Evaluation of special educational needs and disability provision in English primary schools using administrative health and education data in the ECHILD database

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Abstract

Introduction

Schools worldwide balance whole-class teaching with additional provision for children with special educational needs or disability (SEND). Robust evidence on equity and effectiveness of SEND provision is essential to address growing demand and rising costs globally.

Objectives

We used the Education and Child Health Insights from Linked Data (ECHILD) database to examine variation in recorded SEND provision in England and its impact on health and educational outcomes in primary schools and mixed methods to understand the SEND service context.

Methods

We followed children from birth to age 11 years to examine social, school, and area-level factors associated with SEND provision among the general population and among children with health conditions likely to affect learning. Using target trial emulation, we estimated the impact of SEND provision on hospital admissions, school absences and attainment. We surveyed and interviewed young people, parents, and professionals and reviewed information about services to understand SEND processes and contexts.

Results

Of 3.8 million children born 2004 to 2013, 30% had SEND provision recorded by age 11. Health conditions are only partially associated with SEND provision, which was also related to male gender, social disadvantage, low attainment and type of school. SEND provision reduced rates of unauthorised absences but did not reduce hospital admissions or improve attainment. Mixed methods studies highlighted benefits of early, responsive support, challenges posed by limited capacity, harms caused by delayed or inadequate provision, and need for parent advocacy to access SEND provision.

Discussion

Weak evidence of benefits of SEND provision in causal analyses is likely to reflect unmeasured confounding, insensitive outcomes, and poor measures of the content of SEND provision in ECHILD data. SEND policies require stronger evidence from collaborative analyses across jurisdictions, based on more granular data on need, provision, confounders and outcomes, combined with experimental methods and contextual evaluation.

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