logo
Call for single law to support inclusive education for all school-age children

Call for single law to support inclusive education for all school-age children

Irish Times13 hours ago

Consideration should be given to bringing all
school-age children
under a single piece of legislation to ensure a legal, rights-based approach to inclusive
education
, according to a new recommendation.
A review of the Education for Persons with Special Educational Needs Act was announced in 2021 to ensure the legislation was up to date, fully operational, and 'reflective of the lived experiences of students and families'.
A report on the review, which contained more than 28,000 survey responses, including 900 from children and
young people
, noted that while the 2004 Act 'clearly' indicated the direction intended for special education into the future, it failed to explicitly define inclusion.
This lack of clarity has been a source of 'much contention since 2004″, the report published on Wednesday reads.
READ MORE
The review noted that the Act also places a limit on the right to inclusion where the child's needs are such that an inclusive environment would be inconsistent with their best interests or the effective provision of education for other children.
It noted that a single underlying legislative basis would bring 'the principle of inclusion to bear on the formation of new legislation'.
[
'Uncertain future' for students with mild disabilities over redesignation of special schools
Opens in new window
]
Such a move has the potential to reshape the sector, strengthen the right to inclusive education and improve access to supports.
It was one of 51 recommendations made in the report, which included a call for the development of a roadmap for an inclusive education system to provide 'systemic coherence'.
It recommended a carefully managed transition to full inclusion, with adequate access to specialist placements based on children's needs.
This would allow for flexible movement between settings, the review notes.
Minister for Education
Helen McEntee
described the review as a 'significant step forward'.
'Education should be inclusive, equitable and responsive to the needs of all students. That is why we carried out this review – to ensure our laws remain effective and relevant,' she said.
Ms McEntee said the findings highlight the need to examine the full education system, 'including how we legislate for student support and transitions between settings, to ensure it delivers for every child'.
Other recommendations include consideration being given to a review of the Disability Act 2005, particularly the assessments of need process to promote 'timely high-quality assessments that trigger appropriate services.'
The review said the efficiency and timeliness of assessments of need should be improved to better serve students' needs, adding that the process should be monitored and updated on a continual basis.
It also recommends giving student support plans a statutory basis to ensure consistency and accountability in meeting individual needs.
Ms McEntee said she is committed to achieving the recommendations and will publish an implementation plan before the end of this year.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Up to 400 post offices could shut' unless state increases subsidy to keep them running, TDs told
‘Up to 400 post offices could shut' unless state increases subsidy to keep them running, TDs told

Irish Times

time31 minutes ago

  • Irish Times

‘Up to 400 post offices could shut' unless state increases subsidy to keep them running, TDs told

There could be widespread closures of local post offices from January if the Government does not approve a 50 per cent rise in the level of subvention to support them, an Oireachtas committee has been told. About €23 million has been provided to postmasters across the country to help maintain the network since the scheme was introduced a little over two years ago, members of the Oireachtas Communications committee were told on Wednesday. But the annual amount needed to be increased from €10 million to €15 million if services were to be retained in hundreds of offices considered to be less viable. 'You're looking at in January of next year, without government funding being increased, unrestrained closures throughout the country, rural and urban,' said Seán Martin, president of the Irish Postmasters' Union, citing a recent poll of its members. READ MORE 'Up to 40 per cent, 400 post offices, may go because the Government decides that it doesn't believe the community should have them.' He said a Grant Thornton assessment commissioned by the union had suggested many local offices were struggling to stay open because payments for the provision of government services were so low. He cited the recent the handling of the recent €2,000 carer's support grant paid to those providing full-time care to an elderly person or someone with a disability, saying that for their time and effort and security concerns related to the handling of cash, postmasters received just 65 cent for each payment handled. 'That's the difficulty postmasters have ... they're doing business, but unfortunately the business they're doing for Government is in cents rather than euros.' Contracts for such services are negotiated centrally by An Post . The company's chief executive, David McRedmond, said its aim was, where possible, to achieve increases in the fees obtained that it could pass on to them. Mr Martin said his union wanted to see more services provided through local post offices and it believed its members could play a valuable role in areas such as updating the register of electors and identity verification. He suggested postmasters could be become peace commissioners, a move that could free up gardaí from having to sign or witness official forms. An Post and the Department of Communications support the proposed €5 million increase in annual Government support, the committee heard, with a decision expected in the budget to be announced later this year. Many committee members expressed support for the increase. Labour's Alan Kelly , who chairs the committee, said he believed the union was selling itself short with the scale of its request. Mr McRedmond said many of the more than 800 post offices run by contractors, which were said to be generally more efficient than the 41 directly managed ones, were doing well, but he accepted some were 'struggling'. Asked about the recent decision to sell the post office building in Rathmines, Dublin, one of a number being transferred to contractors, he said it had been offered to the Land Development Agency and to Dublin City Council before the decision had been taken to put it on the open market, but both had declined. Asked about the terms on which it was offered, he said the LDA had been offered it for 'almost no payment', but would have to check with regard to the discussion with the council, which had viewed the premises before deciding it did not want to take it over.

Homelessness is ‘too high and we have to do better', admits  Harris
Homelessness is ‘too high and we have to do better', admits  Harris

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

Homelessness is ‘too high and we have to do better', admits Harris

' Homelessness is too high in Ireland and we have to work every day to do better and do more,' Tánaiste Simon Harris has said. He made the admission after fresh criticism on how homelessness is affecting children in emergency accommodation and news coverage about rough sleepers in Dublin. On Tuesday, Nuala Ward, a senior official at the office of the Ombudsman for Children, told the Oireachtas housing committee that child homelessness is a 'national shame' with a 'devastating impact' on the children involved. Of the 15,580 homeless people living in emergency accommodation in April, 4,775 were children. READ MORE Separately, The Irish Times reported on how up to a dozen rough sleepers are living in a makeshift camp surrounded by rubbish and rats under the M50 road . Mr Harris admitted that homelessness is 'too high', while also defending the record of the Government in its attempts to resolve the crisis. He said the key to tackling the homelessness issue is the 'supply of a whole variety of homes, including social homes'. He said the Government is working on making it easier for local authorities to get through the approval process for new social homes more quickly. [ Opinion: The housing crisis could erode Ireland's middle class to a point of collapse Opens in new window ] The Fine Gael leader also said: 'Last year, we did see the highest number of social homes allocated than any year since the 1970s, so that's part of the record of my party and of Fianna Fáil in Government, actually delivering more social homes last year than any time in my lifetime.' He said the Government's 'North Star' is to 'get to 300,000 homes over the next five years, and I believe that's what success will look like'. Mr Harris also said: 'I don't in any way, any way, underestimate the scale of the housing crisis . It is a housing emergency. 'It's a very real and acute emergency for people, particularly families, challenged in relation to their housing today, and that's why we need to break down every silo that exists in the State. 'Housing can't just be an emergency for the Minister for Housing, the Department of Housing or people in need of housing. 'It has to be an emergency for every part of the State' including the chief executives of local authorities and utilities such as Uisce Éireann and the ESB and 'every county councillor who needs to realise their job isn't to object to houses, but build houses'. Mr Harris was speaking as he accompanied Minister for Housing James Browne to officially open 133 new cost-rental homes delivered by South Dublin County Council in Tallaght. Mr Browne, a Fianna Fáil TD, said homelessness was 'foremost' in his mind when he became Minister earlier this year and the first thing he did was meet homelessness organisations and visit emergency accommodation. [ Analysis: Tough decisions to tackle housing crisis are under way – but will they work? Opens in new window ] He said higher rents cause higher homelessness internationally, and that by increasing supply 'we get rents down and we'll also help to get homelessness down'. He said the extension of Rent Pressure Zones and plans to improve security of tenure for tenants 'will help to prevent people going into homelessness as well.' Mr Browne said: '40 per cent of everybody going into homelessness is as a result of a notice to quit' and when the new legislation comes in people will have security of tenure. While homeless numbers reached a new record high in April Mr Browne also said there is 'record prevention' of homelessness as well and people are being exited from homelessness as quickly as possible.

Dublin transport contactless payment system not operational until 2029, says minister
Dublin transport contactless payment system not operational until 2029, says minister

Irish Times

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Dublin transport contactless payment system not operational until 2029, says minister

Contactless payments across Dublin's bus, tram and railway public transport networks will not be fully operational until 2029, Darragh O'Brien has told an Oireachtas hearing. The first testing phase of the 'next-generation ticketing' contactless payments system will be introduced in 2027 in a 'controlled area within Dublin across bus, rail and Luas', the Minister for Transport told Wednesday's Oireachtas hearing on 2025 transport estimates. A second phase is scheduled to run in summer 2028, with a third one to follow in 2029, he said. 'Obviously how we roll it out will be dependent on the first phase – if that goes well and the testing of that is robust and we don't require many system changes,' Mr O'Brien said in response to a query on the system from Green Party leader Roderic O'Gorman. 'By 2027 to 2029 we would have the system fully operational.' READ MORE The Minister said he was investigating whether it was possible to 'shorten the distance' between the first two testing phases, but he could not give a commitment on that. 'It is a roll-out of, effectively, a whole new contactless ticketing system that's going to be with us for a generation and will make a very significant change.' A National Transport Authority report published this year stated contact payments on public transport would take about three years to deliver. Spanish company Indra is responsible for the introduction of the contactless system across bus, tram and rail services. Asked by Fine Gael TD Grace Boland whether the Government planned to maintain the 90-minute €2 fare beyond the end of this year, Mr O'Brien said it was his 'intention to keep that'. The Minister also referred to the extension of free travel for five- to eight-year-olds from September and extending student travel fares to 25-year-olds. Anecdotally, recent fare reductions have resulted in more people taking public transport, the Minister said. However, it was difficult to quantify how many people were opting for bus or rail as a result of such price cuts, he said. Recently published data showed more than one million public transport journeys are now taken in Dublin daily. The Oireachtas committee also heard how the number of electric-vehicle (EV) charging points across the State remained far behind the European Union average. At present, there are seven EV charging posts for every 10,000 people, compared to an EU average of 20 per 10,000 and 13 per 10,000 in the UK, Sinn Féin's Pa Daly told the committee. People needed to have 'confidence that the battery will take them far enough, but also that they'll be able to recharge around the State', Mr Daly said. He also cited a recent warning from the Climate Change Advisory Council that the Government did not support access for lower-income families to EVs, which jeopardised emissions targets. Acknowledging that the number of charging points was below the EU average, Mr O'Brien said his department was addressing the shortfall and investigating EV grant options for lower and middle-income families and for rural dwellers. Asked if this would include grants for second-hand EVs, Mr O'Brien said it would. Earlier on Wednesday, the Minister told Newstalk Breakfast radio he did not expect the State would hit its projection of one million EV users by 2030, but said numbers would most likely reach 630,000-700,000 by the end of the decade. Responding to concerns from Mr O'Gorman regarding the 'almost systematic removal of references to cycling in this programme for government', Mr O'Brien told the committee the TD could 'be absolutely assured that this Government is as committed as the last to continue the real advancements that were made over the last five years in the provision of active travel schemes'. In addition to the Government's commitment to spend €360 million on public transport infrastructure, Mr O'Brien said his department would seek additional funds through the updated National Development Plan to improve 'active travel'.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store