Education support for children with cancer

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Today is World Cancer Day. According to Cancer Research UK, an average of 1,574 children were diagnosed with cancer each year between 2009-2011.

Naturally the focus of parents will be health, but additional education support is also available.

Cancer and special educational needs

It may not seem obvious that a child with cancer may have special educational needs. The phrase “special educational needs (SEN)” has a specific definition. A child has special educational needs if they:

  1. Have a learning difficulty or a disability; and
  2. That learning difficulty or disability requires special educational provision.

Cancer is a disability. Equality Act 2010 (sch 1, para 6) states that a person who has cancer has a disability. The person is protected by the Act from the point of diagnosis.   

A “special educational provision” is education which is additional to or different from the provision generally made for children of their age in mainstream maintained schools in the area.

As a child with cancer has a disability which is likely to call for special educational provision, there is a significant possibility that they have special educational needs.

Available support

Children with special educational needs can expect to receive additional support.

This support can either be via Additional SEN Support or via an Education, Health and Care Plan(formerly a Statement of Special Educational Needs).

The Additional SEN Support scheme requires that each pupil with special educational needs is entitled to up to £10,000 worth of funding from their school per annum. With this budget the school /college is expected to provide each child with special educational needs support that they require. This support is prepared, delivered and monitored by the school with input from professionals, parents and the child.

If Additional SEN Support is insufficient to deliver the support that the child requires, it is possible to seek an assessment of the child’s special educational needs from the local authority. This is called an Education, Health and Care assessment.

Following the assessment, an Educational, Health and Care Plan (EHCP) may be issued by the local authority. This details, in a legally binding document, the education, health and social care services which must be provided by school, health commissioning groups, and social care.

What to do

The focus for any parent of a child with cancer will obviously be to try to help them receive treatment and hopefully go into remission. However, education is a basic right. The UK law requires that all children access a suitable full-time education.

If a child is struggling to access school as a result of having cancer, parents should first talk to the school. They should also speak with the local authority special educational needs team at the earliest opportunity.

I am so happy at the outcome, I don't think we would have had such a comprehensive service from any other law firm, and you took the worry away...I do not regret a single second of the whole process, apart from the bit before you got involved. 

James' mother, Boyes Turner client

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