Home / Charity claims autistic pupils are illegally excluded
Charity claims autistic pupils are illegally excluded
EB News: 13/02/2014 - 16:06
Its survey of 500 families revealed that four in 10 children had been requested informally to stay at home temporarily, which is illegal. Some were made to miss school trips or attend lessons part-time.
20 per cent of the parents surveyed said that their child had been formally excluded.
Jolanta Lasota, chief executive of Ambitious about Autism, said: "It is shocking so many children with autism are missing out on education. All schools are legally bound to provide quality full-time education to all pupils, including children with autism.
"Asking parents to collect their children early or putting them on part-time hours is against the law and fails to address the underlying need for schools to make reasonable adjustments to include children with autism."
A Department for Education spokeswoman said: "All councils must ensure children are educated in a placement which meets their needs and we have been clear that schools have a duty to follow our strict rules when excluding pupils.
"We are spending over £3.5m on SEN co-ordinators in schools to provide targeted support to children with SEN, and have given the National Autistic Society £440,000 to provide advice to parents and teachers about how to support autistic children at school."
New research reveals that 57 per cent of low-income families say their child struggles to access devices or reliable internet outside school, severely impacting their education.
The number of eligible children taking up the offer of free school meals in Scotland has increased for the second year running, according to the latest statistics.
Schools in England must take “proactive” action to identify and support children at risk of falling out of the education system, according to updated statutory guidance.
According to a new survey, science teachers are struggling to deliver practical lessons – and could face the problem of lab technicians leaving the profession.
Fifty two of the schools with targeted grant funding have had RAAC removed, and a further 71 schools with RAAC are in the process of being rebuilt under the School Rebuilding Programme.