•Currently SENCOs do not have legally
protected time, yet this research illustrates the impact on the professional
and the school if there is insufficient time to fulfil the role. Therefore, we call upon school leaders
and governing bodies to make a pledge to protect SENCO time in their schools.
•SENCOs who are seeking to leave the role
are citing workload as a primary reason. SENCOs are also lacking time to
adequately reflect and evaluate the effectiveness of provision in their
settings. The financial cost of these factors is high. Therefore, we recommend that senior
leaders review the SENCO role in terms of time and support to encourage
experienced SENCOs to remain in post.
•We recommend that senior leaders review
the responsibilities of the SENCO role and share this with the governing body
and wider staff to raise the profile, and understanding, of the SENCO role. A focus should be on the coordination
nature of the role, with an emphasis on ‘every teacher is a teacher of learners
with SEN’.
•Head teachers should structure and
protect the SENCO role to afford
the SENCO the necessary status and seniority to influence school policy at
strategic level.
•Consideration should be given to how
schools can work with their SENCO to build capacity, distribute responsibility
and enable support. Where
funding/resourcing allows, it is recommended that the development of a team
around the SENCO, for example through department SEN champions, assistant SENCO
support, administrative support and/orwider SEN teams, is
given consideration as a way in which immediate additional support can be
provided for the SENCO and, as a consequence, improve outcomes for children and
young people with SEN.