Thousands of new school places are being created for children with
special educational needs or those facing additional challenges in
mainstream education, providing tailored support to help children
thrive. Every region in the country will benefit from a new school,
which include 37 special free schools and two alternative provision
free schools. This will create around 3,500 additional school
places, boosting choice for...Request free trial
Thousands of new school places are being created for
children with special educational needs or those facing
additional challenges in mainstream education, providing
tailored support to help children thrive.
Every region in the country will benefit from a new school,
which include 37 special free schools and two alternative
provision free schools. This will create around 3,500
additional school places, boosting choice for parents and
providing specialist support and education for pupils with
complex needs such as autism, severe learning difficulties
or mental health conditions, and those who may have been or
are at risk of being excluded from mainstream schools.
It follows a commitment from the Education Secretary
to give the green light
to all high-quality special free school bids last December
when he announced an additional £250 million for local
authorities for their high needs budget. This builds on an
additional £100m of capital funding for local authorities
to invest in additional places and better facilities for
pupils with special educational needs and disability at
mainstream schools, special schools and colleges, taking
total investment from 2018 to 2021 to £365 million.
Education Secretary said:
Parents rightly want choice of where their child goes to
school and to know that the education and support they
receive will ignite that spark of potential that exists
in all of us, so they can go on and succeed.
We want every school to be a school for children with
special educational needs and disabilities. That’s why we
are investing significant funding into Special Education
Needs units attached to mainstream schools and in
additional support so children with education, health and
care plans can access mainstream education.
But we recognise some children require more specialist
support. These new special free schools and alternative
provision schools will make sure that more complex needs
can be provided to help support every child to have a
quality education.
Applications will now open in the 39 successful local
authorities to find providers - including community groups,
teachers, charities, existing education providers and other
organisations - that will run them.
Of the 37 new special free schools:
- three will be in the North East, providing over 200
places in total mostly for children with social, emotional
and mental health needs (SEMH);
- six will be in the North West, providing over 400
places including for children with SEMH, Autistic Spectrum
Disorder (ASD), Severe Learning Difficulty (SLD) and
speech, Language and Communication Needs (SLCN);
- five will be in Yorkshire and the Humber, providing
over 500 places including for children with SEMH, ASD, SLD,
Profound and Multiple Learning Difficulties (PMLD) and
SLCN;
- one will be in the East Midlands, providing 50 places
for children with SEMH;
- four will be in the West Midlands, providing over 400
places including for children with SEMH, ASD and Multiple
Learning Difficulties (MLD);
- four will be in the East of England, providing over 300
places including for children with SEMH, ASD and SLCN;
- five will be in London, providing over 400 places
including for children with SEMH, ASD and SLCN;
- three will be in the South East, providing over 300
places including for children with SEMH and ASD;
- six will be in the South West, providing 500 places
including for children with SEMH, ASD, Complex Learning
Difficulties (CLD) and SLCN; and
- two AP free schools will provide over 100 places in the
West Midlands for children who have been, or are at risk of
being, excluded from mainstream education.
Dame Christine Lenehan, Director of the Council for
Disabled Children, said:
We are pleased to welcome the new wave of special free
schools and the extra choice they will bring to the
system for children with special educational needs. We
look forward to seeing them working in partnership with
parents, children and local agencies to deliver the best
outcomes for children.
Leora Cruddas, Chief Executive of the Confederation of
School Trusts, said:
These additional school places will enable children with
special needs and those facing difficulties to have
access to high quality education provision. Over the past
week, there has been much debate in the media about
children and young people whose social, emotional and
behavioural needs make them vulnerable. Today’s
announcement of a range of specialist provision in every
region of the country is hugely welcome.
The 39 new free schools will offer an extra 3459 extra
places for pupils. The schools add to the 34 special and 42
AP free schools already open, and come on top of a further
54 special and 12 AP free schools approved in a previous
application rounds, which will open in future. The total
number of special free schools will come to 125 upon
completion.
Notes to editors:
-
Information about the 39 areas, as well as guidance
about the application process for the competitions, has
been published on GOV.UK.
-
The 37 special and two alternative provision free
schools will be established in the following local
authority areas:
-
Special free schools - Bexley, Bromley, Bury, Cornwall,
Dorset, Essex, Halton, Hartlepool, Hertfordshire, Kent,
Kingston upon Hull, Kingston upon Thames, Leeds,
Leicestershire, Newham, Norfolk, North Lincolnshire,
North Somerset, North Yorkshire, Northumberland,
Oxfordshire, Plymouth, Reading, Richmond upon Thames,
Rochdale, Salford, Sandwell, Sheffield, Shropshire,
Solihull, Somerset, Stockport, Stoke on Trent, Suffolk,
Tees Valley, Warrington and Wiltshire.
-
Alternative provision free schools - Warwickshire and
Worcestershire
-
The 39 new free schools follow an applications round in
July 2018, where councils set out their case for why a
new special or AP free school would benefit pupils in
their area.
-
Once all the schools are open, they will offer an extra
3,469 extra places for pupils, extending the support
given to SEND pupils as well as those not in mainstream
education.
-
The commitment to 39 new free schools comes after the
Department for Education announced an additional £250
million for the high needs budget and an extra £100
million investment to create more specialist places in
mainstream schools, colleges and special schools in
December.
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