Rights, duties and procedures
The detailed learning outcomes covered in the introduction for the module are shown in the table below.
In broad brush terms, the learning outcomes for the Legislative Context materials
identify and trace three important aspects of work associated with children with
PMLD, SLD, and CLDD that are underpinned and secured by the legislation.
Rights | What are children entitled to? |
Duties | Who should do what; what powers of authority help people to carry out tasks? |
Procedures | How are rights and duties woven together? |
As recently as forty years ago, children with SLD
were not automatically entitled to education and were often considered incapable
of being educated – sometimes described as ‘ineducable’. That is
certainly not the case now.
Since 1971, legal safeguards have ensured that all children have a more equal chance
of benefiting from education. In that year for the first time, the Education (Handicapped Children) Act 1970 granted all children
of compulsory school age the right to an education. This entitlement continues to
this day under the Education Act 1996.
Legislation has not only provided the critical checks and balances needed to progress
equal rights. It has also helped to drive the overall direction of policy and set
the threshold beyond which we, as a society, agree that provision will not fall.
What systemic weaknesses are highlighted in the Green Paper?
Click for the answer
- Children do not have a voice.
- Teachers are given insufficient training and support.
- Too many assessments are involved.
- Appropriate support can be too difficult to access.
- The appeals process is costly.