The SEND strategy for Torbay for 2023
Torbay’s Joint Health and Wellbeing Strategy sets out a vision ‘to create a healthy, happy Torbay where individuals and communities can thrive’.
Children and young people are our future and our ambition of achieving this vision must start with them. Getting a good start in life and childhood, building resilience and getting maximum benefit from education are important markers for good health and wellbeing throughout life. Offering support to all children, young people and their families, as well as focusing on those who need help the most, reduces inequalities and improves health outcomes.
We know we must do better when it comes to delivering services for children and young people with Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND) and their families – and we are firmly committed to doing so. Placing children, young people, and their families at the heart of this work is key to achieving this and the principles of co-design and co-production will underpin everything we do.
Partners across the local area in Torbay are committed to working in partnership with SEND Family Voice Torbay as well as children, young people, parents, carers and partner organisations to radically improve support for children and young people with special educational needs and/or disabilities within Torbay so they have the very best life chances.
This SEND Strategy sets out our ambitions and the priorities upon which we will focus to achieve them. As we measure our progress against our priorities, we will continually ask ourselves, as well as our children and young people, and their parents and carers, “what difference have we made?”
We are committed to:
We are determined to work together to ensure an improvement in the quality of outcomes for those children and young people with special educational needs and/or disabilities.
Councillor Nick Bye
Cabinet Member for Children’s Services, Torbay Council
Nancy Meehan
Director Children’s Services, Torbay Council
Penny Smith
Chief Nursing Officer, NHS Devon
Rebecca Box and Karen Roofe
Co-Chairs, SEND Family Voice Torbay
This strategy sets out a vision and direction of travel for children and young people 0 – 25 years, with Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND) in Torbay. It is intended to cover the ‘local area’ of Torbay and can only be achieved through effective partnership between children, young people, parent and carers and our local system; the local authority, Integrated Care System (ICS) (health), public health, NHS England for specialist services, early years settings, schools, further education provisions and the voluntary and community sector.
The legal definitions outlined in the Equality Act 2010, Children and Families Act 2014 and SEND Code of Practice 2015 are used in this strategy to provide our framework for delivery and identify what we mean by children and young people with SEND.
This strategy has been produced in partnership and represents a marked shift in our local area. It builds upon the current lived experience and expertise of our children, young people and their parents/carers and sets out an ambitious goal for making sure that SEND becomes ‘everybody’s business’ through pro-active inclusion, improving the experience at every opportunity.
The strategy was produced together with key partners and draws upon the following information:
This strategy covers the key areas that will help us to make cultural change, keep up momentum and be more responsive to the need across our local area. The strategy cannot be considered in isolation and acknowledges that there are interdependencies with the development of Family Hubs, Child Friendly Torbay and the development of the Integrated Care System for Devon.
The shared vision for the strategy was produced with representatives from across the local area. The shared vision is:
Our vision will be delivered through five priority areas:
To achieve this vision, young people, parents, carers, professionals and services across the local area have agreed to adopt a set of principles that have been set out in a partnership pledge. We know that the success of our strategy depends on cultural change. The commitments that we expect everyone to adopt and sign up to have been defined by our children and young people.
We will underpin our strategy by continuing to adopt Restorative Practice. Restorative Practice is about putting strong, meaningful and trusting relationships at the heart of how we work with children and families. It means we will offer supportive relationships combined with clear goals that are focussed on the needs of children. It also places emphasis on family led decision making to how we solve problems. Our strategy is underpinned by the principles of listening and working “with” rather than doing things “for” or “to”.
We are committed to working with children and young people with Special Educational Needs and/or Disabilities and their families.
Children and young people have told us what they would like to see for this priority:
“SEND needs should be treated as equally important across all areas and services”
Changing culture is at the heart of providing high quality services across the local area. Experiencing positive values, behaviours and responses is essential to be able to identify need, provide support and high-quality responses for our children and young people with SEND and their families. For everybody working with or providing support to children and young people, interaction matters and can set the trajectory of travel for the young person. If this is conducted with a biased opinion, without good knowledge, or through misguided information it can lead to further concern and distress.
“Culture” can seem like an ambiguous term; how is it valued or is it measured? It is hard to quantify, but if it is not right, the result can be a poor lived experience. One of the definitions of culture is: “It’s the stories we tell ourselves about ourselves” and the stories are based on our experiences based on our behaviours. Our strategy wants to bring consistency and change to the habits and behaviours of everyone that is involved in SEND. We want our different behaviours and habits to lead to different stories.
Children have told us what they would like to see for this priority:
“Treat all young people as a priority, not just those that have the highest needs”
A child’s life is full of opportunities to learn and develop, to foster a whole set of personal strengths and skills that will prepare them for their life ahead. When we work together with families, we can provide the right conditions to maximise these opportunities through:
“While some have argued that early intervention may have its strongest impact when offered during the first few years of life, the best evidence shows that effective interventions can improve children’s life chances at any point during childhood and adolescence.” (Early Intervention Foundation)
For children, young people and parents and carers this means valuing their lived experience and expertise. This matters because it is only those who have had direct experience who will truly understand the nuances and complexities of that experience and what it will mean for their lives.
Children have told us what they would like to see for this priority:
“We are stronger together”
The SEND Review: Right support Right place Right time (DFE, March 2022) sets out a robust case for a change in the way we understand our population needs and commission services to meet them:
“We are clear that, in an effective and sustainable SEND system that delivers great outcomes for children and young people, the vast majority of children and young people should be able to access the support they need to thrive without the need for an Education Health and Care Plan (EHCP) or a specialist or alternative provision place. This is because their needs would be identified promptly, and appropriate support would be put in place at the earliest opportunity before needs can escalate. Those children and young people who require an EHCP or specialist placement would be able to access it with minimal bureaucracy. To shift the dial, we are setting out proposals for an inclusive system, starting with improved mainstream provision that is built on early and accurate identification of needs, high-quality teaching of a knowledge-rich curriculum, and prompt access to targeted support where it is needed. Alongside that, we need a strong specialist sector that has a clear purpose to support those children and young people with more complex needs who require specialist or alternative provision. We need a system where decision-making is based on the needs of children and young people, not on location. This must be underpinned by strong co-production and accountability at every level, and improved data collection to give a timely picture of how the system is performing so that issues can be addressed promptly.
“The Review has heard the need to align system incentives and accountabilities to reduce perverse behaviours that drive poor outcomes and high costs in the current system. Where local systems work more effectively, they are often too reliant on good will and relationships and this is the exception rather than the norm. We need every partner to be clear on their responsibilities in the system, have the right incentives and levers to fulfil those responsibilities and be held accountable for their role in delivery.”
Children have told us what they would like to see for this priority:
“Give opportunities to attend relevant training to support with SEND needs”
In a disjointed setting of schools and education provision, there is an inconsistency in our ability to meet children and young people’s needs. The school system is independent in decision making and where good practice emerges this may not be repeated across the system. The experience of children and young people with SEND is variable.
Experiences of Torbay’s families are aligned with the SEND Green Paper March 2022.
“It is not clear to families what they should reasonably expect from their local mainstream settings, and they lose confidence that these settings can meet their child’s needs. As a result, education health and care plans (EHCPs) and, in some cases, specialist provision, are seen as the only means of guaranteeing the right and appropriate support”. (SEND Green Paper 2022)
For many children with SEND they have poor attendance, are subject to repeated suspensions and are more likely to get excluded from a Torbay school than when compared to statistical and national comparators. For some schools excellent practice exists where needs are identified at SEN K and support is offered consistently and with impact, for others there is an over reliance on the need for Education Health and Care Plans to meet needs.
For the vast majority of our children and young people with SEND, access to education should be provided through mainstream education, our schools and colleges, with high quality identified support. Specialist and alternative provisions should be retained for those with clearly identified and complex needs.
Excellent teaching is the bedrock of strong mainstream provision. Research from the Education Endowment Foundation (EEF) found that teacher strategies, additional teaching and positive interactions with teachers are important factors for improving the outcomes of children and young people with SEND.
Children have told us what they would like to see for this priority:
“We want to increase the services and awareness of what services are available for supporting young adults.
The tragic fact is that on all indicators, people with disability fare much worse than their peers in the general population. However, research has shown that young people with SEND say they want the same opportunities as all young people, so that they could have the same life outcomes. This includes:
(Source: Council for Disabled Children)
Young people will need our support and encouragement to get ready for the challenges and increased independence of adult life. They need us to help plan ahead, providing opportunities to share aspirations and hopes and building meaningful and well produced plans that can become a reality over a period of time. Professionals need to know what part they play in helping to plan for the future and have confidence and knowledge of the system to make sure that this can be delivered and maintained into adulthood.
For young people and their families, preparation for adulthood should be well planned and understood. For many young people there will be a marked change to greater independence, however for some young people there needs to be a continuum of provision. We need to make sure that moving between children’s social care services to adult social care services is a seamless process.
We will have robust governance in place to make sure we deliver our commitment to improved services for children and young people with SEND and their families. The SEND Strategic Board, which includes representatives from SEND Family Voice, Department for Education , NHS England Advisors, reports into our Children’s Continuous Improvement Board (CCIB) making sure that our work around SEND is embedded in a broader approach to improvement and securing the very best outcomes for children and young people with SEND.
This document can be made available in other languages and formats. For more information please contact ehcp@torbay.gov.uk