Additional Learning Needs

1. Questions to the Minister for Education – in the Senedd on 3 July 2019.

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Photo of Mark Isherwood Mark Isherwood Conservative

(Translated)

10. How is the Welsh Government supporting pupils with additional learning needs into post-16 education? OAQ54153

Photo of Kirsty Williams Kirsty Williams Liberal Democrat 2:14, 3 July 2019

Thank you, Mark. Welsh Government provides funding to local authorities, Careers Wales, and further education institutions to deliver services that support pupils with additional learning needs entering into post-16 education. Furthermore, our ambitious ALN reforms will deliver improved collaborative assessment, planning and monitoring of support provided to all learners with an ALN.

Photo of Mark Isherwood Mark Isherwood Conservative

Thank you. After the Welsh Government announced in the last Assembly that placements to specialist colleges for students with learning difficulties and learning disabilities would normally now be for two years rather than three, I visited Derwen College in Gobowen just across the border, which takes students from England and Wales. The Welsh Government at the time responded by stating that this was flexible; it would consider individual cases according to individual circumstances and needs, and the college showed me that the third year was critical, because that's when they provide the direct work experience in partnership with employers locally. I've now been contacted by a Flintshire mum, whose son attends the college on a two-year placement, who, in a review meeting, has been told that students from England can still have three-year placements, but students from Wales only two, and the flexibility that was previously available has not been made available to her. What is your current position to enable or ensure that students who need that third year in Wales can access funding for it through the appropriate processes, or is it simply now a blanket 'no'?

Photo of Kirsty Williams Kirsty Williams Liberal Democrat 2:16, 3 July 2019

No, it's not at all a blanket 'no'. We would expect the majority of placements to last for two years, however, all these placements come to me, as Minister, for sign-off and I know that I have signed off, for this financial year, a number of three-year placements, because that three-year placement has been designated and decided is the most appropriate length of study for an individual student. And from time to time, we have requests that are brought forward to extend a two-year placement to a third year if that's in the best interest of the learners. So, there is absolute flexibility still in place within Wales, and the nature, whether it's two years or three years, or whether a two-year needs to extend into a third year is a matter of an individual's assessment, and there is no blanket policy of saying only two years.

Photo of Elin Jones Elin Jones Plaid Cymru

(Translated)

Thank you, Minister.