The government's new SEND reforms are genuinely ambitious. Earlier intervention. Stronger mainstream inclusion. National Inclusion Standards. Clearer accountability for schools.
Through SEND Reform: Putting Children and Young People First, the direction is clear. And we believe it’s the right one.
If implemented well, these changes will be transformative.
But as reform accelerates, so too must our critical question:
Are we building a system that delivers consistent inclusion for every child? Or one that continues to vary depending on where they happen to be?
The Problem Isn't Knowledge
Schools have long known what good inclusion looks like: high quality teaching, early identification, adaptive practice, a culture where every child belongs.
The problem isn't that we don't know what to do.
It's that we don't do it consistently.
Right now, the quality of support a child with SEND receives can depend on:
That's not a system. That's a lottery.
And the SEND reform consultation says it plainly: support arrives too late, too inconsistently, and families are forced to fight for what their children are legally entitled to.
This is not a knowledge gap. It is a delivery gap.
Reform Raises the Bar. But Bars Don't Change Behaviour.
The new framework introduces a stronger Universal offer in mainstream settings, National Inclusion Standards, and structured layers of support: Targeted, Targeted Plus, Specialist.
In theory, this creates something more predictable. More equitable.
But here's what many of us have seen play out in practice.
Frameworks land. Training days happen. Then Monday arrives. And it's the same classroom, the same pressures, the same lone SENCO holding everything together.
The risk isn't that the reforms are wrong. The risk is that good policy meets inconsistent implementation, and the children who needed things to change most end up waiting again.
Ofsted Has Already Shifted the Goalposts
This is where it gets serious for school leaders.
Inspection is no longer looking for isolated pockets of good practice. It is asking whether inclusion is embedded, whether it is consistently improving outcomes for pupils, system-wide.
Not "does your SENCO do brilliant work?" but "does every teacher in this school identify need early, adapt their practice, and follow the evidence?"
Leaders are expected to ensure:
Inclusion is no longer about intent. It is about delivery. At scale. Every day.
The Leadership Questions We Must Ask
Publishing an Inclusion Strategy is now a requirement. Evidence-based practice is expected. Accountability runs through the whole school, not just the SEND department.
But compliance isn't the same as culture.
The leaders who will close this gap are the ones asking harder questions:
Because here's the uncomfortable truth:
Consistency fails when practice depends on individuals rather than systems.
This Is a Real Opportunity, If We Do These Three Things.
The reforms can genuinely work. They can shorten the wait for support, reduce over reliance on EHCPs as the only route to getting help, and build mainstream schools that truly include, rather than merely tolerate.
But only if implementation is consistent enough to matter.
Ideas are cheap. Implementation is where things get stuck.
And for implementation to work consistently, here are the three things we must do:
Because the future of SEND won't be shaped by what the white paper says.
It will be shaped by what happens in classrooms. Every day. For every child.
Not just the ones lucky enough to have the right teacher.
But all of them.