No, the school are in breach of The Equality Act by suggesting that your DD should stay at home and not offering her the same curriculum as able-bodied children.
Leaving aside the travesty of the destruction of the Building Schools for the Future scheme, schools are not allowed to discriminate in this way.
- Reasonable adjustments for disabled people
Schools have a continuing duty to ?make reasonable adjustments?. This may involve treating disabled pupils ?more favourably? than non-disabled pupils. The duty contains three requirements:
? changing your provisions, criteria or practices;
? making changes to overcome barriers created by the physical features of the premises;
? providing auxiliary aids and services ? this is a new duty and further details will be provided in the final guidance.
All schools have to make adjustments in relation to:
? the arrangements you make for deciding who you offer admission to;
? the way you provide education;
? the way you give access to a benefit, facility or service.
- Providing education and access to any benefit, service or facility
A school must not:
? discriminate in the way it provides education for a pupil;
? discriminate in the way it gives a pupil access to any benefit, facility or service;
? refuse to provide education for a pupil for discriminatory reasons;
? refuse to give a pupil access to a benefit, facility or service;
? harass a pupil;
? victimise a pupil.
- Exclusions
Schools must not discriminate against pupils when making exclusion decisions. Reasons for exclusion must not be the protected characteristic. Any exclusions based on behaviour, should be consistently applied to those with or without a protected characteristic.
The procedures used for deciding what punishment a pupil will receive and for investigating incidents must not discriminate against pupils with a particular protected characteristic.
Essentially, by asking your DD to stay at home, they are excluding her due to her disability.