TheBuskersDog - what about those that are on SA+, should have a statement but don't? Where has the support in their IEP's gone...
THAT is the issue - so many DC's that should have statements but don't, are on SA+ with no protection.
Now I KNOW what was in my DD's IEP, and what it meant, and how much TA time she was losing at her review. I was able, as a relatively intelligent, well informed parent, to ask if my DD had made enough progress to warrant the reduction in floating support, and if so, why wasn't that evident in her levels.
Not all parents with DC's with SEN are as well informed as I am, or have the level if education that I have, that enables me to do research and find out how best to help my DD.
I managed to keep the floating support in my DD's Catering lesson because the school then had no choice but to admit to me that they didn't have the same budget for floating support as my DD had had before the Academisation of the school.
I'm quite sure lots of other DC's at her school have lost the floating TA support that was essential for them to access the curriculum.
Look at the number of DC's with statements. Then look at the number of DC's currently on SA and SA+ that often still need enormous amounts of support to access the curriculum.
My DD started Y7, in a MS Comp, on SA+, no statement, with the reading ability of a 6yo and the numeracy skills of a 4yo. How would she access a curriculum designed for the average 11yo without MASSIVE support?
And she is FAR from alone - this is at a high achieving MC comp Academy that people move to in order to get their DC's into. It has the best GCSE results in our town, bar the superselective Grammars.
DD is in no way the DC that requires the most support in her year group, just to be able to access the curriculum, either. And the majority are on SA+, despite limited progress over the entirety of KS1, KS2 AND KS3.
Like I said, the SEN system is broken, beyond repair IMO, and I as one parent can't fix it. I've tried!