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Written Question
Special Educational Needs
Monday 16th June 2014

Asked by: Chris Heaton-Harris (Conservative - Daventry)

Question to the Department for Education:

To ask the Secretary of State for Education, what steps his Department is taking to support children with special educational needs.

Answered by Edward Timpson

The Children and Families Act - to be implemented from September – introduces the most fundamental reform to the system for SEN and disability for 30 years, placing children and families at the heart of a more integrated system focused on improving outcomes for children and young people.

Families will be more involved in decision making and there will be greater clarity about local services provided in each area.

We're providing substantial funding to local areas to deliver the reforms. Last week we announced a further £45.2m - on top of the £70m already provided this year - for implementing the reforms.

We are also providing £30m over two years to provide independent supporters to families.


Written Question

Question Link

Monday 31st March 2014

Asked by: Chris Heaton-Harris (Conservative - Daventry)

Question to the Department for Education:

To ask the Secretary of State for Education, how many people with learning disabilities reported being bullied at school in each year for which figures are available.

Answered by Edward Timpson

The Department for Education does not collect information on the number of people with learning difficulties reported being bullied at school.

The Government is clear that bullying, for whatever reason, is totally unacceptable. All schools are required, by law, to have a behaviour policy with measures to address all forms of bullying including that which occurs online. Schools have the freedom to shape these measures in the context of their particular local circumstances and pupils' needs. Schools are held closely to account by Ofsted for how well they deal with pupil behaviour and safety, which includes bullying.

We are also providing £4 million of funding over two years from spring 2013 to four organisations - Beatbullying, the Diana Award, Kidscape and The Anti-bullying Alliance (ABA) with the National Children's Bureau (NCB) - to develop effective initiatives that prevent and tackle all forms of bullying.

As part of their funding, the ABA has recently published a guide to cyberbullying for SEND young people, which contains advice for schools on developing effective anti-bullying practice and we link to this report in our Departmental advice on bullying.