Stay aware of your legal responsibilities towards the safety of your pupils. The Safeguarding Hub keeps you up-to-date with recruitment procedures and receive continuing guidance on e-safety with this invaluable subscription.
Keeping headteachers, the entire senior leadership team and governors up-to-date with the latest news, reports, articles and guidance, the Leadership & Governance Hub brings together extensive materials on education law, leadership issues and school governance.
Richard Bird outlines an approach to disciplining pupils with special educational needs – taking into account human rights law, and practical considerations for the school community as a whole
Truly inclusive practice can be a difficult path to follow; not all schools choose to take it. Ruth Comerford describes the range of provision that makes her school genuinely inclusive
Preventing Prejudice-Based Bullying: Boost staff confidence to tackle unacceptable behaviour and language provides four training sessions to enable all staff to take a proactive approach to tackling prejudice-based bullying in all its forms.
Disability provisions in the Equality Act 2010 should be regarded as an opportunity for schools to strengthen their Local Offer rather than an onerous additional responsibility, argues Brian Lamb. Here he provides a comprehensive summary of new guidance for schools on implementing the duty
Governing bodies must keep a written statement of the school policy on sex and relationship education – use this template policy to tailor one for your school.
Christopher Robertson introduces new Equality and Human Right Commission guidance for schools and local authorities on the reasonable adjustments duty, including advice on an extension of the requirement for schools to provide auxiliary aids and services for disabled pupils
Helping pupils realise their potential and achieve their dreams is a core aim of all educators – but how do you go about that in practice, especially with those groups whose expectations can appear to be lowered rather than raised by those around them? Jacqui O’Connor believes the answer lies in an all-inclusive whole-school approach