Special needs don’t end at 16
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Special needs don’t end at 16
https://www.tes.com/magazine/archive/special-needs-dont-end-16
It is always moving to read the testimonies of elderly people who were randomly institutionalised in the mid-20th century with the assumption that they were incapable of learning. The shock that so many people’s lives could have been curtailed so casually should alert us to the continuing lack of access to adequate learning and social experiences for adults with severe and profound and multiple learning difficulties.
It is striking and contradictory that while significant statutory funding guarantees quality educational provision for special needs in our mainstream schools, when a young person with significant learning needs goes to cross the bridge to adulthood, they and their families find there is almost nothing there on the other side.
While this review is most welcome, perhaps there needs to be a more fundamental reflection on our attitudes to adults with learning difficulties. It is not enough to build a child’s abilities up at school - we have a duty to follow through into adulthood.
Phil Goss 22 Ruskin Drive Kirkby Lonsdale Carnforth, Lancashire
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