SEND Review Portal Contact

Working with Families

The best support comes through joined-up thinking and working with families in a way that ensures everyone's voice is heard and valued. 
0-25 SENC Code of Practice 2015 (p30-32)

Impartial information, advice and support

Information, advice and support should be provided through a dedicated and easily identifiable service. Local authorities have established Information, Advice and Support Services (formerly known as Parent Partnership services) to provide information, advice and support to parents in relation to SEN. In addition, many local authorities provide or commission information, advice and support services for young people. Local authorities should build on these existing services to provide the information, advice and support.

Information, Advice and Support Services should be impartial, confidential and accessible and should have the capacity to handle face-to-face, telephone and electronic enquiries.

Local authorities should involve children, young people and parents (including local Parent Carer Forums and Youth Forums) in the design or commissioning of services providing information, advice and support in order to ensure that those services meet local needs. Local authorities should do this in a way which ensures that children, young people and parents feel they have participated fully in the process and have a sense of co-ownership.

Staff working in Information, Advice and Support Services should be trained to support, and work in partnership with, parents.

As a child reaches the end of compulsory school age (the end of the academic year in which they turn 16), some rights to participate in decision-making about Education Health and Care (EHC) plans transfer from the parent to the young person, subject to their capacity to do so, as set out in the Mental Capacity Act 2005.

Parents of young people can still access information, advice and support on behalf of, or with, the young person. Staff should be clear about the transfer of some rights and responsibilities to young people, and work sensitively with parents to help them understand their role.

There may be cases where the young person and the parents do not agree on an issue. Legally, it is the young person's decision which prevails, subject to their capacity. Where there are disagreements, staff providing information, advice and support should work impartially and separately with both the parents and the young person.

Parental Confidence Measure (Morewood and Bond, 2012)

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Thinking outside the box!

Click the images below to discover alternative solutions. 

Local resources building

365 SEND

This is one our flagship programmes that unites local communities into working together to meet local needs.  Involvement and engagement of parents /carers is a BiG part of the programme.


Frameworks for dialogue

Co-Production Matrix

To ensure the conversation we have are co-productive, it is important everyone understands the co-production matrix. 

Gratitude

Annual Appreciation Day

We believe in acknowledging and appreciating everyone's contribution.  This annual event held on 1st July every year brings the global together to value all those who contribute to inclusion, including families. 

Other info:

Child Mind Institute
5 ways to support siblings in special needs families
Read an article
Working Families
A Guide to Benefits if you Care for a Disabled Child
Read an article
Fostering Resources
Training and networking resources for foster carers and people that help to support fostered children.
THE resources
Sky Badger
Finding help for disabled children and their families. Sky Badger will link you to a huge variety of services, charities and special events ... even free stuff.
visit the website
CAre of the family
Time out for Parents: Children with special educational needs
read an article
Affinity Hub
Emotional support for parents of children with special needs
read an article

Watch Aiden make his own velcro task list 

Part of the Superkids Movement
Working in partnership

Early years

Working in partnership

Teacher and parent relationships

SEND & curriculum

Intent, Implementation & impact

SEND & curriculum

Online safety