Boiler wrote: ↑Sat Jul 05, 2025 9:23 pmMuch the same.Oboogie wrote: ↑Sat Jul 05, 2025 8:32 pmGuardian.Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Sat Jul 05, 2025 8:18 pmHa haI don't get it? If not the Mail, which paper was it from?
The Weeping Angel wrote: ↑Mon Jul 07, 2025 1:03 pm The press are full of fevered speculation about SEND.The Guardian certainly is, based purely on speculation.
The government has not yet made a decision on future changes to education, health and care plans and is not looking to end “effective provision” for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND), a minister has told MPs.
Schools minister Catherine McKinnell faced MPs’ questions today in the final session of the Commons Education Select Committee’s inquiry into solving the SEND crisis.
Tes previously revealed that, as part of the government’s ongoing reforms of the SEND system, it is considering whether education, health and care plans (EHCPs) are “the right vehicle” to continue with.
A White Paper setting out planned SEND reforms is expected to be published in the autumn.
Ms McKinnell told the committee that the government was yet to decide on changes to EHCPs.So I'm not sure what the pearl-clutching is for. Perhaps if Foz reads this she could give us a more in-depth insider opinion.
The government has said it believes more pupils could be educated within mainstream schools.
Tes revealed in May that the government is considering the future of EHCPs - a system of statutory support for pupils that was created in 2014.
Ms McKinnell said today: “We have been clear that we will avoid removing effective provision, that is evidence-based and is working and delivering for children and young people.”
Select committee member and former education secretary James Cleverly asked if this meant that the government was not guaranteeing a continuity of provision.
“You’re saying where it’s good quality it will continue but you’re not giving a 100 per cent guarantee of continuity of provision?” he asked.
Ms McKinnell responded by repeating her comment that the government was not going to remove effective provision.
“You’re saying where it’s good quality it will continue but you’re not giving a 100 per cent guarantee of continuity of provision?” he asked.This led to "minister fails to deny that lots will lose provision". I think McKinnell's response is perfectly sensible. If something is expensive and not very good, there's a strong argument that the government stops funding it.
Ms McKinnell responded by repeating her comment that the government was not going to remove effective provision.
Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Mon Jul 07, 2025 8:05 pm SEND changes sound like they're coming. The current system is appalling, and the fact the Tories didn't even try and reform it is a sure sign that they knew they'd lose the election Labour's stuck with rocketing costs and a completely unsustainable system that everybody agrees is awful. They'll get no thanks for improving that either, if they can. And the usual MPs (principled, the principle being more spending on this and everything else, funded by a wealth tax) will kick up a fuss about "to the right of the Tories".My own MP spoke about SEND during our lsast exec meeting he blames a lot of the problems on the childrens and familes act 2014 responsible. Meanwhile from the Guardian
Corbyn published 2 manifestos. 2017 accepted £7bn of benefit cuts pencilled in but yet carried out by the Tories. I think in fairness that 2019 didn't have benefit cuts in, though there was some dubious tax revenues. But how would that look now with the growth of SEND and PIP costs? Anybody care to put it to him?
Phillipson has said that the government will protect the “legal right to the additional support children with Send [special educational needs and disabilities] need” when it reforms the Send system later this year. (See 6.09pm.) But the government has not said that all Send children who currently get extra help because they have an education, health and care plan (EHCP) will continue to receive that when the changes are implemented.Of course this hasn't stopped John Crace from sticking the knife in.