Special Educational Consortum
The Special Educational Consortium (SEC) is a group of organisations who protect and promote the rights of disabled children and children with special educational needs (SEN).
Visit the SEC website now
Children and Families Bill
Find out how EDCM and SEC are campaigning together to ensure the reforms proposed by the Children and Families Bill meet the needs of disabled children and their families.
Go to Children and Families Bill
Education
The time that children and young people spend in an educational setting helps them to prepare for the rest of their lives.
Children with special education needs and disabled children in education
Children with special education needs and disabled children (children with SEND) want the same opportunities and have the same rights as non-disabled students to achieve qualifications and skills. However, children with SEND are nine times more likely to be excluded from school than the rest of the school population. In 2011, approximately 1.67m children were categorised as having SEND, and estimates usually fall between 18-20% of all children that will have some form of learning difficulty.
EDCM supports the work of the Special Educational Consortium, who are one of our founding organisations. We are currently working in partnership to campaign on the Children and Families Bill.
Inclusion in education
There are many barriers that contribute to poor experiences for children with special education needs and disabled children in mainstream education settings. These include inadequate facilities and signage; not making the right adjustments in exams; a lack of inclusion in activities and school trips; and low expectations for disabled students.
In EDCM's Disabled children's manifesto for change, disabled children and young people said that they want the Government to 'push schools, colleges and apprenticeship schemes to promote opportunities for disabled children and young people.'
Read more about what disabled children and young people have to say on their experiences of education in the Disabled children's manifesto for change.