Spent the day at a special school in south London.

The difficulties parents are facing are significant everywhere. None more so than in special schools.

All special schools are supposed to be open for all their children. But in practice it often isn't working that way.
Under government rules, all children with Education, Health and Care Plans (or EHCPs) are considered vulnerable and entitled to school places full time.

But in special schools, every child has an EHCP. They're all entitled to a place.
Yet recent DfE figures suggested only a third of special school pupils are in attendance.

Why? Because schools simply can’t offer every child a place in a way which is safe for them or the staff.

Staff to pupil ratios are high (perhaps as many as seven or eight for a class...)
of 10 or so.

It simply can't be done safely. There isn't enough space.

Likewise some parents have to keep their child off as result of their extreme physical vulnerability.

But there's still often more demand for places than there is space. So Special School heads are....
...often placed in a position where they have to ration places. Choose which kids get to come in and how for long based on their needs and family circs.

Those who have to stay at home some/all of the time have home schooling with their parents. Which is often v difficult.
If you think it's hard to get your kid to sit down in front of zoom all day, it is nothing to the challenge for children in special schools.

It's also meant that the only respite for parents in terms of providing care has disappeared.
"My son and the other kids at school can’t just be put in front of a computer, you must be with them all the time, help them hold their pencil, hold their pen- he needs help all through the night, he’s not a sleeper, he’s fed by a pump so you can’t even have a meal...
"you’re constantly watching him."

The effect on him has been significant mentally and physically- he's become less confident and has lost access to the suite of other facilities the school provides- like physiotherapy and speech and language therapy.
Special schools aren't just places of education but centres of essential infrastructure for disabled children- much of which is now no longer available on a daily basis. "My son was learning to be independent and that’s just come to a halt", one mother tells me.
Something some councils are turning too in order to get more kids back in the classroom is vaccination of staff. Charities want teachers and teaching assistants in specials schools to be classified as care staff and therefore eligible for a vaccine.
Lewisham Council, for example, has done this. It involves tiny numbers of staff in the grand scheme of things but could help make a bit of a difference.

Would also give staff some reassurance given that social distancing is impossible in a special school.
Longer this goes on, the worse it might be. One special school teacher told me she worried that there may be permanent effects on disabled children after losing so much time: "In school they receive physiotherapy, physio assessments, assessment for their equipment..."
"If they’re at home they can’t access that and even some of the school can’t regularly. Some of the children it could have lasting effect on their physical development, bone development for years to come...."
"We might find they'll have to have more operations than they would have done had they continued to be mobile, use their equipment, access to outside space etc."

Some of the families we spoke to don't have a garden and limited physical space. They're having to...
...educate special school and non-special school children at home. As well as work. It's an enormous challenge and many parents are left physically and mentally spent.

Full report from me and @MattQuinton to come on Newsnight very shortly. Tune in.
Struck by the response to this and how many out there are really grappling and struggling with these issues.

Please do continue to let me know what your experiences are.

In the meantime, you can watch the report from last night's NN in full here: bbc.co.uk/programmes/p09…
More worrying stats from this report on SEND and lockdown

-30% of SEND families had limited IT access and struggled with remote learning.
-Healthcare support was not provided at all, or only to a small extent for 65% of pupils at school and 83% at home. nuffieldfoundation.org/wp-content/upl…
-Social care and support (including respite care and home help) was either not provided at all, or only to a small extent for 57% of pupils attending school or college and 77% of pupils at home.

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More from @lewis_goodall

4 Feb
On Brexit, James Buchan, Chief Exec of Scottish Seafood Association tells the Scottish Affairs Select Committee: “I’m not going to say it any other way: for our members it has not been the best deal- it’s a sad state of affairs.”
James Withers, Chief Exec, Scottish Food and Drink Federation adds: “There have been catastrophic decisions taken to create enormous non-tariff barriers. We have ended up with a trading regime which is complex, costly, slow, prone to break down at its best.”
Withers continues “At its worst some food exporters have been shut out of the EU market altogether in Scotland and the rest of the UK. Unfortunately it’s the very predictable outcome of trying to test a multi billion £ trading system in real time in the middle of a pandemic.”
Read 25 tweets
3 Feb
Curious discourse at the moment on Northern Ireland. The problems were predicted and are intrinsic to divergence and the Protocol. And here's the thing- the more GB diverges (ie the point of Brexit), the more potential there is for friction for NI north/south and east/west.
There is a great deal of talk at the moment (we heard from the PM yday) about protecting and securing NI's place in the Union. Sometimes it doesn't seem to have quite sunk in that NI's place in the Union has quite fundamentally changed- and that was at the PM's own hand.
Reported this on Dec 10th when Protocol was signed. Doesn't contain unique insight that many others didn't express. It was clear that tension had potential going to exist permanently as a result of these much changed economic and political structures. bbc.co.uk/programmes/p09…
Read 4 tweets
3 Feb
NEW: The UK records another 1322 Covid deaths.

That takes the total to 109,335.

Roughly one in 608 of the population has died of this disease.
Nearly 50,000 of those deaths (49,077) have been recorded since the 1st December alone.

33,117 of the deaths have been recorded since January 1st.

That's roughly 30% of all Covid deaths in the UK since the start of the year.
Have to be a bit careful because date of death is different to when the data comes in. But still the point is this "wave" has been catastrophically lethal. The immediate pre and post Christmas period has made up a huge % of our total death toll.
Read 8 tweets
3 Feb
There’s an argument the UK got unlucky with the Kent variant. But the idea that no-one predicted it could happen is nonsense. It was widely speculated about from the pandemic’s earliest days.
Though even with this, scientists were also warning that high prevalence=more chance of a mutation.
Read 6 tweets
2 Feb
NEW: Wow. Big news from Italy. Italian President Sergio Mattarella has asked Mario Draghi, the former president of the European Central Bank to begin talks to form a new government.
To anyone covering this tonight I will give you a pizza if your cue line is “Will he do whatever it takes to form a government?”
The parties of government in Italy wanted to do everything they could to avoid another election, an election which if it were held today looks likely to put Salvini as PM. Medium term, Draghi could be a foil Salvini feels pretty comfortable with. Playbook is obvious.
Read 4 tweets
31 Jan
NEW: News of the the other, much darker side of the UK Covid story comes in. Another 587 deaths.

Always lower at weekends but still nearly another 600 dead. 7day average down by 5%.

We lamented 100,000 deaths earlier in the week. Only days later we’re already at 106,158.
This is the context of the success of the vaccine roll out- the profound failure of the UK having one of the very worst total death rates per million anywhere in the world. The worst of any major industrialised country.
That’s why some of the criticism about reporting the success of the vaccine rollout is off the mark. They’re one and the same. We need it to be so rapid partly because of the dire straits we’re in, at least partly caused by mistakes in other areas of the pandemic policy response
Read 4 tweets

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