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Nurseries

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Nurseries & SEN assessment

4 replies

sally300 · 14/05/2009 20:16

My son is 2.9. He was born with a tongue tie which was released late. He is a late talker and is having speech therapy. Communication however, is rarely a problem as he is very good at getting others to understand him (especially children). Otherwise he is attaining his normal milestones.

He goes to a nursery where the manager seems convinced there is something rather wrong with him. At her insistance we took him to see: the HV, a paediatrician at the child development centre, speech therapist (privately as NHS waiting lists are so long - ouch at £65 ph) all who said yes he is speech delayed but otherwise functioning well (slightly above his age). Despite of this the manager still thinks something is wrong and wanted him to be seen by the early years inclusion team so she could get extra funding for him. I was reluctant but agreed as she explained this would enable the staff to spend more time with him and the other children would not miss out. I made a condition that I wanted to meet the person from the SEN team and wanted to be there for the assessment. She agreed.

Today, after I collected my son from his 3 hour stint in nursery I received a phone call at home from the SEN person who had done the assessment today at nursery with the nursery manager! She would like to meet me in a few weeks time to tell me about it... I expressed my surprise and distress about not being involved and am told it is the way they do it.
The nursery manager later rang and was evasive about not involving us saying she had forgotten she was coming, mix up over messages etc. DH was at the nursery for ages this morning with her discussing voucher payment schemes with the said manager and I was there for at least 10 mins at pick up and yet nothing was said.

I am so upset about this and feel the manager has deliberately left DH & I out of this important assessment.

Sorry such a long post but can anyone advise please?

OP posts:
nurseryvoice · 15/05/2009 18:53

Its a bit out of order. Maybe she did forget, but she could have rung you up....
I am wondering why they are so adamant about extra help? does your child show challenging behavior due to being frustrated at his speech? just a thought, I know you;ll probably reply no. If not then I would not let the Nursery mangager bully you into this. Also you shouldnt have to wait for a few weeks find out the person's name and ring them up. I assume it was the early years senco (attached to early years dept in the council).

MegGriffin · 15/05/2009 21:43

Hello there. I work in a pre-school and I am also the setting SENCo and it's certainly not the way we do it. If we involve any outside agencies we need consent from the parent and when the inclusion team visit, they chat with us, observe the child then meet with the parents and us to discuss their observations. This all happens during the session. We would never treat our parents in such a manner.

wrinklytum · 15/05/2009 21:55

Hi there,I have a dd who is pre school and needed SEN assessment for speech and other issues.I think that you should have been consulted about any meeting really.All communication about dd was done in conjunction with the Nursery,and SENCO.

Although you SHOULD have been consulted,if your dc does have speech isues then the involvement of SEN is useful and valuable,as help can be put in to assist your child.It is an awful feeling to know tht your child is "Different" in some way but I would say to grasp any help offered to your LO.SALTS are as rare as hens teeth but can offer valuable support and advice.dd got 1:1 support from a worker put in to assist her at nursery and it helped a lot.Big hug,Wrinkly xxx

sally300 · 15/05/2009 22:32

Thank you for your messages. I am still really upset about this but also getting cross.
The SENCo is now coming to our house on Monday to discuss further. OFSTED tell me this is absolutely the wrong way for a nursery to behave. My Ds loves the nursery but there needs to be honesty & trust between the adults involved.

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