Saturday, 17 September 2016

Roald Dahl Resources


Roald Dahl was born in Cardiff 100 years ago.
Our Capital is being  transformed 'by Roald Dahl' this weekend!


Poster


Links to useful learning resources 


Age Appropriate Book List (US grade 2 is UK grade 1) 


Lesson plans to help you teach the stories of his best known titles. 


The Enormous Crocodile  - teaching ideas

The BFG - lesson plans for ages 5-11. HUGE workbook


Guided reading and discussion resource for Charlie and the Chocolate factory 


The Witches - Activity booklet

The Witches - another resource pack here!

Revolting Rhyming Cartoons - I love these :)  Video resource.
Matilda - Penguin teachers notes , and another learning resource for you here


Little Red Riding Hood - Poetry and active listening exercise 

November 2016 - Into Film Festival. 


There are FREE cinema screenings across the UK for Home Educators. Please note that if you book and are a no show without following the correct cancellation procedures there WILL be a charge made! This is to stop abuse of a wonderful opportunity for Home Educators. Autsim friendly screenings are available, as are venues with disability access but it's a good idea to book in good time for these.

A wonderful FREE opportunity to go see a Roald Dahl Film on the big screen in order to help visual and multi-sensory learners bring his stories to life. Learning resources are provided on the website for you to download and use.

Link to take you to all Dahl Film Events and Resources 

 "Matilda" is our top pick. This film covers the topic of bullying, which is sadly why some children become home educated. What better way to help a child heal than a nice trip to the pictures together?

Link to downloadable learning resource from the IntoFilm team for Matilda so you can see for yourself if you think it may be helpful for your child in advance.


We've also spotted Dahl films on amazon prime, if you are an existing subscriber, and audio books on sale at the Book People this month. Both film and audio can be very help for encouraging literacy for our reluctant/struggling readers.

Do please add to the comments section of this blog if you stumble across any more Dahl resources you think other families may enjoy using!




Saturday, 10 September 2016

Exam Centres


South Wales

  • Monmouth - Home Ed Partners
GCSEs, with controlled assessments, and IGCSEs. Cost of sitting an IGCSE is approx. £100 per subject (exam fee plus invigilation of £20 per hour).Edexcel and WJEC. Waiting to hear if they can use AQA (as of May 2016 they are not using AQA as AQA
require a fee of £900 to register and this cannot be recouped from the small number of students that use this center)http://www.homeedpartners.co.uk Rosemary, who runs it, is very pro-HE and will look at all sorts of ideas to see if they can
be accommodated. The plan is to add things like ECDL and BETECs if it can be done.Courses to lead up to exams are run for regular attenders and distance learners.Candidates can be entered as internal rather than external but would mean
they would need to attend some study sessions and not be registered at another centre.
This does, however, open up the chance of GCSEs which are not normally available to
private candidates e.g. Food Tech and Child Development Pembrokeshire College – Haverfordwest Private Candidates for GCSE iGCSE A-level exams including the new Science Practical Endorsement Workshops (5 days) including Access Arrangements + Examination SupportExam fees of £60 per paper for iGCSEs, GCSEs, A-levels. Cover all examination boards AQA, Edexcel, OCR, WJEC, Cambridge International. Online “self-paced study” courses for iGCSE and A-levels in most subjects with support
of a dedicated course tutor, examination preparation and UCAS application support if required. Online “Live School” courses for iGCSE and A-level available in most subjects including
A-level Computer Science with support of a dedicated course tutor, examination
preparation and UCAS application support if required.Our experience has been of
homework marked and returned within 3-4 hours for A-Level Physics and Maths. Another very Pro-HE centre and good at helping with access arrangements. Contact: Matthew Norman – m.norman@pembrokeshire.ac.uk 01437 753 191 http://online.pembrokeshire.ac.uk/ * Swansea sixth form - £150 per GCSE http://www.sscwales.com/ * St Claire's, Porthcawl - various prices - one off annual admin fee of £50 and
invigilator cost per hour andexam cost of approx £50.
https://www.stclares-school.co.uk/ * 3A Tutors Bristol £150 per GCSE - can be useful for MFL and computer science IGCSE. http://www.3at.org.uk/ * Bridgend College - Approx about £75 per GCSE - best to check with exam officer. AQA, IGCSE EDEXCEL, WJEC. http://www1.bridgend.ac.uk/
  • West Monmouth School - Pontypool
External candidates can sit WJEC, AQA and Edexcel. They have previously used OCR
and City and Guilds and still are able to offer exams through these boards.The price of
exams vary with different board and level of exam. They range from £7.60 up to £28.70.Contact person is Soosie Watson at 01495 762080.

Central Wales

Interhigh - this was approved as an independent exam centre earlier this year, so this
years entrants will be the pioneers for the Home Education Community at this centre.
It’ll be interesting to see how responsive they are to our needs. IGSE and A Level mostly EdExcel Board. http://www.interhigh.co.uk/ School Office InterHigh Education Lewis Parry House Elvicta Estate Crickhowell NP8 1DFTel. 44 (0)1873 813900 Fax. 44 (0)8709 127314 Email. enquiries@interhigh.co.uk
  • Newtown - Coleg Powys
Do IGCSEs at least. Very accommodating. http://www.coleg-powys.ac.uk

North Wales


  • Moreton School, The Howells in Denbigh and Ellesmere College don't take external candidates.

  • Ruthin School, Ruthin. Take a small number of IGCSE candidates yearly and happy to accommodate various papers. Check A levels. Apply early.
  • The Marches does not accept external candidates.
  • Coleg Cambria, Wrexham, accept external students as long as exams are self contained and do not require a controlled assessment or coursework etc. Although I was only enquiring about the Wrexham college, I see no reason as to why they wouldn't offer it at their other colleges.
  • Oswestry - Oswestry School
Doesn't accept external candidates as a rule.
  • Conway - Conway Education Centre
Do at least IGCSE Eng Lang spec A

General Information about Exams.

Please note sourcing and updating exam centres that accept private candidates is an ongoing exercise for the Home Education Community across the UK. If you can’t find a centre for the subject and board you would like please take a look here:-http://he-exams.wikia.com/wiki/HE_Exams_Wiki

The exams wiki is maintained by home educators from all over the UK and is very useful. You'll find information on IGCSE's, A levels and alternative qualifications such as BTECs.
Users have commented on the various Specs available, and you'll find updates on the timetable for the new English IGCSE and GCSE implementations.
If you find a new exam centre please email us at cymrualn@gmail.com so we can update the file.

An explanation of access arrangements for the most commonly used exam boards can be found here:- 
http://www.jcq.org.uk/exams-office/access-arrangements-and-special-consideration
Please ensure you make any access arrangements well ahead of time. Article written by Steph Shobiye #CymruALN

Thursday, 1 September 2016

Starting Home Ed in KS3? Structured Approach Quick Start Guide.

Please don't go spending a fortune at first, it takes a while to suss your child's preferred learning style. We think the real burning need for expensive text books only comes when you hit the exam syllabus stage; and that until then most stuff can actually be gleaned for free or very low cost. Start with the free stuff and only make purchases when you are sure you actually need them. This will mean that hopefully you will have the funds available for any really critical things you may find your child needs further down the line such as private therapies. As an Elective Home Educator you will also need to budget for the exam fees later on to enter your child as a private candidate for iGCSE's etc.


The Home Education community often negotiates group discounts on things like specialist dyslexia software etc. We also swap, share and sell on learning resources to one another. So do ask in our Face Book group, before splurging out. For some specialist therapies and disability equipment etc we've worked hard to find sources of grant support wherever possible. For most things someone, somewhere will have found a way of accessing it more cheaply.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/WalesHESN/ - link to our group where you can ask! 

This is a core curriculum that you can add to, adapt and tailor to exactly meet your child's needs over time. It is intended to help you hit the ground running and avoid the common HE newbie mistake of spending a large amount on text books that just sit gathering dust on a shelf, only to disparately wish you could claw back those funds to spend on something your child really needs to aid their learning further down the line. With that in mind most of the resources listed below are totally free, and any resource that isn't has had to really justify being included.
Almost all home educators benefit hugely from a broadband connection and a basic PC/lap top + printer. Click here for advice on how to keep the costs for this down. 


Maths 

At 11 I would stick with this course for maths as its free, until you need a specific exam board textbook later on. That keeps the costs down for one core subject. http://www.cimt.plymouth.ac.uk/menus/resources.htm



Science

This range of text books is really good for  KS3. very visual, fun and comes with an accompanying DVD for your PC. Check out the 2nd hand section of amazon before making your purchase as it's often available in excellent condition at a much lower price than brand new.
 
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Explo.../dp/1405892463/ref=sr_1_6...
FREE practical experiments for this level - HE gives the opportunity to do much more hands on science than is often possible in classes of 30. Which is a huge benefit to many of our children who prefer a hands on learning approach.

 http://www.scholastic.com/teachers/article/40-cool-science-experiments-web


Do check out 
https://www.futurelearn.com/

A couple of great courses coming up in the next term or so we'd recommend

- basic science experiments 

https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/science-experiments

- the science of nutrition
https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/the-science-of-nutrition


Khan Academy is great for Science and maths. https://www.khanacademy.org/


English - Free again!

https://www.amblesideonline.org/curriculum.shtml
This is a fab structured resource. Most of the literary texts are available totally free through the site too. Gives a really solid grounding in English language and literacy. Incorporates History in a lovely way too - wonderful to read about how people really lived as its all interconnected so nicely. 
Amazon often do second hand textbooks for as little as a penny. You just pay £2.80 postage and 9 times out of ten the books are in near perfect condition. We've often had great success finding CGP textbooks this way.
Abesbooks is another place to find standard textbooks much cheaper than the RRP.

Need a FREE KS3 Poetry Course? We love this one from NI. Huge poetry teaching PDF for ages 12yrs plus. (Key stage 3 in Northern Ireland). This is a brilliant resource for older children and uses computer skills, research, poetry and reading comprehension. Really good.
http://www.nicurriculum.org.uk/docs/key_stage_3/areas_of_learning/english/Poetry.pdf

English - reading comprehension and analysis!
Very good resource!
Book review reports, reading comprehension templates, critical analysis templates.


Modern Foreign Language
Duolingo is hard to beat. It's available for PC,and tablet and there is now a Welsh option
https://www.duolingo.com/

History 

This is a 42 part course on World History. Enough to see you through your first year of Home Education. Of course it's free and should be enough for your child to decide whether this subject interests them enough to continue their studies in this area. 

https://www.khanacademy.org/partner-content/crash-course1/crash-course-world-history


Geography 

This is a great site to begin your KS3 Geography. Field trips are so easy for us as home educators. Wales is a particularly good place for this subject given our natural environment and several HE groups take advantage of that. It's quite common to also study environmental management as well as geography to iGCSE and for children to take the Jean Muir award later on.

 
http://geography.learnontheinternet.co.uk/ks3/index.html

This also seems like a good place to point out that most curriculum topics have a dedicated Face Book group chock full of learning resources and usually run by subject matter experts. This is the link to the Geography group, which is a particularly useful one. Again rather than rushing to Waterstones and spending a fortune, it's always worth asking in our own online group  if your ASD kid's current obsession with Astonomy can't be nurtured all the way to an iGCSE pass via cheap online resources. 


Internet Safety. 

Cyber Safety isn't yet part of the Welsh National Curriculum, so please don't assume your child is cyber savvy re their personal safety, because of what they've been taught at school. Most Home Educated Children quickly discover the amazing learning resource that is the internet and make best use of it. In order to keep them safe as they do so we believe quite strongly that it's worth taking the time right at the start of your HE journey to spend some real time on this subject.Parents! Do take a look at these cyber safety sites. Being clued up yourself is the best way to ensure our children and young people stay safe online. Our young digital natives are depending on us!



Learning with minecraft - if yours is a gamer then make their time productive in terms of learning. There is a home education server we can give details about in our group (moderated). This site is used by teachers globally in lessons across the curriculum so is worth making a note of too
http://education.minecraft.net/resources/


Legal Stuff - here's a link to our quick reference guide for Home Educators in Wales. It's handy to save to your favourites in case of queries when dealing with officialdom. The vast majority of our members are Elective Home Educators.

KS4. 

It's worth noting our Face Book Group contains members at the extremes of the academic ability range in both directions, with early Uni entrants and those aiming to do foundation skills alike.  Not all our kids will take exams and we recognise that. Alternative opportunities to prepare for independent adult life are discussed in our Face Book group on a regular basis, as and when we come across them or develop new initiatives. We are currently in the process of compiling a list of Exam Centres across Wales that accept private candidates. Where possible we are enquiring about the possibility of access arrangements for candidates with disabilities. Welsh Exam Centres will be the subject of a blog post in the near future. 


Author - Steph Shobiye.
#CymruALN

Thursday, 4 August 2016

Live online schools, tutors & MOOCS - updated

Live Online Schools – Primary

Lessons are live, which means they are scheduled for set times. Most providers will offer a month’s trial if you ask nicely.
Children are admitted at 9, the earliest that developmentally they can cope with the intensive focus and concentration needed to successfully participate in learning via this format.  If your child does not yet have the focus for learning this way, it may be worth waiting a few years and trying again. One of the joys of homeschool is that children can be allowed to progress naturally, rather than according to arbitrary targets.  It is worth noting that this learning format is best suited to structured or semi-structured families and is unlikely to suit completely autonomous families.
Some schools will admit children with additional learning needs, others are unable to cater for them.
At this level all schools will take children for single subjects or for the whole curriculum. Curriculum wise they start at UK Year 4/5.  One of the joys of Internet school is that it is easy for a child to accelerate or decelerate their studies, so a 12 year old can join Year 5 without being made to feel sensitive about it if that’s what they need academically. Another child might be accelerated in their favourite subject without fuss.

http://www,briteschool.co.uk  This aims to be a supplement to your own homeschooling programme, not a complete packaged solution.  It is aimed at keeping children up to date in the core subjects + a foreign language if desired. It is popular with ex-patriate parents who know they may want their children to rejoin the school system upon their return to the UK. To this end it offers preparation classes for the common entrance exam at 13+. Children join the class that best suits their academic ability, not their chronological age.   All aspects of the lesson are recorded, which is ideal for children who may wish to revise the lessons in their own time. This is a unique service, and ideal for some additional needs pupils. Fees for the core curriculum are approximately £333 per term. Modern Foreign  Languages are £47 a month.  The timetable of 3 mid-week afternoons a week is ideal for those who would like lots of long weekends free for family field trips/to attend hospital appointments etc.  The school is kept small in total numbers, which means staff know their pupils well. It is expected however that parents will provide adequate socialisation activities offline.

http://www.net-school.co.uk Offers a rigorous academic schedule, including Latin if required. Single subjects can be taken and the website is easy to navigate.  It can be considered a complete curriculum, so ideal for parents of bright children who want to hand over all teaching to someone else.  Lessons are spread across the week. Fees are approx £1000 term, or £180+VAT for a single subject.

http://www.firstcollege.co.uk This is a supplementary programme to your own homeschooling efforts, not a complete packaged solution.  This has a very nurturing ethos, and so can be an excellent choice for children who are nervous or healing from school bullying. Social activities are very tightly monitored, which may offer reassurance to a nervous child. The proprietor is a Pagan.  There is considerable flexibility as to which year group your child joins – very helpful for children with delayed or asynchronous development. Subject matter experts are recruited in favour of trained teachers, which means it may not be the ideal choice if your child intends to return to school at any point.  The common room is moderated and offers an opportunity for children who might have limited socialisation options (often for health reasons) to do so.  The school has a strict policy to keep total numbers small, which means staff get to know their students well. 
Fees are approximately £333 per term.



 Live Online Schools – Secondary 


Note that it is increasingly common for children to join at 14+ having previously been autonomously educated or mainstream schooled for support in obtaining their iGCSE’s.

UK

The choice of provider widens at KS3. Do check which exam board the school is aligned to so that you can verify that an exam  centre will be within reasonable travelling distance when the time comes. It is not unusual to be enrolled with different schools for different course options particularly at KS4. You’ll find that the providers do not mind. Some students even combine college and or flexi-schooling at this stage of their educational career.

http://www.Interhigh.co.uk. 
This is the current market leader and aims to replicate a comprehensive school online as a complete package. It enjoys the closest links to LA’s, some of whom fund children with a statement and additional learning needs to attend. The school works well with LAs for these pupils.  Lesson slides may be available in some subjects, but not recordings for revision. Offers double science and an extensive virtual social experience.  Single English award. You need to sign up for the whole curriculum. Single subjects are not offered in KS3/4 for those who only want to enroll in order to learn a MFL etc. . Children may join the school at 11+ Offers a good choice of subjects for A level. The school is now about 700 pupils strong, & you should be aware that the fee arrangements are quite inflexible, based as they are on a standard private school contract. Based here in Wales with their own dedicated exam centre. (Useful for those needing complex access arrangements). 

www.net-school.co.uk
See Primary providers. The Sciences are offered as single subjects. Is unusual in that both English Language and English Literature are offered as GCSE options.  Also offers Latin to iGCSE.  No modern language option at iGCSE. French and German offered at KS3. Possible to take single subjects. Children may join the school from 9+ onwards.

www.briteschool.co.uk
See Primary providers. Often accelerates students so it is typical to stagger GCSE’s. Offers common entrance exam prep as an optional module for 13+. Offers science as a choice of a double iGCSE award or as 3 separate subjects. Single English award. French, German and Spanish offered at iGCSE. History only offered as a recorded option a present (free to all enrolled students).  Pupils may choose between Foundation level and the Higher level Maths iGCSE options, which can be very helpful to some additional needs students. Fees approx £2500 per year. Children may join the school from 9+ onwards (though the occasional gifted 8 year old is admitted).  Offers the ECDL course in lieu of iGCSE ICT and a very limited range of A level courses.  It is also possible to enroll just for a single subject.

http://tute.com/virtual-academy/
Everyone we’ve spoken to has had high praise for this provider. Most people have been LA funded to attend. However fees are roughly competitive against Interhigh and Brightschool.

http://www.nisai.com/
A dedicated post 16 option!!!!!! Fees are approx £1500 per subject. Intended student intake is those whose SN’s or illness makes college attendance difficult. Most pupils are LA funded.

http://www.firstcollege.co.uk/
Models itself on an old fashioned village school in a virtual context. Prides itself on providing a nurturing environment so worth a look for anxious children or those in recovery from being bullied at school.  Based here in Wales which is very useful for exam centre know how!

http://www.redballoonlearner.org/Life-at-RBAir-(online-provision) For bullied children and school refusers. So far we’ve only been able to  locate LA funded users of this option and the end goal has usually been for eventual reintegration into the state system as a result

Pembrokeshire College Online http://online.pembrokeshire.ac.uk/

This provider offers a great range of A level subjects including the sciences. The Science A level courses are worth a special mention, as there is the facility to do practical workshops. They also run their own exam centre which is useful for those who may need access arrangements to accommodate disability or Additional Learning Needs. A small range of iGCSE & GCSE subjects are also on offer including Computer Science, which is often very tricky to locate an exam centre for here in Wales. Pricing is competitive against other providers. This provider is one of those that accepts LA funded pupils via their statement of special educational needs and works well with LAs. As an exam centre it is also very helpful for those pupils who need access arrangements. If these are required, as always you should aim to organise these 18 months before your child is due to sit the exam in question. 


Online tutorial services for Home Educators



To find experienced tutors of Home Ed Students who are fully clued up on the need to follow the IGCSE programmes, and how things work for private candidates etc we advise you to join this facebook group -  HE APPROVED ONLINE TUTORS
These use a variety of software solutions to connect learners with their tutors, the most common being Skype.  Some of the online schools also offer one to one tuition on a case by case basis via their own software.  This is the most expensive method of learning online but can be a useful avenue to explore if for instance no specialist dyslexia support is available in your area. It is also useful for some gifted students and those who might want to study a subject not readily available via more popular options.

We believe giftedness is an additional learning need so wanted to include providers that can cope with the advanced end of our spiky profile children. Briteschool is fab for acceleration in maths, science and a few other subjects. Now we have a provider on board for English and the humanities too.
www.dreamingspireshomelearning.co.uk Runs online courses for ages 11 and up for homeschoolers/educators all over the world. Using the Charlotte Mason method, I've designed 30 weeks of online webinars that work for both the US-style high school credit hours, and the UK's desire to prepare students for exams.  4 different courses in English for different literary periods, and have brought on board an OU tutor/former home-ed mum for Classical Civilization.  Run by a CIE examiner for IGCSE & A level. 


Online crammer courses for the CIE English Language 0500 exam (higher tier only). These are 8-session coaching courses which I've designed based on my experience as an examiner. I usually run one during the Easter break, but people are asking me to do one for this autumn, so it may be offered near the end of August. The website for that is here:


The Open University 

The Open University accepts students from age 12 subject to a long list of caveats. Due to the developmental and emotional maturity required, it is VERY unusual for a student to be accepted below 14 years of age. Fees have risen rapidly in recent years, which sadly may remove this option from many Home schooling families box of option. It remains however a great alternative to A levels, or even mainstream University for some pupils.
At degree level it is worth noting that several UK Universities, (including Russell Group) are now offering distance or online learning at degree level. This may be the best route to obtaining a degree for some students with additional needs, especially those with sensory issues that may become overwhelmed in the traditional lecture Hall.

STATIC ONLINE LEARNING - MOOCS


Classes are delivered via a series of pre-recorded, audio, slide or video lessons. Assignments are submitted for peer review or marking by the lecturer.  Online forums provide the medium for class discussion. There may be thousands globally at anyone time studying a specific MOOC module so the format is by its very nature very impersonal.  So long as assignments are handed in by the deadlines MOOCs offer great freedom in terms of scheduling, so may be very convenient for families who wish to remain semi-autonomous and flexible in terms of their time.
The sheer range of breadth & range of topics offered means that if your child is suited to this format for learning, it is worth browsing the course indices every so often.  MOOCS are currently totally free, unless you require formal verification of course completion.
MOOCS alone should not be relied upon alone to gain entrance to College or University.  They are not a replacement for formal qualifications such as GCSE’s, NVQ’s and BTECs. No UCAS points can be awarded for completion. They do however show that a homeschooled child can learn in a structured manner, and are useful for extending subject knowledge. It makes sense if you feel you may want to demonstrate evidence at interview of extended learning in a topic to pay the extra for the certified or verified route on these courses in order to obtain the available certificate.
These certificates only provide proof of study and cannot as yet be used to accumulate UCAS points but it is perhaps worth the UK home ed' community lobbying?

 futurelearn – This is the Market Leading provider here in the UK, and is considered particularly valuable by UK home edders for its basic science courses. Certificates can only be issued in a child’s name at 14+, https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/upcoming

Edx.org  This site has only very recently launched a range of High School courses specifically aimed at the 14-19 year old age group.  Some of these courses can be certificated. We look forward to seeing how this initiative progresses. https://www.edx.org/

Coursera.org  Some useful courses here for parents to take on educational topics such as positive behavioural support (ABA) & dyslexia. https://www.coursera.org/

Khan Academy - an amazing resource chock full of help with maths, science and many other subjects. Well worth a look!  https://www.khanacademy.org/

PLEASE NOTE and THANKS


1. We can only list those providers we have found bone fide Home Educators willing to vouch for. If you provide a service please email cymrualn@gmail.com with the contact details of the parents of some happy Home Educating pupils that we can talk to. This is the only way to be included in future lists. 
2. We update this list in July each year so if you are a Home Educator using a provider not listed here - do sing their praises to us as we do our best to update the list periodically. 

3. All prices are approximate only and you should check with individual providers before selecting your final choice as they are subject to change. 

4. 
Also please note that the vast majority of providers expect you to make your own exam centre arrangements. Often it's easiest to work backwards and locate an exam centre before choosing a provider. Where relevant we've listed those Welsh providers who may be helpful due to their local knowledge, or because they run their own centre. There's also lots of help available for sourcing local exam centres available in our Face Book Group via our members. Work is constantly ongoing to persuade more existing centres across Wales, to accept private candidates and specifically those who need access arrangements due to additional learning needs at a reasonable cost. 



Author - Steph Shobiye

In the pipeline - ischooldigital - a specialist Welsh online ALN provider. We are watching this closely and will update as soon as we hear more. 

Dreaming Spires - will be running geography, history and biology courses from 2017.
Arts Award for Cymru ALN group members 2017. 

Tuesday, 26 July 2016

Common Terminology & the Law in Wales

SEN Special Educational Needs. With the advent of the Additional Learning Needs Bill the phrase Special  Educational Needs has been superseded for all but the still current SEN CoP.  Thus instead of SEN departments we now hear the term ALN department. In schools the job title SENCO is currently being replaced by ALNCO (Additional Learning Needs Coordinator).  

ALN - Additional Learning Needs. You'll hear this phrase used more and more as local authorities begin to prepare for the anticipated rollout of new legislation in 2018. The two phrases should be considered interchangeable during this transition phase. 

Current SEN Code of practice - The SEN CoP This document should be considered every parent/carer and education professionals main reference as it clearly outlines what the Welsh Government considers to be best practice.  
http://learning.gov.wales/docs/learningwales/publications/131016-sen-code-of-practice-for-wales-en.pdf 




EHE - Self-funded programmes are called EHE (Elective Home Education). No monitoring. Parents who are funding their child's education themselves already know how well their children are progressing. The parents assume full legal and fiscal responsibility for the education a child receives. Many parents who feel their children have been failed by the system, resent attempts to monitor them by that same system. Elective Home Education Government guidance here.  We keep a list of local EHE groups in our online support group for newcomers to enable newcomers to Home Education to be able to go and meet their local group/s.


EOTAS 
- LA funded home programmes are commonly referred to as EOTAS (Education Other Than ASchool) in official documentation. The Local authority is responsible for the Education be provided. This group of pupils includes those in Hospital schools & PRU's as well as those receiving Home Tuition from LA tutors,  ABA or II programmes in the Home environment. Monitoring of the LA funded provision is right and proper to ensure taxpayers money is spent correctly. Welsh Government guidance here. In many areas these services are under threat due to funding cuts. 

It is incredibly important for ALL parents of children to be aware of the very clear difference in status between EHE & EOTAS, both in terms of funding expectations, and their own duties under the law.  

FORCED Home Educators - This is a grey area which covers children who are not currently in the school environment for a variety of reasons from bullying to illness and lack of support at school for special needs. Legally children in this group may fall into either of the two categories listed above. This group has become and increasing phenomenon in recent years as sadly cuts to NHS & Education services have begun to bite. The shortage of specialist teaching facilities is a contributory factor, as is the overload on child mental health services at present.  It is in everyone's interest to ensure that this growth is halted. This term is used a lot in Home Education support circles but we'd really rather not have to!

Off-rolling
is a term often used to refer to illegal exclusion of ALN pupils and if this happens to your child we'll happily put you in touch with organisations that can help. 

FLEXI - schoolers. There are children who spend part of their week in school and part of it being educated at Home. Permission to do this is at the discretion of the individual Head Teacher so arrangements vary, and the child remains on the school roll.


Access to Education and Support for Children and Young People with Medical NeedsUseful for parents trying to avoid joining the ranks of forced home http://learning.gov.wales/docs/learningwales/publications/131016-access-to-education-for-children-with-medical-needs-en.pdf


Social Services and Wellbeing Act (Wales) 2014 which replaces part III of the existing Children's Act from April 2016.  This is a crucial change of approach from "welfare" to "well-being" & now covers whole of life from birth to old age. Many parents will first notice the implementation of this act via the new "person centred planning" approach being rolled out to many Local Authorities for transition etc. 
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/anaw/2014/4/contents/enacted




Estyn - The Inspectorate for Education and Training in Wales. 


Common Acyronyms

ADHD: attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
ALN: additional learning needs
ASD/C: Autistic Spectrum Disorders/Conditions, includes Asperger’s Syndrome
ATR: additional teacher resource
BESD, ESBD or SEBD: Behaviour, Emotional and Social Difficulties
CoP: Code of Practice
DCD: developmental coordination disorder
HI: hearing impairment
MSI: multi-sensory impairment
MLD: profound and multiple learning difficulties
SpLD: specific learning difficulties, including dyslexia
VI: visual impairment 


Our Face Book group & other web links.
Group - https://www.facebook.com/groups/WalesHESN/
FB page - https://www.facebook.com/cymrualn/
Blog - http://cymrualn.blogspot.co.uk/
Email - cymrualn@gmail.com

Sunday, 24 July 2016

Life skills learning resources.


Ability Levels are intended as an  approximate guide only - use your child as your guide!

Life Skills Grades 1-3/Years 2-4

Grade 1 
http://www.mml.co.za/docs/FP_Resources/English-Life-Skills-Grade-1-Workbook.pdf

Grade 2 http://www.mml.co.za/docs/FP_Resources/English-Life-Skills-Grade-2-Workbook.pdf
Grade 3 http://www.mml.co.za/docs/FP_Resources/English-Life-Skills-Grade-3-Workbook.pdf

Grade 3/4 Safety & Hazards 

http://www.youthsafenb.ca/en/smartchoices/pdf/smart%20choices%20grade%203.pdf

Age Appropriate cyber safety learning resources.
https://www.thinkuknow.co.uk/

Teens - ASC money management online course. A free online learning module from the National Autistic Society.
http://www.autismonlinetraining.com/mod/page/view.php?id=229

Key Stage 4 - older teens. Money Management workbook from Barclays. 
Social Stories - A free guide to social stories on almost every topic from visiting the dentist& haircuts to dealing with family celebrations. A great one stop shop this! http://www.oneplaceforspecialneeds.com/main/library_social_stories.html

Everyday life 
Life is filled with chaos, and we have to learn how to work and solve problems in the midst of it every day. These interactive lessons give you the opportunity to experience these daily challenges without real-world consequences.  I really like these for teens with anxiety. http://www.gcflearnfree.org/topics/everydaylife/

Do2learn. In order for communication to take place, a person needs to understand his environment and know what is expected of him. It can be very frustrating to not know what is happening or what to do. Frustration can breed inappropriate behavior.  This site is incredibly useful for finding ways to teach what is expected around everyday activities from getting dressed to social emotional skills. Includes help with schedules, story strips, emotional skills training, fine motor skills development etc. One to save to your favourites for sure! 

Life skills for parents & carers - Keeping our young digital natives safe. 


Parents! Do take a look at these cyber safety sites. Being clued up yourself is the best way to ensure our children and young people stay safe online. Our young digital natives are depending on us!


Sources of help for adults with using the internet in the community. Type your postcode into the database for your nearest source of face to face help in the community. (Lots of Grandparents  we know, who help with home education have upskilled themselves to help keep their loved ones safe this way). 

https://www.ukonlinecentres.com/




Once again many thanks to Lynne Wilkinson for her help in sourcing some of these links.