notable public letters. Where capacity allows, we may include links to ISC blogs, press statements and information about school or association events. News stories are selected based on their relevance to the independent sector as a whole. Editorial control of the DNS remains solely with the ISC.
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