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A-Z of Special Needs

This A-Z of special needs is a quick reference guide for all busy SENCOs, teachers, teaching assistants and mentors. Each entry gives a brief definition, outlines the characteristics of the condition and suggests ways of supporting the child in the classroom. There are also definitions of roles and organisations involved in the sphere of special needs. At the bottom of each entry you will find links to sources of further information.

Activities to develop fine motor skills | A to Z of Special Needs

Fine motor skills refer to the ability to use the smaller muscles in the body for precise tasks. These activities will help to develop fine motor skills for writing, drawing, using scissors, etc.

ADHD (Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder) | A to Z of Special Needs

The terms ADD and ADHD are medical diagnoses and describe a syndrome of emotional or behavioural difficulties, which may include extreme impulsiveness, inattentiveness and continuous motor activity.

Aphasia | A to Z of Special Needs

Aphasia is the inability to express thoughts in words, or the inability to understand thoughts expressed in the spoken or written words of others.

Apraxia | A to Z of Special Needs

Developmental verbal apraxia is the inability to coordinate the lip, tongue and throat muscles in order to form sounds into words.

Arthritis | A to Z of Special Needs

There are three main types of juvenile arthritis: pauci-articular, poly-articular and systemic.

Asperger syndrome | A to Z of Special Needs

Children with Asperger syndrome display similar characteristics to those of autistic children. They have problems with communication, social relationships and making imaginative responses.

Asthma | A to Z of Special Needs

Children with asthma have airways that narrow and can become clogged with mucus as a reaction to various triggers.

Audiologist | A to Z of Special Needs

Audiologists are based in hospitals and are qualified in assessing levels of hearing and hearing impairment.

Autistic spectrum disorder (ASD) | A to Z of Special Needs

This condition affects a child’s ability to socialise and to develop speech and language.

Behaviour support teacher | A to Z of Special Needs

Behaviour support teachers are employed by the LEA and are part of a behaviour support service.

Brittle bones (osteogenesis imperfecta) | A to Z of Special Needs

'Brittle bones' is a range of conditions which cause the bones to break very easily.

Carer | A to Z of Special Needs

This is a person who cares for a child for whom the social services have parental responsibility.

Casework officer | A to Z of Special Needs

This is the person within the LEA who coordinates assessments and provision, and prepares statements of special educational needs.

Cerebral palsy | A to Z of Special Needs

Cerebral palsy is the generic name for a group of disorders affecting muscles and movement.

Child and Adult Mental Health Unit | A to Z of Special Needs

The Child and Adult Mental Health Unit is concerned with various aspects of mental health.

Child Guidance Centre | A to Z of Special Needs

This is sometimes called the Child and Family Centre or the Child and Family Therapeutic Service.

Child protection officer/coordinator | A to Z of Special Needs

All schools must have a child protection officer or coordinator and a back-up child protection officer or coordinator.

Child psychiatrist | A to Z of Special Needs

Child psychiatrists are doctors who specialise in childhood mental disorders and related problems.

Child psychotherapist | A to Z of Special Needs

Child psychotherapists tend to work with the most disturbed children.

Childminder | A to Z of Special Needs

Childminders have to be approved and registered by social services.

Clinical psychologist | A to Z of Special Needs

Clinical psychologists have trained to develop an understanding of how people’s minds, abilities and behaviours develop.

Community paediatrician | A to Z of Special Needs

Community paediatricians are based in hospitals or community care trusts and are employed by the NHS.

Cystic fibrosis | A to Z of Special Needs

Cystic fibrosis is a genetic disease that affects a number of organs in the body (especially the lungs and pancreas) by clogging them with thick, sticky mucus. This also affects the child’s digestion.

Diabetes | A to Z of Special Needs

Diabetes is a metabolic disorder in which a person's normal hormonal mechanisms do not control their blood sugar levels effectively.

Down syndrome | A to Z of Special Needs

Down syndrome is a genetic condition whereby a child is born with an extra chromosome.

Dyscalculia | A to Z of Special Needs

Dyscalculia is a specific learning disability involving maths skills.

Dysgraphia | A to Z of Special Needs

Dysgraphia is a processing problem causing difficulty in remembering and using the correct sequence of muscle movements in order to write

Dyslexia | A to Z of Special Needs

Dyslexia is a specific learning difficulty that affects the ability to read and spell. About 60 per cent of children with dyslexia also have trouble with the sounds that make up words.

Dyspraxia (developmental coordination disorder) | A to Z of Special Needs

Dyspraxia is a specific learning difficulty. Children with dyspraxia have problems with motor coordination and often appear clumsy when moving around the classroom.

Educational psychologist | A to Z of Special Needs

Educational psychologists are qualified teachers who have taught in schools and have then gone on to undertake further training in psychology.

Educational welfare officer | A to Z of Special Needs

They will spend time in school on a regular basis monitoring attendance by checking registers, but they have other roles too.

Emotional and behavioural difficulties (EBD) | A to Z of Special Needs

This term is used when a child's ongoing behavioural difficulties appear to have their root cause in emotional or possibly social problems.

Engaging hard-to-reach parents | A to Z of Special Needs

Who are the parents who evade all forms of contact from schools and why do they choose to exist at the fringes of their child’s education? Jo McShane investigates

Epilepsy | A to Z of Special Needs

Epilepsy is neither an illness nor a disease, but rather a tendency of the brain to be triggered to cause a spasm, a seizure or a fit, when neurones malfunction temporarily.

Family Centre | A to Z of Special Needs

These are sometimes called Parents’ Centres.

Family support worker | A to Z of Special Needs

Family support workers work alongside social workers.

Fragile X syndrome | A to Z of Special Needs

Fragile X is thought to be the most common inherited form of learning disability.

Glue ear (otitis media) | A to Z of Special Needs

Glue ear involves inflammation, either chronic or acute, and an accumulation of fluid in the middle ear.

Health visitor | A to Z of Special Needs

Health visitors are registered nurses who have undergone further specialist training.

Hearing impairment | A to Z of Special Needs

There are two types of hearing impairment or loss – conductive and sensori-neural.

Heart disorders | A to Z of Special Needs

Most children with heart disorders have a congenital condition which means that the disorder has been present since birth.

HIV and AIDS | A to Z of Special Needs

HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) is a virus that prevents the immune system from working properly, making it less effective at fighting infections. AIDS (acquired immune deficiency syndrome) is the term used when loss of or damage to immune function caused by HIV has been diagnosed.

Home tuition service | A to Z of Special Needs

This service is financed by the local authority to provide tuition for children who are unable to attend school for any reason, for example prolonged illness, recuperation from an accident, permanent exclusion, school phobia.

Hydrocephalus | A to Z of Special Needs

Hydrocephalus is a condition in which a watery fluid is produced continuously throughout the brain.

Independent parental supporter (formerly named person) | A to Z of Special Needs

The independent parental supporter can be a relative, a friend or a member of a voluntary support group willing to offer parents advice on special needs.

Innovative teaching of PE and sport | A to Z of Special Needs

Angela Youngman looks at some innovative ideas to get children moving

Learning mentor | A to Z of Special Needs

A learning mentor is an adult who works with a specific child on a one-to-one basis and offers personal support.

Learning support assistant (LSA) | A to Z of Special Needs

The term LSA is widely used for teaching assistants (TAs) who work in classrooms with teachers supporting children with special needs.

Learning support service | A to Z of Special Needs

The learning support service is usually provided by the LEA.

Learning support service | A to Z of Special Needs

The learning support service is usually provided by the local authority.

Learning support teacher | A to Z of Special Needs

Learning support teachers usually have additional qualifications in teaching pupils with specific learning difficulties like dyslexia.

Leukaemia and cancer | A to Z of Special Needs

One third of all cases of childhood cancer are leukaemia, which is a disease of the white blood cells.

ME (Myalgic encephalomyelitis or encephalopathy) | A to Z of Special Needs

ME is a chronic disabling illness of the immune and central nervous system that affects children as well as adults.

Moderate learning difficulties (MLD) | A to Z of Special Needs

Children with moderate learning difficulties (also known as global learning difficulties) have a general developmental delay. They have difficulties with learning across all areas of the school curriculum.

Multidisciplinary team | A to Z of Special Needs

In education, the multidisciplinary team is a group made up of several specialists who assess children's difficulties.

Muscular dystrophy | A to Z of Special Needs

Muscular dystrophy is a genetic, neuromuscular condition in which muscle cells break down and are gradually lost. Some types of muscular dystrophy are degenerative and ultimately severely disabling with a marked impact on life expectancy, whilst others cause only a relatively mild disability.

Named LEA officer | A to Z of Special Needs

The named officer or case worker is an officer of the local education authority who keeps parents informed throughout the process of statutory assessment for a statement of special educational needs.

Occupational therapist | A to Z of Special Needs

Occupational therapists help children with special educational needs, elderly people who need help to function at home, and anyone who has a disability and who needs help to gain maximum independent function.

Opportunity group leader | A to Z of Special Needs

Opportunity groups are pre-school settings which are set up in most areas to provide appropriate support for children with special needs or with difficult home circumstances.

Parent partnership service | A to Z of Special Needs

This is a service set up by or with the support of the local authority, but which must be independent from it, to provide parents with information, advice and support.

Peripatetic teacher/tutor | A to Z of Special Needs

Peripatetic teachers and tutors are usually employed by the loacl authority.

Physiotherapist | A to Z of Special Needs

Children’s physiotherapists are state registered and are usually employed by the NHS via health trusts.

Play therapist | A to Z of Special Needs

The play therapist may work in a child guidance centre or hospital.

Portage | A to Z of Special Needs

Portage is the pre-school support system for children with severe special needs or whose development has been significantly delayed.

Prader-Willi syndrome | A to Z of Special Needs

Prader-Willi syndrome is a chromosomal disorder which affects both sexes.

Primary workshop ideas wanted! | A to Z of Special Needs

Any primary school teachers out there with workshop ideas? I’m organising a few Antarctica mornings for local primaries and I’m trying to work out what to do

Provision for pupils with moderate learning difficulties | A to Z of Special Needs

Michael Farrell considers provision for pupils with moderate learning difficulties (MLD)

Religious education: raising the bar for gifted and talented | A to Z of Special Needs

Dilwyn Hunt, adviser for RE and G&T, explores the idea of having a more philosophical approach to religious education

Responsible person | A to Z of Special Needs

The governors of the school must designate a responsible person, who is usually the headteacher, or possibly the special needs coordinator or the special needs governor.

School doctor | A to Z of Special Needs

The work of the school doctor is closely related to the community paediatrician's role, except that in some areas the school doctor is exclusively employed to visit schools and assess children’s needs.

School nurse | A to Z of Special Needs

School nurses are trained nurses employed by the health service.

School phobia | A to Z of Special Needs

Most children have days when they do not want to go to school, but school phobia is more serious than this. It can be identified as a persistent and frequent fear of attending school. It is often emotional in origin and is usually a social anxiety.

Selective mutism | A to Z of Special Needs

Children with selective mutism are physically capable of normal speech and comprehension but choose not to speak in certain situations.

Self-evaluation forms: going departmental | A to Z of Special Needs

Anne Clarke, principal of Benton Park School, discusses the value of departmental SEFs

Semantic pragmatic disorder | A to Z of Special Needs

Semantic pragmatic disorder is a communication disorder, which crosses the boundaries of both specific language impairment and autistic spectrum disorder.

Social worker | A to Z of Special Needs

Social workers are employed by the social services department of the local authority. They have responsibility for child protection issues, children in need and looked after children.

Special needs adviser | A to Z of Special Needs

The special needs adviser is a member of the advice and development team for your local authority.

Special needs coordinator (SENCO) | A to Z of Special Needs

The special needs coordinator is the teacher with overall responsibility for coordinating provision for children with special educational needs in the school and for monitoring their progress.

Special needs governor | A to Z of Special Needs

Governing bodies are required to nominate one of their members to have special responsibility for special needs.

Special needs panel | A to Z of Special Needs

This is the group responsible for making decisions about statutory assessment within the local authority.

Specific language impairment | A to Z of Special Needs

Speech and language impairment can vary a great deal from mild difficulties to severe problems with the understanding and use of language.

Speech and language therapist | A to Z of Special Needs

Speech and language therapy, in most cases, is considered to be an educational provision and is usually funded jointly by the local authority and the NHS trust.

Spina bifida | A to Z of Special Needs

Spina bifida is one of the most common congenital disabilities, affecting approximately one in 500 births.

Stammering | A to Z of Special Needs

Stammering, also known as stuttering, is a condition in which the sufferer speaks hesitantly or in a stumbling and jerky way. Stammering varies, both in the way it affects different people and in its severity.

Teaching assistant | A to Z of Special Needs

The member of staff who is likely to be most involved on a day-to-day basis with supporting individuals or groups of children in classrooms.

Tourette syndrome | A to Z of Special Needs

Tourette syndrome is a hereditary neurological disorder, characterised by repeated involuntary movements or sounds called tics.

Visual impairment | A to Z of Special Needs

Visual impairment – having little or no sight – has been classified in a number of ways.



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