Most children and young people can have their needs met and receive the support they need without an EHCP.
The graduated approach: assess, plan, do and review
If your child has SEND their current school or setting should put an 'assess, plan, do and review' model in place. This is known as a graduated approach.
The school or setting has funding to support this work and should use the services available on our Local Offer to help meet your child's needs.
All mainstream schools and educational settings have a person called a special educational needs coordinator (SENCO) who will know about the graduated response. It's helpful to talk to your SENCO to discuss your child's needs. Some useful questions are:
- what's been done and what support is already in place?
- are there services or professionals that could offer further support?
- have different approaches been tried and reviewed?
- has the school or educational setting got evidence of a graduated response?
If your child or young person needs more help
For a small number of children, a graduated response may not be able to fully meet their needs and they may need extra help. We might need to consider whether that help and support needs to be provided through an EHCP.
We will agree a needs assessment if both of these apply:
- the child or young person has, or may have SEND
- they may need SEND support that they can only get through an EHCP
If a needs assessment is agreed, it won't always result in an EHCP This could be because there isn't evidence of a graduated approach, or because:
- the school or setting can support the child or young person through SEND support
- the child or young person's needs are unclear
- it's not clear what help they're getting at the moment
We start thinking about an EHCP when a graduated approach is already in place and your child's needs are still not being met.