I have news for the school; the arrangements
have to change! Type 1 diabetes is classified as a disability under the Equalities Act 2010. By excluding your daughter from school activities because of her disability, the school is breaking the law. It is also worth pointing out that the last point of the unacceptable practice I mentioned previously states:
“prevent children from participating, or create unnecessary barriers to children participating in any aspect of school life, including school trips, e.g. by requiring parents to accompany the child.”
If testing in the classroom is mentioned in the care plan and the school has signed the plan, the school have then agreed she can do it and this is what must happen
.
The go-to document when heads are being particularly difficult is the reasonable adjustments guidance, which is part of the Equality Act. You can find more information about it at
https://www.citizensadvice.org.uk/l...e-reasonable-adjustments-for-disabled-people/ I can send you the full document if you fancy a bit of bedtime reading. If you want more advice about this, please let me know.
Is your daughter taken out of assembly because she needs to test or for another reason? Does it happen regularly? What reason is being given? I’d still like to look at the school’s other policies if that’s ok. Sometimes, there are parts of other policies e.g. health and safety, that can be of use to parents in these situations.
If necessary, you can escalate it to the governors, but maybe wait and see what the result of the meeting with the head and SENCO is. I’m sure you will prepare thoroughly for the meeting. Go into it armed with the evidence that backs up what you say, including legal quotes. Have a plan for the direction you want the meeting to go in and make sure you stick to it, don’t let the head follow her agenda.
If it helps, you can tell the head that the advice you’re getting from me is from someone who volunteered for the Diabetes UK care in school helpline, so I have been trained in these matters.