What are Education, Health and Care Plans?
These wereĀ introduced in September 2014. After this date students with existing Statements of Special Education Need may have them updated to EHC Plans. The LA are currently involved in discussions with parents throughout Northumberland about this.
This is an excerpt from the draft SEND Code of Practice 2014 describing EHC Plans:
The majority of children and young people with SEN will have their needs met within local mainstream early years providers, schools or colleges.
A local authority must conduct an assessment of education, health and care needs and prepare an Education, Health and Care (EHC) plan when it considers that it may be necessary for special educational provision to be made for the child or young person through an EHC plan. This is likely to be where the special education provision required to meet the child or young personās needs cannot reasonably be provided from within the resources normally available to mainstream early years providers, schools and post 16 institutions. This statutory assessment should not be the first step in the process; rather it should follow on from planning already undertaken with parent and young people in conjunction with an early years provider, school, post-16 institution or other provider.
EHC plans must be focused on the outcomes the child or young person seeks to achieve across education, health and care. EHC plans must set out how services will work together to meet the child or young personās needs and in support of those outcomes. EHC plans will be based on a co-ordinated assessment and planning process which puts the child and young person and their parents at the centre of decision making.
Statutory assessment will not always lead to an EHC plan. The information gathered during an assessment may indicate ways in which the school, college or other provider can meet the child or young personās needs from within available resources.
More information about EHC plans can be accessed via the Northumberland website.
What is Top Up Funding?
When a pupil is continuing not to make adequate progress despite significant support, as well as guidance from outside agencies such as the Local Inclusion Support Team, Ā and it is agreed by all those involved that additional support is required, an application can be made to the Local Authority for funding. This is called Top Up Funding.
To meet the criteria for Top Up Funding the pupil should have had significant support with clear, specific targets and expected outcomes, which haveĀ been reviewed and monitored over a period of time.
Top Up Funding is a time limited resource.