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Current year 1 classes

70 replies

Sunglassesevenintherain · 09/04/2026 21:56

My daughter is in Year 1 at primary school and has been really unhappy at school. She is quite sensitive (she does have some SEN) and finds her class too much as there are a lot of disruptive and boisterous kids. I’ve started looking at other options, but a friend who works with children, though in a different borough warned me that in her area the current Year 1 classes all have a reputation for being quite unsettled and challenging. She said this is linked to children in this year group having been born during lockdown/Covid.
It made me worry whether moving schools might not improve things if it’s a broader issue across this age group.
I'm looking at schools next week but
I’d really appreciate hearing if others have found similar or if your children are settled and happy in Year 1?

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
Thenakedwineglass · 11/04/2026 22:28

BoleynMemories13 · 11/04/2026 11:51

Essay incoming!

As you say, nobody will be able to provide a definitive answer as such but here are some of the common theories for why Year 1 classes appear to be becoming more difficult in general, as a national trend, year upon year:-

Covid babies
Some people see this as the sole reason for the decline. Other people see it as a complete excuse. The reality is most likely somewhere in between. Services were obviously cut dramatically during this time, which must have had some effect somewhere down the line (health visitor checks either not happening, being delayed or only occuring over Zoom rather than in person). A lot of early developmental issues slipped through the net. Depending on the individual circumstances of each family, early attachment and socialisation skills may have been affected (whereas, for others, the opposite might be true).

Life-style changes
Life is significantly different for most young families these days. Most families have either two working parents or a single working parent (with many having to work full time). Children are therefore spending less time with their parents than ever before (again, affecting attachment). Lots of infants spend long hours in private nurseries from a very young age, long before they start school. Many children spend long hours in wrap around care once they are at school. Family time is precious, and some parents may understandably feel less willing to discipline their children as they spend such little time together as it is. They wish their time together to be enjoyable, so children these days do genuinely seem more use to getting their own way than ever before, and many never hear the word no at home. Starting school, where there are firm rules and boundaries, can be a real shock to the system for these children.

Rise in technology
Linked to life-style changes, children today are far more likely to be babysat by screens for long periods (especially if parents are juggling working from home, rather than using wrap around care). You only have to visit a supermarket or restaurant to see how many infants are glued to a screen, even when they're out of their home. Research into the long term effects of prolonged screen time on young brains is still in the early stages, but the new advice on screen time for under 5s has been a long time coming (and will sadly be ignored by many). Ask anyone who works with young children, the link between excessive screen time and concentration is obvious.

Lack of SEN funding
The current state of SEN provision in this country is appalling. Far more children than ever are being diagnosed with SEN, or have suspected SEN which they may or may not be on the pathway for a diagnosis for (which can take years). Yet there are less and less special school places available. We are seeing children with some pretty extreme SEN needs entering mainstream education these days, far more than ever before. The lack of funding for these children is having a massive impact on all the children. It's not uncommon these days for Year 1 classes to only have additional adults as named 1-1's, rather than general TAs. This impacts everyone and is nothing short of a national disgrace. The government are not only massively failing children with SEN, but they're also failing their mainstream peers who are impacted by sharing a classroom with children who sadly are not suited to mainstream education. Young children often display copycat behaviours. For every class who display empathy to their peer with severe SEN needs, you'll have another class who are off the wall because they can't cope with the noise and disruption these peers may bring with them, through no fault of their own.

Poorer Communication Skills
Early communication skills are generally declining, year upon year (probably due to a mixture of everything above). In general, children are spoken too far less at home than ever before, and the percentage of children who are read to at home seems to fall year upon year too. It's a bleak picture which is beginning to impact massively in the classroom. Children who struggle to communicate their needs and feelings generally become more frustrated, which can sometimes result in aggressive behaviour. Children who struggle to listen and focus generally become less engaged in the work, which can also lead to 'silly' behavioural choices. It's a vicious cycle.

Educational changes
Sadly Year 1 in the 2020s resembles nothing like the Year 1 we remember from our own school days. The expectations the government place on 5/6 year olds in terms of attainment and curriculum content is ridiculous these days. Some schools do still run some continuous provision in Year 1 (role play, construction, outdoor learning etc) but, for many Year 1 classes, whole class teaching where every child is sat at a table doing maths or writing (for example) together is the norm. With less general class TAs than ever, this puts a massive strain on the teacher who is desperately trying to support them all. Some children are not developmentally ready for this. They miss the freedom of Reception and some do sadly (but understandably) rebel with a dip in behaviour.

I've probably missed some things, but these are the main 'theories' talked about often within education circles. It's a desperately sad picture which just seems to be getting worse and worse each year. I don't think it's down to one single thing, but all of the above definitely plays a part. I don't see Covid as a cop out excuse, it undeniably had an impact, but I think people are naive if they can't see that some of these problems were starting long before 2020. I last taught Year 1 in 2018 (I've been in Reception ever since) and they were a challenging bunch, even then. My Reception classes seem to get more challenging with more extreme needs each year. The picture continues to get worse and worse. It can't just be 'because of Covid'.

Edited

As a parent of year 1 who is struggling (SEMH) I found your post very interesting and insightful - thank you for sharing. It’s given me a lot of food for thought.

some things definitely ring true for us (single parent who works full time so always had to use full time nursery however wrap around care very limited as he struggles in that environment)

we do do daily reading - both them reading to me and me to them, and he will happily play with cars, do colouring, jigsaws etc but if he had his way he would be permanently attached to a games console - so this has strict limits on both time and frequency

Sloupt · 11/04/2026 22:49

Sunglassesevenintherain · 11/04/2026 10:25

Wow this thread is really eye opening! If we move, it’s not a choice I will make lightly at all but I think I’m armed with some more questions to ask the perspective schools. I don’t know if anyone is really able to actually answer this question but does anyone have any reason or theories as to why so many year ones are finding this. Thank you

It's a lot of anecdata and confirmation bias. Since COVID, every year there are conversations (here, on teaching forums, irl) that Y3 are the worst, or Reception, or Y5 because of the specific age they were during COVID. The reality is state schools are more and more stretched as costs rise and redundancies are made, at the same time as support for SEND is reduced. It only takes one or two poorly supported children to tip the balance in any class. Inclusion used to mean multiple services coming into school to work with children in their own communicates. Now even speech and language do most of their appointments over the phone. Other services have folded completely. I really don't think this is a Y1 problem; it's a funding issue.

Sunglassesevenintherain · 11/04/2026 22:53

TinyMouseTheatre · 09/04/2026 22:05

Mine are way past Primary School so I can’t help with your question but I’m wondering if she has an ECHP and has been assessed by an OT?

Yes, I am speaking to the SENCO and the head. They have been engaged but all the difficult behaviour happens outside school and they don’t really offer much actual support or help for this.

OP posts:
Denim4ever · 11/04/2026 22:59

Year 1 can be very challenging SEN or no SEN. Year 2 is often so much better as kids settle down to school life and routines. It honestly does take many kids that long.

Cosleepingadvice · 11/04/2026 22:59

@BoleynMemories13 thank you for such an insightful post. My eldest in currently in reception and i know her school has been offering continuous provision in Y1 for a few years now. From the sounds of your post, I really hope it continues, especially as she is a late June baby and I do worry so much about how young she is.

Elariakopiethat · 11/04/2026 22:59

Sunglassesevenintherain · 09/04/2026 23:14

Oh so it’s a national thing! Does anyone know why or what is causing the rise? Is it just this one year group?

Screens parents and babies / toddlers on them all the time

Sunglassesevenintherain · 11/04/2026 23:06

BoleynMemories13 · 11/04/2026 11:51

Essay incoming!

As you say, nobody will be able to provide a definitive answer as such but here are some of the common theories for why Year 1 classes appear to be becoming more difficult in general, as a national trend, year upon year:-

Covid babies
Some people see this as the sole reason for the decline. Other people see it as a complete excuse. The reality is most likely somewhere in between. Services were obviously cut dramatically during this time, which must have had some effect somewhere down the line (health visitor checks either not happening, being delayed or only occuring over Zoom rather than in person). A lot of early developmental issues slipped through the net. Depending on the individual circumstances of each family, early attachment and socialisation skills may have been affected (whereas, for others, the opposite might be true).

Life-style changes
Life is significantly different for most young families these days. Most families have either two working parents or a single working parent (with many having to work full time). Children are therefore spending less time with their parents than ever before (again, affecting attachment). Lots of infants spend long hours in private nurseries from a very young age, long before they start school. Many children spend long hours in wrap around care once they are at school. Family time is precious, and some parents may understandably feel less willing to discipline their children as they spend such little time together as it is. They wish their time together to be enjoyable, so children these days do genuinely seem more use to getting their own way than ever before, and many never hear the word no at home. Starting school, where there are firm rules and boundaries, can be a real shock to the system for these children.

Rise in technology
Linked to life-style changes, children today are far more likely to be babysat by screens for long periods (especially if parents are juggling working from home, rather than using wrap around care). You only have to visit a supermarket or restaurant to see how many infants are glued to a screen, even when they're out of their home. Research into the long term effects of prolonged screen time on young brains is still in the early stages, but the new advice on screen time for under 5s has been a long time coming (and will sadly be ignored by many). Ask anyone who works with young children, the link between excessive screen time and concentration is obvious.

Lack of SEN funding
The current state of SEN provision in this country is appalling. Far more children than ever are being diagnosed with SEN, or have suspected SEN which they may or may not be on the pathway for a diagnosis for (which can take years). Yet there are less and less special school places available. We are seeing children with some pretty extreme SEN needs entering mainstream education these days, far more than ever before. The lack of funding for these children is having a massive impact on all the children. It's not uncommon these days for Year 1 classes to only have additional adults as named 1-1's, rather than general TAs. This impacts everyone and is nothing short of a national disgrace. The government are not only massively failing children with SEN, but they're also failing their mainstream peers who are impacted by sharing a classroom with children who sadly are not suited to mainstream education. Young children often display copycat behaviours. For every class who display empathy to their peer with severe SEN needs, you'll have another class who are off the wall because they can't cope with the noise and disruption these peers may bring with them, through no fault of their own.

Poorer Communication Skills
Early communication skills are generally declining, year upon year (probably due to a mixture of everything above). In general, children are spoken too far less at home than ever before, and the percentage of children who are read to at home seems to fall year upon year too. It's a bleak picture which is beginning to impact massively in the classroom. Children who struggle to communicate their needs and feelings generally become more frustrated, which can sometimes result in aggressive behaviour. Children who struggle to listen and focus generally become less engaged in the work, which can also lead to 'silly' behavioural choices. It's a vicious cycle.

Educational changes
Sadly Year 1 in the 2020s resembles nothing like the Year 1 we remember from our own school days. The expectations the government place on 5/6 year olds in terms of attainment and curriculum content is ridiculous these days. Some schools do still run some continuous provision in Year 1 (role play, construction, outdoor learning etc) but, for many Year 1 classes, whole class teaching where every child is sat at a table doing maths or writing (for example) together is the norm. With less general class TAs than ever, this puts a massive strain on the teacher who is desperately trying to support them all. Some children are not developmentally ready for this. They miss the freedom of Reception and some do sadly (but understandably) rebel with a dip in behaviour.

I've probably missed some things, but these are the main 'theories' talked about often within education circles. It's a desperately sad picture which just seems to be getting worse and worse each year. I don't think it's down to one single thing, but all of the above definitely plays a part. I don't see Covid as a cop out excuse, it undeniably had an impact, but I think people are naive if they can't see that some of these problems were starting long before 2020. I last taught Year 1 in 2018 (I've been in Reception ever since) and they were a challenging bunch, even then. My Reception classes seem to get more challenging with more extreme needs each year. The picture continues to get worse and worse. It can't just be 'because of Covid'.

Edited

This essay is excellent, thank you. I totally see the perfect storm here. We try and read daily and we have family time but we also struggle with screen time even though we don’t have iPads and try and stay away from the tv that feels addictive. But it feels impossible when me and my DH have work calls and have long days etc :
I also completely see about the unrealistic goals set for kids. My DD missed a bit of school in reception (not loads but enough) but is also very young for her year yet the system expects her to be keeping up with kids nearly a year older and it’s causing her to feel out of her depth when sat at a desk. Shes not disruptive in class at all, but when she gets home, she melts down and is very unhappy.

OP posts:
bunnyvsmonkey · 11/04/2026 23:09

I think exercise is also a factor. My dc in year 1 is constantly being kept in for 'wet play' when we would have been chucked out in a coat. I wonder how on earth teachers cope with 30 x 5-6 year olds who have been stuck in a room all day with no physical outlet.

DingleDungle · 11/04/2026 23:12

BoleynMemories13 · 11/04/2026 11:51

Essay incoming!

As you say, nobody will be able to provide a definitive answer as such but here are some of the common theories for why Year 1 classes appear to be becoming more difficult in general, as a national trend, year upon year:-

Covid babies
Some people see this as the sole reason for the decline. Other people see it as a complete excuse. The reality is most likely somewhere in between. Services were obviously cut dramatically during this time, which must have had some effect somewhere down the line (health visitor checks either not happening, being delayed or only occuring over Zoom rather than in person). A lot of early developmental issues slipped through the net. Depending on the individual circumstances of each family, early attachment and socialisation skills may have been affected (whereas, for others, the opposite might be true).

Life-style changes
Life is significantly different for most young families these days. Most families have either two working parents or a single working parent (with many having to work full time). Children are therefore spending less time with their parents than ever before (again, affecting attachment). Lots of infants spend long hours in private nurseries from a very young age, long before they start school. Many children spend long hours in wrap around care once they are at school. Family time is precious, and some parents may understandably feel less willing to discipline their children as they spend such little time together as it is. They wish their time together to be enjoyable, so children these days do genuinely seem more use to getting their own way than ever before, and many never hear the word no at home. Starting school, where there are firm rules and boundaries, can be a real shock to the system for these children.

Rise in technology
Linked to life-style changes, children today are far more likely to be babysat by screens for long periods (especially if parents are juggling working from home, rather than using wrap around care). You only have to visit a supermarket or restaurant to see how many infants are glued to a screen, even when they're out of their home. Research into the long term effects of prolonged screen time on young brains is still in the early stages, but the new advice on screen time for under 5s has been a long time coming (and will sadly be ignored by many). Ask anyone who works with young children, the link between excessive screen time and concentration is obvious.

Lack of SEN funding
The current state of SEN provision in this country is appalling. Far more children than ever are being diagnosed with SEN, or have suspected SEN which they may or may not be on the pathway for a diagnosis for (which can take years). Yet there are less and less special school places available. We are seeing children with some pretty extreme SEN needs entering mainstream education these days, far more than ever before. The lack of funding for these children is having a massive impact on all the children. It's not uncommon these days for Year 1 classes to only have additional adults as named 1-1's, rather than general TAs. This impacts everyone and is nothing short of a national disgrace. The government are not only massively failing children with SEN, but they're also failing their mainstream peers who are impacted by sharing a classroom with children who sadly are not suited to mainstream education. Young children often display copycat behaviours. For every class who display empathy to their peer with severe SEN needs, you'll have another class who are off the wall because they can't cope with the noise and disruption these peers may bring with them, through no fault of their own.

Poorer Communication Skills
Early communication skills are generally declining, year upon year (probably due to a mixture of everything above). In general, children are spoken too far less at home than ever before, and the percentage of children who are read to at home seems to fall year upon year too. It's a bleak picture which is beginning to impact massively in the classroom. Children who struggle to communicate their needs and feelings generally become more frustrated, which can sometimes result in aggressive behaviour. Children who struggle to listen and focus generally become less engaged in the work, which can also lead to 'silly' behavioural choices. It's a vicious cycle.

Educational changes
Sadly Year 1 in the 2020s resembles nothing like the Year 1 we remember from our own school days. The expectations the government place on 5/6 year olds in terms of attainment and curriculum content is ridiculous these days. Some schools do still run some continuous provision in Year 1 (role play, construction, outdoor learning etc) but, for many Year 1 classes, whole class teaching where every child is sat at a table doing maths or writing (for example) together is the norm. With less general class TAs than ever, this puts a massive strain on the teacher who is desperately trying to support them all. Some children are not developmentally ready for this. They miss the freedom of Reception and some do sadly (but understandably) rebel with a dip in behaviour.

I've probably missed some things, but these are the main 'theories' talked about often within education circles. It's a desperately sad picture which just seems to be getting worse and worse each year. I don't think it's down to one single thing, but all of the above definitely plays a part. I don't see Covid as a cop out excuse, it undeniably had an impact, but I think people are naive if they can't see that some of these problems were starting long before 2020. I last taught Year 1 in 2018 (I've been in Reception ever since) and they were a challenging bunch, even then. My Reception classes seem to get more challenging with more extreme needs each year. The picture continues to get worse and worse. It can't just be 'because of Covid'.

Edited

This reads a lot like AI-generated style generalisations. For a start, parents spending less time with kids because they are working is a) not something that would particularly affect current year 1s and b) isn't true. The data is very clear that working parents actually spend much more quality time than in previous generations. Yes in the 50s women would more often be at home but they would not be at home playing with their kids for hours!

I agree with PP that this thread is confirmation bias and anecdata. In my kids' school it's year 5 that is the difficult year. 🙍

DingleDungle · 11/04/2026 23:13

Nix32 · 09/04/2026 22:34

Last year, the local and national picture for the Reception cohorts was very different to other years. Much, much higher numbers of SEND and much more severe needs. Those children are now Year 1 and those needs have enormous implications for that year group. I’m a Reception teacher.

Can you link to or screenshot the actual data on this?

Nix32 · 11/04/2026 23:26

@DingleDungle

Current year 1 classes
DingleDungle · 11/04/2026 23:35

Thanks. That seems to suggest it's just gradually getting more prevalent than saying that there's a significant difference between current Y1 and other years though? Add that looks like an AI summary it might also be missing some nuance.

TheSpryLemur · 11/04/2026 23:41

EvangelicalAboutButteredToast · 11/04/2026 10:27

For us it’s the current years 2s, no problems with the year 1s.

Us too. Y1 are fine, no issues but the current Y2’s are a very hard work year.

DingleDungle · 11/04/2026 23:42

https://explore-education-statistics.service.gov.uk/find-statistics/special-educational-needs-in-england/2024-25

Is that AI summary from here? If so it's misrepresenting the data, as I can't see anything that looks at the reception class specifically, only overall figures from primary school, and this suggests that most common age for prevalence of SEN is 9, so the rise could just be in older primary pupils?

This is the reason why AI summaries are not always helpful.

Release home - Special educational needs in England

Pupils in England with SEN support or an education, health and care plan (EHCP). Including type of need, age, gender, free school meals (FSM) and ethnicity.

https://explore-education-statistics.service.gov.uk/find-statistics/special-educational-needs-in-england/2024-25

AnalogArtifact · 11/04/2026 23:49

I think that current Y5s are feeling more of an impact overall. Also current Y1s aren't the only ones that were babies during the first lockdown. Summer babies from Y2 were as well.

Besidemyselfwithworry · 11/04/2026 23:54

EvangelicalAboutButteredToast · 11/04/2026 10:27

For us it’s the current years 2s, no problems with the year 1s.

My youngest son is In year 2 and compared to my older 2 kids year groups (current years 5 and 8) I would say there is more than the average number of kids with various issues. I accompanied them on a school trip and some of the behaviour was shocking, lots of the kids had to have medication administered to keep them calm and I would say getting on to half of them have a diagnosis of adhd/autism or both and just issues in general with behaviour. The teachers must be on their knees as year 2 has 1 full time TA for the 2 classes and then an intervention officer for small group work so not many extra bodies to help support this.
My son was born in 2019 and so he was 1 during the first Covid pandemic so far too young too realise what was going on and be traumatised by Covid but my partner was furloughed and so he had stability and he had 2 older siblings to play with and be read to with them, and do activities etc which made a massive difference to kids who maybe didn’t have siblings to play with?
my sons class teacher is very quick to call them the “Covid kids” but lockdown looked different for different people and I’m not sure how long they can keep banging on about Covid it was 6 years ago - it was awful - I appreciate that I worked in a hospital for the duration but surely in the last 6 years kids have had ample chance to make progress etc?

bunnyvsmonkey · 12/04/2026 08:35

Besidemyselfwithworry · 11/04/2026 23:54

My youngest son is In year 2 and compared to my older 2 kids year groups (current years 5 and 8) I would say there is more than the average number of kids with various issues. I accompanied them on a school trip and some of the behaviour was shocking, lots of the kids had to have medication administered to keep them calm and I would say getting on to half of them have a diagnosis of adhd/autism or both and just issues in general with behaviour. The teachers must be on their knees as year 2 has 1 full time TA for the 2 classes and then an intervention officer for small group work so not many extra bodies to help support this.
My son was born in 2019 and so he was 1 during the first Covid pandemic so far too young too realise what was going on and be traumatised by Covid but my partner was furloughed and so he had stability and he had 2 older siblings to play with and be read to with them, and do activities etc which made a massive difference to kids who maybe didn’t have siblings to play with?
my sons class teacher is very quick to call them the “Covid kids” but lockdown looked different for different people and I’m not sure how long they can keep banging on about Covid it was 6 years ago - it was awful - I appreciate that I worked in a hospital for the duration but surely in the last 6 years kids have had ample chance to make progress etc?

The lag of healthcare since COVID is a real issue. My year 1 ds has NEVER seen a GP or health visitor despite needing to because they won't see anyone in person even six years later. He is under a consultant for hearing and speech issues despite that but that's because we went private for a hearing test and then were able to get referred into the NHS by the back door. The NHS cannot provide any SALT post-covid which has meant we have been left to YouTube our own speech therapy. Essentially he can't hear properly in class and his speech affects his writing because he can't differentiate phonic sounds well.

My guess is that there are probably quite a few children in year one that have similar non-SEN health issues that impact learning and behaviour.

landlordhell · 12/04/2026 08:39

At my school the current year R, 1 and 2 are very hard work because in each class there are 4/5 chn that are very disruptive and do not respond to normal classroom management techniques. It is exhausting. I am not looking forward to work tomorrow.

Educationisfailing · 12/04/2026 08:58

landlordhell · 12/04/2026 08:39

At my school the current year R, 1 and 2 are very hard work because in each class there are 4/5 chn that are very disruptive and do not respond to normal classroom management techniques. It is exhausting. I am not looking forward to work tomorrow.

That's what the problem in my year 1 class is. 4/5 kids who cannot cope in the classroom. Yes, I find the whole class ditzy, but it's those children that are making it so impossible.

I actually don't think COVID has got anything to do with it. I blame technology and poor parenting.

landlordhell · 12/04/2026 09:04

Educationisfailing · 12/04/2026 08:58

That's what the problem in my year 1 class is. 4/5 kids who cannot cope in the classroom. Yes, I find the whole class ditzy, but it's those children that are making it so impossible.

I actually don't think COVID has got anything to do with it. I blame technology and poor parenting.

I agree. The majority are just fine. Of those that are struggling, there are parenting issues which vary. Monday mornings are hell because after two days of doing what the hell they like, we have to try to get some order in place. Imagine after 2 weeks off? Yes I am looking to escape education.

Besidemyselfwithworry · 12/04/2026 09:04

bunnyvsmonkey · 12/04/2026 08:35

The lag of healthcare since COVID is a real issue. My year 1 ds has NEVER seen a GP or health visitor despite needing to because they won't see anyone in person even six years later. He is under a consultant for hearing and speech issues despite that but that's because we went private for a hearing test and then were able to get referred into the NHS by the back door. The NHS cannot provide any SALT post-covid which has meant we have been left to YouTube our own speech therapy. Essentially he can't hear properly in class and his speech affects his writing because he can't differentiate phonic sounds well.

My guess is that there are probably quite a few children in year one that have similar non-SEN health issues that impact learning and behaviour.

The lack of health visitors etc is really sad 😢 I know someone who does admin for the health visiting team in our area and she said there just isn’t as many now and they need more not less!! People leave or go part time and the hours aren’t replaced as they are he’ll bent on saving money!! The areas they cover are huge and so priority is given to safeguarding concerns and mega serious stuff so loads of really important things like speech and language are likely to get missed, by then which is awful. People shouldn’t be having to use YouTube to navigate this there should be help out there for them. The argument is that there is more funding and lots of kids access nursery from 9 months but it isn’t the same input or support really; my son was born Feb 2019 so he was 13 months when Covid hit in the March and even then I think I saw a health visitor maybe 2/3 times before that, that was all, but with my older kids I had much better support. Maybe it’s a postcode lottery and other peoples experiences are different?

Elariakopiethat · 12/04/2026 09:04

bunnyvsmonkey · 12/04/2026 08:35

The lag of healthcare since COVID is a real issue. My year 1 ds has NEVER seen a GP or health visitor despite needing to because they won't see anyone in person even six years later. He is under a consultant for hearing and speech issues despite that but that's because we went private for a hearing test and then were able to get referred into the NHS by the back door. The NHS cannot provide any SALT post-covid which has meant we have been left to YouTube our own speech therapy. Essentially he can't hear properly in class and his speech affects his writing because he can't differentiate phonic sounds well.

My guess is that there are probably quite a few children in year one that have similar non-SEN health issues that impact learning and behaviour.

The NHS cannot provide any SALT post-covid

Do you know why this is out of interest?

WildDenimDuck · 12/04/2026 09:09

I work in a primary school. It’s the current year 5s that are the most impacted by covid. I know this is the case in other local schools, so I think it’ll be reflected in the year 6 SATS next year. But not just educationally impacted.
However, a general issue is so many kids have excessive screen time. So many go home and play video games or watch TV until dinner. This massively impacts communication skills, they aren’t getting ‘bored’ and learning to use imagination, they aren’t getting enough physical activity. There’s been a massive increase in children starting reception not reliably potty trained, and even in nappies!
However the current receptions are an absolute dream for the most part and been absolutely ages since we’ve had a cohort like it. Not a single child in nappies. Most started school being able to write their own name, and could read… anything from CVC words to books like Rainbow Fairies. Excellent listening and communication skills. Knew to say please and thank you. So even though it is generally an issue, it does not impact all cohorts! So it could be different at a different school.

Edited to add: I don’t believe the younger year groups are impacted by COVID. It’s a side effect of poor parenting and excessive screen time.

bunnyvsmonkey · 12/04/2026 09:11

Elariakopiethat · 12/04/2026 09:04

The NHS cannot provide any SALT post-covid

Do you know why this is out of interest?

My ds is not seen as needing it 'enough'. My guess is funding is only available for those in highest need. I do know a family have a completely non-verbal 9 year old and they've just been offered 6 appointments with SALT after 6 years on the register. 6 appointments! For a completely non verbal child. So I get that my ds who can speak but just can't form most of his words correctly is not a priority. He bumbles along ok. He gets angry and frustrated by it so we try to help him at home but we don't really know what we are doing!

Besidemyselfwithworry · 12/04/2026 09:22

WildDenimDuck · 12/04/2026 09:09

I work in a primary school. It’s the current year 5s that are the most impacted by covid. I know this is the case in other local schools, so I think it’ll be reflected in the year 6 SATS next year. But not just educationally impacted.
However, a general issue is so many kids have excessive screen time. So many go home and play video games or watch TV until dinner. This massively impacts communication skills, they aren’t getting ‘bored’ and learning to use imagination, they aren’t getting enough physical activity. There’s been a massive increase in children starting reception not reliably potty trained, and even in nappies!
However the current receptions are an absolute dream for the most part and been absolutely ages since we’ve had a cohort like it. Not a single child in nappies. Most started school being able to write their own name, and could read… anything from CVC words to books like Rainbow Fairies. Excellent listening and communication skills. Knew to say please and thank you. So even though it is generally an issue, it does not impact all cohorts! So it could be different at a different school.

Edited to add: I don’t believe the younger year groups are impacted by COVID. It’s a side effect of poor parenting and excessive screen time.

Edited

This is really interesting as I also have a year 5 child who was obviously reception age when Covid hit. In my experience I’d say from the “limited” things I’d seen and heard (bearing in mind I’m not there all the time I only volunteer sometimes and from what my kids tell me which doesn’t 100% reflect it!) there aren’t as many issues with the current year 5 but then also interestingly the current year 5 cohort is a really small year group. There is 23 in one class and 24 in another (low birth rate year apparently) so many any issues are easier to manage with less kids?
during Covid our schools did online learning lessons and sent stuff out to us in the post they were really good but again this may vary from area to area but my elder 2 had online lessons daily as my partner was furloughed and key workers kids went in (in their bubbles) just so surreal when you think back to it!