1. Introduction
Welcome to this Brighton & Hove City Council SEN guide for families.
This guide explains the assessment and support available for children and young people with special educational needs (SEN). It also includes advice and information for families about Education, Health and Care (EHC) Needs Assessments and Education, Health and Care (EHC) plans.
The council and schools must follow laws and legal advice when supporting children and young people with SEN. This includes the Children and Families Act 2014 and the SEND Code of Practice.
Most children and young people with SEND can get the support they need in a mainstream education setting (early years settings, schools and post-16 colleges).
This can include:
- reasonable adjustments
- different teaching methods
- advice and support from a range of specialist support teams, such as the Brighton & Hove Inclusion Support Service (BHISS)
This is known as ‘SEN Support’. The help given will be planned to meet the individual needs of each child.
Examples of this support include:
- a special learning programme for your child
- extra help from a teacher or an assistant
- changing learning materials or equipment used
- giving extra support in class or at break times
- making sure your child understands things by encouraging them to ask questions and try something they find difficult
- supporting your child with physical or personal care, such as eating, dressing, going to the toilet and getting around the school safely
Staff at your child or young person’s education setting will be able to give you more information about the extra help available for them.
You can also find more information on the wide range of support that is available in the Brighton and Hove SEND Guide for Professionals.
A small number of children and young people may need more intensive help or specialist support than a mainstream setting can normally give through its standard support arrangements. For these children and young people, the Local Authority (LA) will look to see if a child needs an Education, Health and Care (EHC) plan.
Across England, a small number of children and young people will have a special educational need at some point in their time at school. Most will be able to get the help they need through SEN Support, with about 4% needing an EHC plan to support them.
Even if they need an EHC plan, many children and young people can continue to go to a mainstream education setting. Some will need their support to be given in a more specialised setting (including specialist provisions within mainstream schools and special schools).
An EHC Needs Assessment will mean that specialist staff across education, health, and social care meet with a child or young person to assess (find out) the full range of needs they have and look to see if they need a higher level of help and support that can come with an EHC plan.
Some assessments will include questions or exercises that the child or young person will be asked to complete.
If you still have questions after reading this guide, get in contact with either the:
- SENCO or SEN worker at your child/young person’s education setting
- the SEN Team
You may also wish to approach Amaze, a local charity that gives information, advice and support to families of children and young people with special educational needs and disabilities.
Amaze provides the independent Special Educational Needs and Disabilities Information, Advice and Support Service (SENDIASS) for Brighton and Hove.
2. The Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND) local offer website
Details of the full range of support available for all children or young people in Brighton and Hove can be found on our SEND Local Offer website.
The SEND Local Offer website provides clear and accessible information about the support and extra help available in Brighton & Hove across education, social care and health for children and young people aged 0 to 25 years who have special educational needs and/or disabilities.
It also gives information about support, advice and groups that can help families of children and young people with SEND.
It can help with:
- what education settings there are
- what support is available
- who can apply for the support (sometimes explained as who is eligible for the different services)
- how to contact those services
We welcome your views on the SEND local offer. You can give feedback on our Local Offer or send an email to SEN.Team@brighton-hove.gov.uk
3. Who can ask for an Educational Health & Care (EHC) Needs Assessment
Usually, the nursery, school or post-16 education provider that the child or young person attends makes a request.
As well as education settings, you can ask the local authority for an EHC Needs Assessment for your child. If aged between 16 and 25, the young person can also ask the local authority for an EHC Needs Assessment.
Anyone else who works with your child or young person can tell the Local Authority if they think they have special educational needs and might need an assessment.
Children and young people under the age of 19 in Youth Custodial establishments also have the right to request an assessment for an EHC plan.
Amaze, our local SENDIAS Service can give support with asking for an EHC Needs Assessment if you wish, including a model letter to make the request
It's helpful if the request includes the following information:
- the full name of the child or young person
- their date of birth
- their address
- the education setting, they go to (nursery, school or college)
- brief reason/s for the request and any information that supports the request, including previous assessments or reports
- names of any professionals who have already been, or are currently, involved
- information about progress, attainment and attendance
Requests for an EHC needs assessment should be sent to SEN.Team@brighton-hove.gov.uk.
We'll acknowledge the request in writing.
4. How long the Educational Health & Care (EHC) Needs Assessment takes
The EHC Needs Assessment evidence gathering from professionals normally takes about 16 weeks in total.
If a child or young person needs an EHC plan, the whole process from getting the request for an EHC Needs Assessment to finalising an EHC plan should normally take 20 weeks.
There are some situations where it may not be possible to meet this timeframe. These include if:
- appointments are missed by the child or young person, which delays advice being written
- a child or young person is away from the area for at least 4 weeks
- exceptional personal circumstances affect the child or his/her parent, or the young person
- the educational institution the child or young person goes to is closed for at least 4 weeks
We'll tell you if the timescale for your request will be delayed.
5. Step 1: Request to Assess (up to 6 weeks)
All requests for an EHC Needs Assessment are recorded in a database when we receive them.
We'll write to you to tell you that we have received the request.
For all requests, we automatically contact:
- the child or young person’s educational setting (the early years provider, school or college
- the Designated Medical Officer for paediatric (children’s) health services
- the council’s specialist educational support teams, the Brighton and Hove Inclusion Support Service (BHISS)
- Front Door for Families (Early Help and Social Care Services)
- any other professionals that have recently worked with, or are currently working with, the child or young person, where we have been told about them, these may include:
- Speech and Language Therapists (SLT)
- the Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service (CAMHS)
- Occupational Therapists (OT)
- Physiotherapists (PT)
If there's someone you would like us to get information from, please tell us.
You'll also be asked if you would like to give us any more details or information about your child or young person.
As we're interested in building up a picture of the current needs of your child or young person, reports and information from the previous 18 months are usually the most relevant for us, although older documentation, such as about a particular diagnosis or medical condition, will also be useful.
At this stage, we'll ask the professionals to give us any information and reports they already have about the child/young person. All the information we get from these professionals will be gathered together as evidence of the needs and current situation of the child/young person.
Your request for an EHC Needs Assessment and all the information available about your child/young person will be looked at in detail by a group of people, including:
- staff from Local Authority services
- school Special Educational Needs Co-ordinators (SENCOs) from across the city
- health services
- parent representatives
This group is called a ‘SEN Multi-agency Panel’. SEN Panel makes a recommendation.
The SEN Panel will look at the evidence and views provided to consider 2 linked questions that come under the Children and Families Act 2014. These are if the child/young person:
- has or may have special educational needs, and
- may need support for their special educational needs to be made through an EHC plan
The Panel must be able to say ‘yes’ to both of these to recommend that the Local Authority agrees to an EHC Needs Assessment. To help the Panel reach a recommendation on the second question, they will usually look at the support the child gets from their educational setting and what impact that support has.
The Local Authority is responsible for making the actual decision regarding the request for an EHC Needs Assessment, taking into account the view of the SEN Panel.
It has a maximum of 6 weeks from when the request was made to decide whether to agree to an EHC Needs assessment or not. We will, however, try to make a decision more quickly if the information is available.
We'll write to you with our decision.
If the Local Authority agrees to an EHC Needs Assessment
We'll write to the relevant professionals to ask them to arrange an appointment with your child or young person so they can:
- carry out a full assessment of their needs
- set outcomes that the child or young person should be working towards
- set out the support they may need to achieve their outcomes
If the Local Authority does not agree to an EHC Needs Assessment
We'll contact you by phone and write to you to explain why and share the information that the panel used to make its decision. We'll also offer to meet with you or speak with you to explain and discuss the reasons behind the decision.
Even if the Local Authority does not agree to an EHC Needs Assessment, your child/young person will continue to get support and monitoring for their needs from their education provider (early years setting, school or post-16 college) and support from outside agencies.
This level of help between the teaching available to all children/young people and the more specialised or intensive support needed by children/young people with an EHC plan is called ‘SEN support’.
Schools and FE colleges receive funding to support children and young people with SEN through SEN support. Your child or young person’s education provider will talk to you about planning this support and give you updates on their progress through reviewing their support plan with you.
This process of identifying needs, planning and delivering a programme of support and then monitoring the changes and progress made is called the ‘graduated approach’ to meeting children and young people’s special educational needs.
The diagram below shows how the graduated approach works in practice.
The Graduated Approach
A text-only version of this diagram is written out below it.
High-quality inclusive teaching and systems for assessing, planning, implementing and reviewing progress.
Not making expected progress.
SEN Support
- Draw on info from above, draw on views of child/parent, external services. Check against SEN criteria.
- Teacher, SENCo, parent, and child agree on interventions, support and expected outcomes. Record in the school system and inform staff
- Implement plan. Class/subject teacher remains responsible for working with the child daily and assessing the impact of plans.
- Impact assessment, along with the views of the parent/child used to review the overall impact of support. Revise plan in light of outcomes.
Progress means SEN support is no longer needed.
Back to the beginning of the diagram.
This graduated approach recognises that all children and young people learn in different ways, at different times and speeds and can have different types and levels of special educational needs that require different types of help and support.
It also means that different or extra support and advice can be given at different times to help a child/young person.
Although it's usually expected that a child will have had a range of different types of support using the graduated approach before a request for an EHC needs assessment is made, or an EHC Needs Assessment is agreed, SEN law does not require this to happen first.
If there is information which shows that a child or young person may need to be supported through having an EHC plan, an EHC Needs Assessment can be agreed even if there is more support that could be given through the graduated response approach.
6. Step 2: Carrying out an EHC Needs Assessment (weeks 6 to 12)
If the local authority decides to carry out an EHC Needs Assessment, your experiences, understanding, and knowledge of your child or young person will be an important part of the assessment process.
We'll allocate a SEN Casework Officer from the local authority to your case, who will organise the work of your child or young person’s assessment.
We will write to you and ask you to give us in writing your views on your child or young person's strengths and needs. This is so we can begin to understand what's important to them as well as your hopes and aspirations for their future.
We'll also ask for your child or young person’s views if they can give them.
During the assessment stage, your Casework Officer will be able to answer any questions or concerns you have about the process. Their contact details will be on the letters we send you.
You can get help and advice with this process from:
- the independent charity Amaze, who provide the independent SENDIASS service in Brighton & Hove
- the Educational Psychologist when they assess your child or young person
- the national charity Contact
We'll ask the education setting your child or young person attends (their early years provider, school or post-16 setting) for the most up-to-date information they have on their needs, educational achievements and the support they receive.
We'll also ask professionals to contact you to arrange assessments (where necessary) for your child or young person. These assessments will help them provide advice on your child’s needs and any extra support they may need.
These professionals include:
- the Educational Psychology Service
- other teams within BHISS, if your child/young person is known to them
- a Specialist Sensory Needs Teacher (SNT) if your child has a hearing or visual impairment
- the Designated Medical Officer or Designated Clinical Officer for young people from the local health service
- any other health care professionals involved with your child or young person that we know of
- Front Door for Families – early help and social care
- any other people who have worked with your child, including from year nine school year onwards, those professionals involved in their preparation for transition to adulthood
- any other relevant person you or the young person themselves, if they're aged over 16, asks us to contact, examples may include a family’s GP or an independent tutor
These advice reports must be provided within 6 weeks of the local authority asking for them.
7. Step 3: Decision on whether to issue an EHC plan (week 12 to 16)
Once we have received all the reports and advice, the Casework Officer will write a draft document that brings together all the evidence, information and advice received from the professionals. This document is called a ‘collation document’.
This will go to the SEN Panel to consider. SEN Panel will make a recommendation to the Local Authority whether the amount of support they need should continue to be given through SEN Support or to issue an EHC plan for your child or young person.
This decision is based on your child or young person’s level of need and the support they should receive, as set out in all the assessment reports. If they need help through SEN Support, you will be given a copy of the reports and collation document for the education setting to put in place different support to meet your child or young person’s needs.
We'll explain the reasons for the SEN panel decision.
We'll also send you details of a mediation service, in case you disagree with the council’s decision, together with information on how to appeal the decision if we cannot come to an understanding through mediation.
If the SEN panel decides that your child or young person should have an EHC plan, your Casework Officer will contact you and send you the draft plan and reports.
We'll write to tell you the Local Authority’s decision and offer you a meeting to discuss the contents of the draft plan. This is normally around 16 weeks after a request to make an EHC assessment was made.
We'll also send you:
- a form for your views on this draft plan
- a form for you to fill in to tell us which education setting (nursery, school or post-16 institution) you would like them to attend
- information about other support which may be useful to the whole family
You can also ask Amaze SENDIASS for support and advice on EHC plans.
8. Step 4: Draft to finalising the EHC plan (weeks 16 to 20)
If your child or young person gets an EHC plan, the draft should reflect your hopes and aspirations for them.
The draft plan will include:
- the views, interests and aspirations of the child or young person
- your views and the views of your child or young person, if given
- an explanation of the SEN, health and social needs identified
- the agreed developmental outcomes for the child or young person
- the support that will be provided to help them achieve these outcomes
You will have 15 days to send us any comments you have on the draft EHC plan. We will take into account your comments in the final plan.
Any changes to either the outcomes or support for your child/young person (this is called provision) will need to be agreed by one of the professionals who assessed your child or young person at the assessment stage of the EHC process.
We'll then send you a copy of the final plan.
We have 20 weeks from someone asking for an EHC needs assessment to issuing a final EHC plan.
If you do not agree with the final plan, you have the right to ask for a meeting with us to talk about any changes you may want us to make.
You also have a right to mediation and appeal to the SEND Tribunal.
9. Personal Budgets
In a small number of cases, it may be possible to have some of the support your child or young person needs to help their education to be given via a personal budget.
A personal budget is an amount of money that can be used to buy part of the support included in an EHC plan.
They can help provide education, health or social care support which is needed but not normally provided by these services. Where this is the case, a personal budget can be calculated so support can be bought from different providers.
You have a right to request a Personal Budget when the LA has completed an EHC needs assessment and confirmed that it will prepare an EHC plan.
For more information, see our page on how personal education budgets work.
Please speak with your Casework Officer if you need further information.
10. Education Setting Options
The majority of children and young people with EHC plans can receive the education and extra support they need in mainstream educational settings. However, some children and young people need more specialist settings.
Children and young people can be educated in:
- maintained nursery school
- maintained school, including any form of academy or free school (mainstream or special)
- non-maintained special school
- further education or sixth form college
- independent school or independent specialist colleges, school, FE or sixth form college approved by the Secretary of State for Education under the Children and Families Act - a list of these places (called the section 41 list) is available on our SEND Local Offer or the section 41 page of the Department for Education’s website
You can find more information about Brighton & Hove council children’s centre nurseries, mainstream schools (including those with specialist units), maintained special schools and FE/sixth form colleges in Brighton and Hove on our SEND Local Offer.
If you ask for a type of school called an independent special school or non-maintained special school not on the Section 41 list approved by the Secretary of State for Education, you will need to obtain an offer of a place directly from the school and present this to your Casework Officer.
The Local Authority will make a decision based on parent's preference and whether a local school can meet the needs.
A link to local schools is on our SEND Local Offer special schools page, or for Section 41 schools, you can look at the Department for Education website.
11. Mainstream early years, schools and post-16 education
Childcare and Early Learning providers
There is a range of childcare and early learning providers in the city, including nurseries, pre-schools and childminders.  Some 2-year-olds are entitled to free childcare, and all 3 and 4-year-olds are entitled to free early learning from the term after their third birthday.
Many childcare and early learning providers can support children with additional needs.
Schools for children aged 5 to 16
In Brighton & Hove, there is a range of:
- infant schools for children aged 4 to 7
- junior schools for children aged 7 to 11
- primary schools for children aged 4 to 11
- secondary schools for children aged 11 to 16
Each school has its own website, including how it supports children with SEND. Links to the schools and how to apply for a place for your child at a school are available on the main council website, as well as through the council’s SEND Local Offer.
All schools have experience of helping and supporting children with SEND, and many children and young people with SEND go to mainstream schools.
Post-16 educational opportunities
Young people have a range of choices for post-16 education in Brighton & Hove and the local area.
Sixth forms attached to mainstream schools
Sixth forms in Brighton and Hove are attached to Cardinal Newman RC Secondary School, Brighton Aldridge Community Academy.
Information about sixth forms attached to schools in East or West Sussex can be found on their Local Offer pages.
Sixth Form College
There are 2 sixth form colleges in the city, BHASVIC (Brighton, Hove and Sussex Sixth Form College) and Varndean College.
Further Education (FE) Colleges
There are a number of FE colleges in or close to Brighton & Hove. These include:
Chichester College Group:
- Brighton Metropolitan College has 5 sites across Brighton, Shoreham and Worthing
- Worthing College, situated on the edge of Worthing
- Crawley College has sites in Crawley, Chichester, Horsham and Brinsbury (for land-based courses)
Other colleges:
- East Sussex College has sites in Lewes, Eastbourne and Newhaven
- Plumpton College is a specialist land-based college
12. Specialist provision in Brighton and Hove
As well as the mainstream nurseries, primary and secondary schools and post-16 options in the city, Brighton & Hove City Council has specialist SEN support in several specialist SEN units attached to mainstream schools and special schools.
Depending on their needs, your child or young person might need to go to one of these units or a special school to get the support they need.
Pre-School assessment and support
The Jeanne Saunders Centre is a specialist assessment centre for children with SEND in their final year before starting school.
It's for children who need to have a specialist assessment over a longer period of time and specialist support because their needs are complex or where their core needs are not yet known.
The Jeanne Saunders Centre is based in Connaught Road, Hove.
Specialist provision attached to mainstream primary and secondary schools
There is a range of specialist resource provisions in Brighton and Hove.
Primary schools
We have the following units attached to primary schools.
Carden Speech and Language Centre
The Carden Speech and Language Centre is for children with severe speech and language difficulties.
It provides specialist speech and language teaching and therapy. It's based at Carden Primary School.
More information on the facility is available at Carden Nursery & Primary School - Speech and Language Centres.
The Perch (based at West Blatchington Academy)
The Perch is for children with autism to have access to a specialist teaching environment and resources.
The aim is for all children to access a mainstream curriculum through both integrated lessons with the main school and small group sessions.
Curriculum based learning runs alongside targeted work on children's communication, social and independent skills.
The Perch is based at West Blatchington Primary School.
More information is available at West Blatchington Primary & Nursery School.
The Launchpad
The Launchpad has been home to Brighton and Hove's specialist provision for Deaf children for many years.
The Launchpad is based at Bevendean Primary School.
More information is available at Launchpad | Bevendean PS&N.
Secondary schools
We have the following resource provision in secondary schools.
The Swan Centre
The Swan Centre is for children and young people with autism and/or speech, language and social communication difficulties, together with an average or higher learning ability.
The Swan Centre is based at Brighton Aldridge Community Academy.
More information is available at The Swan Centre.
The NAS Cullum Centre
The NAS Cullum Centre is for children and young people with autism and/or speech, language and social communication difficulties, together with an average or higher learning ability.
The NAS Cullum Centre is based at Hove Park School.
More information is available at SEND | Hove Park School.
Longhill Special Facility
Longhill Special Facility is for children and young people with a specific learning difficulty.
Longhill Special Facility is based at Longhill High School.
More information is available at Longhill High School.
13. Mainstream Post-19 education
Many learners with SEND attend local mainstream colleges. Some young people can go to university after studying at sixth form centres or college.
Universities offer a range of support for learning with SEND, and there are other higher education options available, such as distance learning over the internet or by post.
An EHC plan will cease when a young person goes to university. They may still qualify for support through the Disabled Students’ Allowance (DSA).
14. Maintained Special Schools
There are 2 maintained special schools in Brighton and Hove for children and young people with severe learning difficulties, profound and multiple learning difficulties and moderate learning difficulties. Students at these schools may also have additional needs. The schools are Downs View School in Woodingdean and Hill Park School in Portslade. They both take students aged 5 to 16.
Hill Park also has a team of outreach teachers who support children with high levels of additional needs in mainstream schools, together with the staff who work with them.
A range of specialist therapies is available at both schools, including physiotherapy, occupational therapy and speech and language therapy.
Both schools teach a full curriculum adjusted to the needs of the pupils, and they can support young people to study for qualifications.
You can read more about Downs View School on Downs View School’s website.
You can read more about Hill Park School on Hill Park School's website.
Brighton and Hove SEMH provision
The Central Hub Brighton
The Central Hub Brighton is for pupils across the primary and secondary phases who are having difficulties accessing education in their school.
Pupils often have special needs such as social, emotional and mental health issues, autism and learning.
Students often have difficulties going to school and may have periods of suspension or have been at risk of exclusion from their school.
Ropemakers Academy
Ropemakers Academy Brighton is for students aged 14 to 16 (years 10 and 11) with SEMH as their primary special educational need and an EHC plan.
The new provision is for up to 20 young people. They offer full-time learning in a safe and nurturing environment. They focus on helping young people with skills for adult life.
The Connected Hub
The Connected Hub is for students in Year 11, the year they take their GCSEs. They will have been referred by their mainstream schools and the LA at the end of Year 10.
The Connected Hub is specifically for students struggling to engage in mainstream provision for a variety of reasons and are at risk of dropping out of education, employment or training.
15. Specialist college for young people aged 16 to 19
Downs View Link College (DVLC) is a post-16 college for young people aged 16 to 19, who have severe learning difficulties (SLD) or profound and multiple learning difficulties (PMLD).
Some students have additional disabilities, such as a diagnosis of autistic spectrum condition (ASC).
Students start at the college in Year 12. The College is located on Surrenden Road next to Varndean Sixth Form College.
You can read more about Downs View Link College on its website.
16. Post 19 specialist education
Downs View Life Skills College (DVLSC) offers specialist provision for young adults, mainly with severe learning difficulties, profound and multiple learning difficulties and severe learning difficulties with autism.
The College focuses on helping young people prepare for adulthood. Depending on the needs of the young person, this can include support with:
- getting a job
- living independently or semi-independently
- making and maintaining positive friendships, relationships and community engagement
- maintaining good health
You can read more about Downs View Like Skills College on its website.
17. Non-maintained and independent special schools and colleges
Information on independent and non-maintained special schools and colleges is available on our Local Offer.
This includes information on Independent schools for pupils with special educational needs, including those approved under section 41 of the Children and Families Act by the Department for Education.
18. What if you are unhappy at any step of the process
If you're unhappy with what is happening at any stage of the EHC process, you should contact your Casework Officer.
If you do not agree with the outcome of any part of your child or young person’s EHC process, or if you do not agree with any element of an EHC plan, contact us to discuss this. These disagreements can often be resolved quite easily.
If you want to talk things through with an impartial service, you can contact Amaze SENDIASS.
If you have been unable to agree with us, you may request independent mediation. The Local Authority uses a service called Global Mediation.
If you are still not in agreement with a decision by the local authority after considering mediation or having had mediation with us, you have the right to appeal to an independent Tribunal, called the SEN and Disability Tribunal.
You can find more information about the tribunal process and the Tribunal’s contact details on their website, from us, or Amaze SENDIASS.
You can appeal to the SEND Tribunal where:
- the LA decides not to carry out an EHC needs assessment of your child or young person
- the LA decides an EHC plan is not necessary to support a child or young person following an EHC Needs Assessment
- you do not agree with the parts of the plan that describe your child or young person’s special educational needs
- you do not agree with the special educational provision (help and support) set out in the plan
- you do not agree with the school or other setting named in the plan
- the LA decides not to amend the plan after a review or re-assessment
- the LA decides to cease to maintain your child or young person’s plan
The Tribunal cannot look at appeals relating solely to health/and or social care aspects of an EHC plan. If someone appeals about an education issue, however, you can also ask the Tribunal to look at social care or health issues of the EHC plan as well.
This provides a single place where parents and young people who are unhappy with their EHC plan can bring their concerns.
The Tribunal can make decisions on education issues which the local authority must follow. It can also make recommendations about what social care or health support it thinks is needed.
The LA and health services must consider social care or health recommendations very carefully, but do not have to follow these recommendations.
If you would like to appeal to the SEND Tribunal, your appeal must be made within (whichever is later):
- 2 months of the local authority making a decision you disagree with
- one month of being issued a mediation certificate by the mediation advisor
19.Reviewing an Education, Health and Care plan
If your child or young person has an EHC plan, their needs and progress will be reviewed at least once every year at a person-centred annual review meeting.
You will be invited to this meeting, along with your child or young person.
The person-centred annual review looks at:
- your child's gifts, talents and aspirations
- what matters to them and what is important for them
- what is working and not working for them
- your child’s progress towards the EHC plan outcomes
- if the plan needs updating to reflect significant changes in need or support
- if the plan is still needed
- plans for the next stage of education, training and preparation for adulthood
Before the meeting, you, your child, and the education provider (nursery, school or post-16 provider) will be asked to write your views down.
If your child is also being seen by other services, they will also send in reports on the progress your child has made and any new outcomes and support they need.
Your Caseworker and other professionals outside the education setting may also go to the meeting if their input is needed.
During the meeting, everyone will reflect on and celebrate your child, and you will be able to give your views about their progress. Your child or young person should be encouraged to be involved in the meeting.
After the meeting, the educational establishment will write a report of the meeting which will be sent to you, the Local Authority and other professionals that work with your child.
The information from the annual review will show the progress that your child has made and will suggest whether the EHC plan should be kept as it is, needs to be changed or should cease.
EHC plans are not normally changed after every annual review, they are usually updated at the end of a key stage or for a phase transfer. They only need to be changed to include significant changes. A smaller change in the work that a child is doing in school should be written up in school support plans and not the EHC plan.
The Local Authority will look at the annual review paperwork and tell you whether the EHC plan needs amending or whether changes should be made to your child’s school support plan.
If the plan is changed, we will send you a draft amended EHC plan for you to comment on before the changes are finalised.
The 20-week EHC Needs Assessment Process
Week 0: LA receives a request for an EHC Needs Assessment from the:
- parent or carer
- young person (aged between 16 and 25)
- pre-school setting
- school
- post 16 setting
- child or young person under 19 in a youth custodial establishment
- any other professional involved can refer a child/young person who has SEN to the LA
Stage 1
Weeks 4 to 6: The request to make an EHC assessment will be considered by the LA’s SEN Panel.
The SEN Panel will consider relevant information, including:
- information from parents/carers/child/young person
- reports from early years setting/school/post-16 setting on the pupil's progress and difficulties
- existing advice from external professionals involved, including strategies for the education setting to follow, such as advice from an educational psychologist, an advisory teacher, and support services
- evidence of the child/young person’s physical, emotional and social development
- evidence of school/setting’s support from within its delegated budget, such as a provision map/costed programme of support
- current attendance, academic attainment and rate of progress over time
All information should be as up to date as possible, ideally within the 12 to 18 months before the assessment request is made.
SEN Panel Decision
| Yes | No |
|---|---|
|
Stage 1 Within 6 weeks of the application: LA will inform parent/carer/young person in writing of the decision to go ahead with the assessment and give an additional opportunity to provide their views. LA will request up-to-date advices from relevant professionals to be received by the end of week 12 of the process. |
Stage 1 within 6 weeks of the application: CWO will inform parents/carers by phone and in writing, including information on their formal right of appeal. Meeting offered to discuss the reasons behind panel decision. |
Week 14: CWO will provide the Collation document to the SEN Panel to decide whether an EHC plan or a school-based SEN Support plan should be agreed.
SEN Panel Decision on whether to issue an EHC plan
| Yes | No |
|---|---|
|
Stage 2 Week 16
|
Stage 2 Week 16
|
|
Weeks 16 to 18 CWO will consider requested amendments to the draft EHC plan CWO will consult with the Governing body of your preferred early years provider, school or post-16 institution and other options considered appropriate to see whether they are able to meet the needs of the child or young person. |
N/A |
|
Week 20 The final EHC plan will be issued along with information regarding your rights to mediation and appeal. |
N/A |
Organisations offering support to parents and carers of children and young people with SEND
Amaze
Amaze provides information to parents across Sussex whose children have SEND, including providing the impartial SENDIASS service for the city.
Amaze is a voluntary organisation that works separately from the council to offer independent information, support and advice on all aspects of the SEN processes.
Other charities providing advice and support
Additional advice is available from 2 national charities:
Common Abbreviations Explained
Common abbreviations explained
| AR | Annual review |
|---|---|
| ADHD | Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder |
| ASC | Autistic Spectrum Condition |
| BHCC | Brighton and Hove City Council |
| C&I | Communication and Interaction |
| C&L | Cognition and Learning |
| DfE | Department for Education |
| EHC plan | Education, Health and Care plan |
| HI | Hearing Impairment |
| PMLD | Profound and Multiple Learning Difficulty |
| S&P | Sensory and Physical |
| SEMH | Social, Emotional and Mental Health |
| SEN | Special Educational Needs |
| SEND | Special Educational Needs and Disabilities |
| SENDIASS | SEND Information, Advice & Support Service |
| SLD | Severe Learning Difficulty |
| SSV CDC | Seaside View Child Development Centre |
| VI | Visual Impairment |
| CWO | Casework Officer |
| DCO | Designated Clinical Officer |
| DMO | Designated Medical Officer |
| EP | Educational Psychologist |
| FDFF | Front Door for Families (Social Care) |
| LA | Local Authority |
| CAMHS | Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service |
| DfE | Department for Education |
| OT | Occupational Therapist |
| PT | Physiotherapist |
| SENCo | Special Educational Needs Co-ordinator |
| SLT (sometimes SALT) | Speech and Language Therapist |
| SNT | Sensory Needs Teacher |
| TA | Teaching Assistant |
BHISS Brighton and Hove Inclusion Support Service
Early Years Team
Educational Psychology Service
Language and Autistic Spectrum Condition (ASC) Team
Literacy Support Team
Sensory Needs Team
Social, Emotional and Mental Health Team