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• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oCbrQp3 
MIwc 
http://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=still+face&FORM=VIRE3# 
view=detail&mid=3E23AA562E7E6A2EC62C3E23AA562E7E6A2EC 
62C
Inclusion and supporting 
learners with SEN 
Thursday 4th December 
Led by 
Diane Greaves – Vice Principal - Greenacre 
Verity Watts – Vice Principal – Springwell
Remove the label 
See the child
Feed forward 
Share what you have put in place from 
your last session…
Knowledge run around
Aims 
• Feedback in groups from the feedforward 
session 
• Know the EHC agenda and the implications 
for a mainstream classroom teacher 
• How well do you really know and 
understand the children you teach? 
• So what? What are the strategies you can 
implement? 
• Now what? What next for your practice?
National context and 
the new EHC plans 
‘All schools have duties under the Equality Act 2010 
towards individual disabled children and young people’ 
‘Teachers are responsible and accountable for the 
development of pupils in their class… ‘ 
‘High quality teaching, differentiated for 
individual pupils, is the first step in responding to pupils 
who have or may have SEN.’ 
Schools: guide to the 0 to 25 SEND code of practice
SEN support – 
a graduated approach 
‘Where a pupil is identified as having 
SEN, schools should take action to 
remove barriers to learning and put 
effective special education provision in 
place.’ 
SEN code of practice July 2014
4 part cycle 
Assess 
Intervention 
• Applying more detailed approaches and make parents aware 
of planned support and interventions 
Plan 
Do 
Review
Involving specialists 
‘Where a pupil continues to make less than 
expected progress, despite evidence-based 
support and interventions… the 
school should consider involving outside 
agencies…’
Requesting an Education, Health 
and Care needs assessment 
• If the child is not making progress in spite 
of interventions the school/parents can 
request an EHC needs assessment 
• Before an EHC plan can be agreed, the 
local authority will need to see evidence of 
action taken by the school in the way of 
SEN support. 
• Date everything as it can be used for 
evidence!
What the Disability 
Discrimination Act Says… 
• Disability discrimination in 
education is unlawful. Schools must 
not treat disabled pupils less 
favourably than others. They must 
make “reasonable adjustments” to 
ensure that disabled pupils are not 
at a substantial disadvantage …
• It is unlawful for the body responsible 
for a school to discriminate against a 
disabled pupil by excluding him from the 
school, whether permanently or 
temporarily....
Mental Health and Behaviour in 
Schools 
• ‘Where a school has identified that a 
pupil needs special education provision 
due to their mental health problems, 
this will comprise of educational or 
training provision that is additional to or 
different from that made generally for 
others of the same age.’ 
DFE June 2014
Are they just naughty children?
How well do you know your pupils? 
Task: 
List the pupils in your class who struggle 
to engage and you don’t know why or who 
have a condition. 
At the side of each pupil make notes of 
the strategies you are already using.
One size fits no-one teaching 
When we teach the same thing to all (students) 
at the same time, 
1/3 already know it, 
1/3 get it 
1/3 never will. 
So 2/3 of the (students) are wasting their time. 
Scott Willis 
Or, more importantly, YOU are wasting their time.
Or…pupil centred planning 
What to consider? 
• Literacy difficulties 
• Numeracy difficulties 
• ASD 
• ADHD 
• Attachment Difficulties/Social, 
emotional and mental health difficulties 
• Dyslexia
Literacy difficulties 
• (Provide scaffolding) gap fill 
• Clozed activity 
• Multi-sensory props 
• Words and symbols 
• Writing frames 
• Help sheets 
• Words and phrases to piece 
together (kinaesthetic) 
• Role Play, hot-seating etc 
• Immersive approach 
• Classroom Organisation (peer support)
Numeracy difficulties 
Consider: 
• Physical equipment – props, counters,etc 
• Contextualise – know your students 
• Purpose – what’s in it for me? 
• Classroom Organisation
5 minute task 
• Plan an activity for a pupil from your list 
taking into consideration the points just 
mentioned on shape, space and measure
If only it were that simple!!! 
There is often even more to consider… 
Task: 
Watch Di’s teaching and give her advice 
on where she is going wrong.
Autism Spectrum Disorder 
NB – a lot of students with general learning 
difficulties will benefit from strategies used 
for students with ASD 
• Relationships – Show that you care and can be trusted 
BUT this doesn’t mean woolly boundaries 
• Consistency and routine 
• Now, next and then 
• Visual cues 
• Preparation for change 
• Use of language 
• Imagination… 
• Purpose and relevance 
• HEALTH WARNING – what works for one child with ASD 
may not work for another – Know your child!
What do you do when a child has 
been backed into a corner? 
• Stop and think 
• Give the child space and time 
• Deflect 
• Change face 
• Provide limited choices (to give the child 
a get out) 
• It’s not about winning
How many of you have pupils who.. 
• Shout out 
• Can’t sit still 
• Can’t focus 
• Disturb others
So what do you do? 
5 minute activity – consider your 
approaches for: 
• Teaching 
• Activities 
• Classroom organisation
Insert you tube link 
• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=- 
xM1X7if3SU
ADHD 
• Rules, routines, re-inforcement, rewards 
• Kinaesthetic/hands on/multi sensory 
• Brain breaks/stretches/exercises 
• Small chunk tasks 
• Limit instructions 
• Specific praise 
• Immediate rewards 
• Limited choices 
• Visual aids 
• Study buddy/social buddy 
• Seating arrangement
Looking at the world from another 
point of view 
http://youtu.be/gwZLFTW4OGY
How do you know a pupil has traits of 
dyslexia? 
What behaviours might they display?
Specific Learning Difficulties 
(Dyslexia) 
• Multi-sensory approach (VAK) – children should be active 
participants involved in the learning experience. Drama/role play 
can be particularly effective 
• Overlearning – repetition BUT in a range of contexts and 
situations 
• Opportunity to access texts below their level – this supports 
their understanding of inference 
• Learning through games 
• Reading/spelling/thinking buddy 
• Provide writing frames and key words to support tasks 
• Model the mental process – what are you thinking as you read 
and write?
• Pale pastel backgrounds to whiteboard 
presentations 
• Pale pastel paper (not white) 
• Coloured overlays for reading 
• Dyslexia friendly font (e.g comic sans) 
• Structure, routine, short chunked up tasks 
• HEALTH WARNING – what works for one 
child with SpLD may not work for another 
– Know your child!
Over to you… 
• Plan a lesson on adjectives, focusing on a 
couple of pupils from your earlier list 
• Take into account the strategies and 
approaches suggested. 
• Work in pairs – each sharing ideas
Social, Emotional and Mental 
Health Difficulties 
What does this include? 
Attachment difficulties: 
• Insecure avoidant 
• Insecure ambivalent 
• Insecure disorganised
Internal Working Model 
Positive: 
I am loveable 
Others can be trusted 
The world is a safe place to be 
Negative: 
I am not loveable 
Others cannot be trusted 
The world is not a safe place to be
Characteristics of Attachment 
Difficulties 
• They work very hard to control all situations, especially 
the feelings and behaviour of caregivers 
• They relish power struggles and have a compulsion to win 
them 
• They feel empowered by repeatedly saying ‘no’ 
• They cause emotional pain and sometimes physical pain to 
others 
• They strongly maintain a negative self-concept 
• They have a very limited ability to regulate their affect
Organised v’s Disorganised Attachment 
Secure 
Insecure/ 
Organised 
Avoidant Ambivalent 
Insecure/ 
Disorganised 
Disorientated
Anxious Avoidant Children will 
• Learn not to ask for help 
• Act as if nothing is wrong when distressed 
• These behaviours lead the carer to feel 
unwanted, not needed, so they back off 
and ‘deactivate’ their caregiving or ignore 
the child.
Strategies for 
Anxious Avoidant pupils: 
• Focus on tasks not your relationship 
• Left brain activities (sorting, organising) 
• Pupils need to feel in control 
• Choice of tasks 
• Need to see big picture and tangible outcomes 
e.g. making something 
• Peer teaching can work well 
• Use of story as a projection tool – avoids 
discussing themselves
Anxious Ambivalent Children will: 
• Act with exaggerated anger and need when 
distressed. These are provocative, noisy 
children who convey a baby state of 
helplessness 
• These children can make the carer feel 
inadequate to soothe or meet the child’s 
needs 
• Carers feel exhausted
Strategies for 
Anxious ambivalent pupils: 
• Small step tasks to encourage 
independence 
• Use of timers 
• Comments to reassure you are will get back 
to them and when 
• Avoid doing their work for them 
• Transition object so they know you haven’t 
forgotten them 
• Acknowledge their difficulty in doing 
things independently
Anxious disorganised pupils will… 
• avoid being cared for 
• Try to remain in control and is self 
reliant, aggressive, rageful, bossy, 
fighting for control 
• Make the carer feels helpless and angry 
so they are tempted to stop caring
Strategies for: 
Anxious disorganised pupils 
• Clear structures, routines 
• Visual timetables for all ages 
• Prepare for any change however small 
• Acknowledge with them how they feel 
about change 
• Key worker to build a positive 
relationship with the pupil
Also refer to ‘Mental health and 
behaviour in schools’ DfE June 2014 
Types of needs: 
• Conduct disorders: ADHD, ODD 
• Anxiety 
• Depression 
• Eating disorders 
• Substance misuse 
• Self harm 
• Post traumatic stress disorder
Some intervention strategies 
• Working with/ involving parents 
• Nurture groups 
• Whole school working to nurture 
principles 
• Boxall profiling to bridge developmental 
gaps 
• Play based approaches inc play therapy 
or filial therapy involving the whole 
family
Work to the 
six nurture principles: 
1. Children’s learning is understood 
developmentally 
2.The classroom offers a safe base 
3.Nurture is important for the development of 
self esteem 
4.Language is understood as a vital means of 
communication 
5.All behaviour is communication 
6.Transitions are significant in the lives of 
children
More pupils have 
complex learning difficulties 
WithCLDD, we frequently see: 
 ADD/ADHD 
 ASD 
 FASD 
 PMLD 
 Neurological difficulties 
 Prematurity
How Do We Define Complex Need? 
CChildren and young people with complex learning difficulties 
and disabilities (CLDD) include those with co-existing 
conditions (e.g. autism & attention deficit/hyperactivity 
disorder (ADHD)) or profound and multiple learning disabilities 
(PMLD). However they also include children who have newly 
begun to populate our schools – among them those who have 
difficulties arising from premature birth, have survived 
infancy due to advanced medical interventions, have 
difficulties arising from parental substance and alcohol abuse, 
and/or have rare chromosomal disorders. Many may also be 
affected by compounding factors such as multisensory 
impairment or mental ill-health, or require invasive 
procedures, such as supported nutrition, assisted ventilation 
and rescue medication”
Common Mental Health 
Difficulties in CLDD. 
• Anxiety Disorders (32-42%) 
• Depression (30%) 
• Oppositional Defiant Disorders (30%) 
• Attention Deficit Hyperactivity 
Disorder (28-53%)
Engagement is key to progress 
• Engagement profile and scale for looking 
at the level of engagement of pupils 
with complex needs 
• http://complexld.ssatrust.org.uk/projec 
t-resources/engagement-profile-scale. 
html
Observation … A Key Factor 
• Appearance & 
behaviour 
• Speech or talk 
• Affect (non 
reactive) 
• Mood 
• Thoughts 
• Perceptions 
• Cognition (alertness) 
• Insight
Where to look next? 
• Report on Complex Learning Difficulties 
and Disabilities Research Project 2011 
• Briefing packs with strategies for 
different special needs 
• http://complexld.ssatrust.org.uk/projec 
t-resources/cldd-briefing-packs.html 
• Further training materiasls 
www.complexneeds.org.uk
An Integrated Approach to 
Intervention 
FAMILY 
SYSTEMIC & 
ENVIRONMENTAL 
INDIVIDUAL 
EDUCATIONAL
Feed forward task 
• Choose a child to case study who is 
experiencing problems in engaging with 
learning – read their notes, background 
information and observe objectively to 
identify what their issues are. Choose 
appropriate to put in place and measure 
the impact.
Parting thought 
‘If children don’t learn the 
way we teach, we will teach 
them the way they learn’
and at Greenacre to day 
Come to the edge. He said. 
We are afraid, they said. 
Come to the edge, he said. 
They came to the edge, 
He pushed them… and they flew.
Essential Reading 
Batmanghelidjh, C. (2006) Shattered Lives 
Blackburn, C Carpenter, B and Egerton, J (2012) Educating Children and Young People with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum 
Disorders 
Bomber, L. (2007) Inside I’m Hurting 
Bomber, L. (2011) What About Me 
Bomber, L. (2014) Settling to Learn 
Boxall and Lucas, (2010) Nurture Groups in Schools 
Brower, F 100 ideas fro supporting pupils on the Autistic Spectrum 
Brown, S (2010) Play 
Cumine, Leach and Stevenson Asperger’s Syndrome – A practical guide for teachers 
Curran, A, (2007) The Little Book of Big Stuff About the Brain 
DfE (2014) Special educational needs and disability code of practice: 0 to 25 years 
DfE (2014) Mental Health and Behaviour in Schools 
Delaney, M (2009)Teaching the Unteachable 
Geddes, H (2010) Attachment in the Classroom 
Gerhardt, S (2004), Why Love Matters 
Hughes,L and Cooper, P (2007) Understanding and Supporting Children with ADHD: Strategies for Teachers, Parents 
and Other Professionals Paperback 
Legislation.gov.uk Equality Act 2010 
Pavey, B Mehan, M (2013) The Dyslexia Friendly Teacher’s Toolkit 
Sunderland, M. (2006) What Every Parent Needs to Know

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Inclusion and supporting learners with SEN

  • 1. • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oCbrQp3 MIwc http://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=still+face&FORM=VIRE3# view=detail&mid=3E23AA562E7E6A2EC62C3E23AA562E7E6A2EC 62C
  • 2. Inclusion and supporting learners with SEN Thursday 4th December Led by Diane Greaves – Vice Principal - Greenacre Verity Watts – Vice Principal – Springwell
  • 3. Remove the label See the child
  • 4. Feed forward Share what you have put in place from your last session…
  • 6. Aims • Feedback in groups from the feedforward session • Know the EHC agenda and the implications for a mainstream classroom teacher • How well do you really know and understand the children you teach? • So what? What are the strategies you can implement? • Now what? What next for your practice?
  • 7. National context and the new EHC plans ‘All schools have duties under the Equality Act 2010 towards individual disabled children and young people’ ‘Teachers are responsible and accountable for the development of pupils in their class… ‘ ‘High quality teaching, differentiated for individual pupils, is the first step in responding to pupils who have or may have SEN.’ Schools: guide to the 0 to 25 SEND code of practice
  • 8. SEN support – a graduated approach ‘Where a pupil is identified as having SEN, schools should take action to remove barriers to learning and put effective special education provision in place.’ SEN code of practice July 2014
  • 9. 4 part cycle Assess Intervention • Applying more detailed approaches and make parents aware of planned support and interventions Plan Do Review
  • 10. Involving specialists ‘Where a pupil continues to make less than expected progress, despite evidence-based support and interventions… the school should consider involving outside agencies…’
  • 11. Requesting an Education, Health and Care needs assessment • If the child is not making progress in spite of interventions the school/parents can request an EHC needs assessment • Before an EHC plan can be agreed, the local authority will need to see evidence of action taken by the school in the way of SEN support. • Date everything as it can be used for evidence!
  • 12. What the Disability Discrimination Act Says… • Disability discrimination in education is unlawful. Schools must not treat disabled pupils less favourably than others. They must make “reasonable adjustments” to ensure that disabled pupils are not at a substantial disadvantage …
  • 13. • It is unlawful for the body responsible for a school to discriminate against a disabled pupil by excluding him from the school, whether permanently or temporarily....
  • 14. Mental Health and Behaviour in Schools • ‘Where a school has identified that a pupil needs special education provision due to their mental health problems, this will comprise of educational or training provision that is additional to or different from that made generally for others of the same age.’ DFE June 2014
  • 15. Are they just naughty children?
  • 16. How well do you know your pupils? Task: List the pupils in your class who struggle to engage and you don’t know why or who have a condition. At the side of each pupil make notes of the strategies you are already using.
  • 17. One size fits no-one teaching When we teach the same thing to all (students) at the same time, 1/3 already know it, 1/3 get it 1/3 never will. So 2/3 of the (students) are wasting their time. Scott Willis Or, more importantly, YOU are wasting their time.
  • 18. Or…pupil centred planning What to consider? • Literacy difficulties • Numeracy difficulties • ASD • ADHD • Attachment Difficulties/Social, emotional and mental health difficulties • Dyslexia
  • 19. Literacy difficulties • (Provide scaffolding) gap fill • Clozed activity • Multi-sensory props • Words and symbols • Writing frames • Help sheets • Words and phrases to piece together (kinaesthetic) • Role Play, hot-seating etc • Immersive approach • Classroom Organisation (peer support)
  • 20. Numeracy difficulties Consider: • Physical equipment – props, counters,etc • Contextualise – know your students • Purpose – what’s in it for me? • Classroom Organisation
  • 21. 5 minute task • Plan an activity for a pupil from your list taking into consideration the points just mentioned on shape, space and measure
  • 22. If only it were that simple!!! There is often even more to consider… Task: Watch Di’s teaching and give her advice on where she is going wrong.
  • 23. Autism Spectrum Disorder NB – a lot of students with general learning difficulties will benefit from strategies used for students with ASD • Relationships – Show that you care and can be trusted BUT this doesn’t mean woolly boundaries • Consistency and routine • Now, next and then • Visual cues • Preparation for change • Use of language • Imagination… • Purpose and relevance • HEALTH WARNING – what works for one child with ASD may not work for another – Know your child!
  • 24. What do you do when a child has been backed into a corner? • Stop and think • Give the child space and time • Deflect • Change face • Provide limited choices (to give the child a get out) • It’s not about winning
  • 25. How many of you have pupils who.. • Shout out • Can’t sit still • Can’t focus • Disturb others
  • 26. So what do you do? 5 minute activity – consider your approaches for: • Teaching • Activities • Classroom organisation
  • 27. Insert you tube link • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=- xM1X7if3SU
  • 28. ADHD • Rules, routines, re-inforcement, rewards • Kinaesthetic/hands on/multi sensory • Brain breaks/stretches/exercises • Small chunk tasks • Limit instructions • Specific praise • Immediate rewards • Limited choices • Visual aids • Study buddy/social buddy • Seating arrangement
  • 29. Looking at the world from another point of view http://youtu.be/gwZLFTW4OGY
  • 30. How do you know a pupil has traits of dyslexia? What behaviours might they display?
  • 31. Specific Learning Difficulties (Dyslexia) • Multi-sensory approach (VAK) – children should be active participants involved in the learning experience. Drama/role play can be particularly effective • Overlearning – repetition BUT in a range of contexts and situations • Opportunity to access texts below their level – this supports their understanding of inference • Learning through games • Reading/spelling/thinking buddy • Provide writing frames and key words to support tasks • Model the mental process – what are you thinking as you read and write?
  • 32. • Pale pastel backgrounds to whiteboard presentations • Pale pastel paper (not white) • Coloured overlays for reading • Dyslexia friendly font (e.g comic sans) • Structure, routine, short chunked up tasks • HEALTH WARNING – what works for one child with SpLD may not work for another – Know your child!
  • 33. Over to you… • Plan a lesson on adjectives, focusing on a couple of pupils from your earlier list • Take into account the strategies and approaches suggested. • Work in pairs – each sharing ideas
  • 34. Social, Emotional and Mental Health Difficulties What does this include? Attachment difficulties: • Insecure avoidant • Insecure ambivalent • Insecure disorganised
  • 35. Internal Working Model Positive: I am loveable Others can be trusted The world is a safe place to be Negative: I am not loveable Others cannot be trusted The world is not a safe place to be
  • 36. Characteristics of Attachment Difficulties • They work very hard to control all situations, especially the feelings and behaviour of caregivers • They relish power struggles and have a compulsion to win them • They feel empowered by repeatedly saying ‘no’ • They cause emotional pain and sometimes physical pain to others • They strongly maintain a negative self-concept • They have a very limited ability to regulate their affect
  • 37. Organised v’s Disorganised Attachment Secure Insecure/ Organised Avoidant Ambivalent Insecure/ Disorganised Disorientated
  • 38. Anxious Avoidant Children will • Learn not to ask for help • Act as if nothing is wrong when distressed • These behaviours lead the carer to feel unwanted, not needed, so they back off and ‘deactivate’ their caregiving or ignore the child.
  • 39. Strategies for Anxious Avoidant pupils: • Focus on tasks not your relationship • Left brain activities (sorting, organising) • Pupils need to feel in control • Choice of tasks • Need to see big picture and tangible outcomes e.g. making something • Peer teaching can work well • Use of story as a projection tool – avoids discussing themselves
  • 40. Anxious Ambivalent Children will: • Act with exaggerated anger and need when distressed. These are provocative, noisy children who convey a baby state of helplessness • These children can make the carer feel inadequate to soothe or meet the child’s needs • Carers feel exhausted
  • 41. Strategies for Anxious ambivalent pupils: • Small step tasks to encourage independence • Use of timers • Comments to reassure you are will get back to them and when • Avoid doing their work for them • Transition object so they know you haven’t forgotten them • Acknowledge their difficulty in doing things independently
  • 42. Anxious disorganised pupils will… • avoid being cared for • Try to remain in control and is self reliant, aggressive, rageful, bossy, fighting for control • Make the carer feels helpless and angry so they are tempted to stop caring
  • 43. Strategies for: Anxious disorganised pupils • Clear structures, routines • Visual timetables for all ages • Prepare for any change however small • Acknowledge with them how they feel about change • Key worker to build a positive relationship with the pupil
  • 44. Also refer to ‘Mental health and behaviour in schools’ DfE June 2014 Types of needs: • Conduct disorders: ADHD, ODD • Anxiety • Depression • Eating disorders • Substance misuse • Self harm • Post traumatic stress disorder
  • 45. Some intervention strategies • Working with/ involving parents • Nurture groups • Whole school working to nurture principles • Boxall profiling to bridge developmental gaps • Play based approaches inc play therapy or filial therapy involving the whole family
  • 46. Work to the six nurture principles: 1. Children’s learning is understood developmentally 2.The classroom offers a safe base 3.Nurture is important for the development of self esteem 4.Language is understood as a vital means of communication 5.All behaviour is communication 6.Transitions are significant in the lives of children
  • 47. More pupils have complex learning difficulties WithCLDD, we frequently see:  ADD/ADHD  ASD  FASD  PMLD  Neurological difficulties  Prematurity
  • 48. How Do We Define Complex Need? CChildren and young people with complex learning difficulties and disabilities (CLDD) include those with co-existing conditions (e.g. autism & attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)) or profound and multiple learning disabilities (PMLD). However they also include children who have newly begun to populate our schools – among them those who have difficulties arising from premature birth, have survived infancy due to advanced medical interventions, have difficulties arising from parental substance and alcohol abuse, and/or have rare chromosomal disorders. Many may also be affected by compounding factors such as multisensory impairment or mental ill-health, or require invasive procedures, such as supported nutrition, assisted ventilation and rescue medication”
  • 49. Common Mental Health Difficulties in CLDD. • Anxiety Disorders (32-42%) • Depression (30%) • Oppositional Defiant Disorders (30%) • Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (28-53%)
  • 50. Engagement is key to progress • Engagement profile and scale for looking at the level of engagement of pupils with complex needs • http://complexld.ssatrust.org.uk/projec t-resources/engagement-profile-scale. html
  • 51.
  • 52. Observation … A Key Factor • Appearance & behaviour • Speech or talk • Affect (non reactive) • Mood • Thoughts • Perceptions • Cognition (alertness) • Insight
  • 53. Where to look next? • Report on Complex Learning Difficulties and Disabilities Research Project 2011 • Briefing packs with strategies for different special needs • http://complexld.ssatrust.org.uk/projec t-resources/cldd-briefing-packs.html • Further training materiasls www.complexneeds.org.uk
  • 54. An Integrated Approach to Intervention FAMILY SYSTEMIC & ENVIRONMENTAL INDIVIDUAL EDUCATIONAL
  • 55. Feed forward task • Choose a child to case study who is experiencing problems in engaging with learning – read their notes, background information and observe objectively to identify what their issues are. Choose appropriate to put in place and measure the impact.
  • 56. Parting thought ‘If children don’t learn the way we teach, we will teach them the way they learn’
  • 57. and at Greenacre to day Come to the edge. He said. We are afraid, they said. Come to the edge, he said. They came to the edge, He pushed them… and they flew.
  • 58. Essential Reading Batmanghelidjh, C. (2006) Shattered Lives Blackburn, C Carpenter, B and Egerton, J (2012) Educating Children and Young People with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders Bomber, L. (2007) Inside I’m Hurting Bomber, L. (2011) What About Me Bomber, L. (2014) Settling to Learn Boxall and Lucas, (2010) Nurture Groups in Schools Brower, F 100 ideas fro supporting pupils on the Autistic Spectrum Brown, S (2010) Play Cumine, Leach and Stevenson Asperger’s Syndrome – A practical guide for teachers Curran, A, (2007) The Little Book of Big Stuff About the Brain DfE (2014) Special educational needs and disability code of practice: 0 to 25 years DfE (2014) Mental Health and Behaviour in Schools Delaney, M (2009)Teaching the Unteachable Geddes, H (2010) Attachment in the Classroom Gerhardt, S (2004), Why Love Matters Hughes,L and Cooper, P (2007) Understanding and Supporting Children with ADHD: Strategies for Teachers, Parents and Other Professionals Paperback Legislation.gov.uk Equality Act 2010 Pavey, B Mehan, M (2013) The Dyslexia Friendly Teacher’s Toolkit Sunderland, M. (2006) What Every Parent Needs to Know