When schools are just sh*t!

I tried to think of a different title for this post, one that wasn’t quite so harsh but honesty just kept me going back to my original title.  As many of you will know, from personal experience, some schools are just sh*t!

Let’s talk about some of the ways in which they are sh*t.

Not accepting children with SEND

As the recent OFSTED report for Kent found, not all schools and settings are willing to accommodate children with SEND.

I have quite a bit of personal experience of this.

One school promotes on its website in its very detailed and thorough SEND policy

“we can make provision for most kinds of frequently occurring Special Educational Needs. We have Learning Support Assistants who support our SEND students both inside the classroom and outside the classroom. These include Hearing Impaired Specialists and Visually Impaired Specialist”

but for some reason they could not accommodate my son who fits into the VI category.

I should have guessed there was going to be an issue when they asked for a copy of his EHC Plan but wanted to check first if funding was detailed in there.

When I was told “we can’t meet his needs”, I queried this especially as their website said they could and the staff we met during the visit had told me they have previous experience of braillers and children with no vision.

I was told “we do not have the staff”.  I again queried this as their site said they did and in addition, my son came with funding towards specialist staff.

They stopped replying.

And of course, as my son is not on their school roll, they don’t have to reply.

So our VI team asked them.

Their response was “we do not have an embosser”.  (An embosser allows work to be typed up in normal text and then translated into braille and printed out).

We explained that he came with funding for an embosser, in fact he had one at his current placement so it could be transferred with ease.

Again, they stopped replying.

When schools are just sh*tAnother school told us they could not fit him into the class.  It came down to health and safety.

We had another school who met with us, walked us around the whole site and then stopped returning calls to us and the VI team.

We can only make assumptions about why because they didn’t tell us why.  We have a good idea though.

Their knowledge of SEND was low though, their SENCO asked how my son would manage to get to their school (it was some distance) and when I said he’ll get a taxi, they expressed concern about the cost to us!

How many schools have you not got through the front door of, once you mentioned SEND?

 

When common sense is non-existent

Many parents talk about breaches of the Equality Act or schools not wholly complying with the Children and Families Act or Code of Practice.  This is, unfortunately, very common.

One of the other common issues we have found is a total lack of common sense.

A few examples (and you couldn’t make these up).

My son is blind, with no vision or light perception.

  • one teacher sending homework that asked him to a) choose a photograph of a building and b) describe the building
  • one teacher put a picture of something on the board and said “write a story about what is happening in the picture”, he added “make sure you use your imagination” – not sure if this was his attempt to “differentiate” his lesson for my son.
  • one teacher making a jokey comment about another teacher “looking visually impaired” in a Facebook post and the headteacher liking the comment (and this was in a school with a VI resourced provision)
  • one head teacher deciding to remove the school bell and introduce a member of staff raising their hands in the playground to let children know break was over (in a school with a VI resourced provision)
  • one teacher wrote a whole array of sentences on a board and then asked the children to copy them into their books – this was the entirety of their lesson (lack of common sense or just lazy – you decide)

How often has a lack of common sense been an issue with your child at their school?

Lack of awareness

Some staff have no awareness of autism or other SEND.  They forget about their pre-emptive obligation to be aware.

One of the most commonly discussed aspects of autism is how literal a child can be.

One teacher asked my son (with ASD) to write eight statements about a subject.  At the end of the lesson, his TA who had been absent, came over and asked him what he had written.  He replied “eight statements”.  She accused him of being impertinent and threatened him with isolation.

Another teaching assistant emailed me to say they were counting how many times he used the word “fart”, so far they had 20 and it wasn’t even 11am.

I explained that this may be useful if we were looking for a diagnosis of ASD but seeing as we had one, it may be more useful for her to spend her time putting in some boundaries and telling him he couldn’t say “fart” in every sentence.

How aware are the staff at your child’s school?  Do they get it?  Or not?

Let’s make this their fault

The lack of awareness, the absence of common sense and the unwillingness to accommodate children is one thing but we have also experienced teachers who try to make the child feel guilty about their disability.

These are two examples, I have more but I think these show the level of incompetence and “pass the buck” attitude some staff have.

One teacher who when told by my son he couldn’t complete the work she had set as it was not accessible, said to him “do you know how difficult it is for me to have you in my class?  Having to differentiate everything is extremely challenging”

A PE teacher made many assumptions about what J could or couldn’t do, without checking in with him.

When we brought this up with the SENCO, it was fed back to the PE teacher but we received no response.  However, a few weeks later, we received his school report saying that he needed to improve his attitude towards learning in PE.

Now, one thing we have never had in all his years of school is any issues with his attitude.  Yes, we have all accepted he is a bit of a character but ask him to do something and he does it.  He also loves PE.

This same teacher had made a big deal about names being sewn into PE kit and not written in (even in laundry marker) and that the consequences would be very serious if children did not comply with school policy.

So I politely responded to the school report to advise that the PE teacher needed to improve her attitude towards learning how to include him in her lesson and that the consequences could be very serious if the school and staff did not comply with the law.

No reply.  What a shocker.

Needless to say, we have moved on from those schools.

In fact we had to access our GP and CAMHS for mental health support after the staff had done such great job at raising his anxieties and lowering his self esteem and self belief.

All three are now in schools we are much happier with (and more importantly, the kids are much happier at).  Yes, we still have the occasional hiccup, but that’s the real world.  Mistakes happen because people are human but it’s how they are addressed that matters.

Passing the buck to the child is not how it should be addressed.  Threatening children with isolation is not how it should be addressed.  Ignoring emails is not how it should be addressed.

One thing I am very sure of though, is that it should not be down to us, the parents, to monitor and hold the schools accountable.

But it is.

Unfortunately OFSTED don’t ask questions such “how many children with SEND have left your school”, “how many children with SEND have enquired but been discouraged”, “how many teachers use common sense”, “how many teachers understand what ‘literal’ means” or “would a member of your staff tell a child that having them in their class made their life difficult”?

Maybe they should.


Tell us about your school experiences – let’s make sure that other parents know they are not alone.   

If you have questions about what schools should or shouldn’t be doing, then head over to our Survival Guide site and check out our SEND Education Survival Guide

I have not named the schools involved but happy to oblige if Ofsted or DfE are interested (or not, as the case may be)!

 

 

 

 

BuT Site Admin

Debs is one of the co-founders and Directors of Bringing Us Together. She is mum to three child with a variety of SEND and has a great husband.

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8 Responses

  1. Jade says:

    I have no words. It’s 2018 and some schools really are just shit!

  2. Awful but sadly not surprising. And yes, I think it would be great indeed if OFSTED asked those kind of questions that you give examples of at the end of this post! x

  3. Dora Schmora says:

    Not shocked, we have experienced much crapness of one particular primary school. One teacher decided they could shout the autism out of my boy, another had decided he would grow out of it. They are just the tip of the iceberg. Some schools are just crappity.

  4. Mb says:

    I wish I could say that I am surprised, but. .. unfortunately, because we live with our SEN children/young people/etc, I believe that we know much more than the average teacher. I am fearful that the world is breeding far less superior staff trained specifically and far more having basic educational training. And unfortunately it appears that even the basic training is difficult to come by, with higher education standards, restricting and minimising the ability for our SEN family to find jobs, as well. So not only are the staff failing in teaching our children/yp, but equally the job market is excluding them, polarizing and discriminating our future generations. Will they realise it, quick enough ?? And, more urgently, * ( when and) will they rectify it , before it’s too late ??

  5. Sho says:

    I’m quite gobsmacked at some of this but in the same breath not surprised. I keep hearing stories like this, more often with hidden disabilities but to hear about such a ridiculous lack of common sense and to be frank common courtesy really takes the biscuit.

  6. Jenni says:

    I’m genuinely shocked that this happens even in this day and age…I count myself lucky that my kids schools are amazing when it comes to sen children as they bend over backwards to include and support the kids. I feel for everyone who has had to deal with what you wrote x

  7. Martha Smith says:

    They should also be looking at whether or not kids with certain types of SEND are under-represented. I applied to get my son into a good school who were absolutely horrified by his EHCP and seemed to think that all autistic kids ought to be in Special Schools. Their attitude towards him was so horrendous I couldn’t send him there, even though, on principal, I should have. They would have destroyed him…

  8. Steph Curtis says:

    OMG I’d like to say all this is unbelievable but sadly I’ve heard of similar bad experiences. Some people are shocking. Even worse if it’s an attitude passed on from the SLT :/

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