by SEN Parent Support Group
The Department for Education has released new inclusion guidance, and understandably it has created a lot of discussion. Whenever something new appears, families worry about what it means for their children, and professionals want to understand how it fits with the duties they already work under.
The most important point to hold onto is this: guidance is not law. The legal protections for disabled children have not changed.
This blog brings together both a parent’s point of view and a professional’s point of view, because inclusion only works when both sides understand the landscape.
For Reference linked guidance reviewed:
Inclusion Mainstream Fund Methodology Updated 25/6/2062026
Inclusive Mainstream Fund: Best Practice for Schools Updated 5/6/2026)
What Has Actually Changed?
The DfE has published new guidance on:
- inclusion bases
- inclusive practice in mainstream schools
- inclusion strategies
- inclusive environments and school estates
- funding linked to inclusion
These documents set out expectations and recommended approaches. They are intended to support schools. ( not replace the legal framework.) and it is important to note that the law below HAS NOT CHANGED
These laws remain fully in force and sits above any guidance.
Parent Point of View
1. The Equality Act still protects your child
Schools and local authorities must:
- make reasonable adjustments
- avoid discrimination
- avoid policies that disadvantage disabled pupils
- ensure disabled children can access education without being placed at a substantial disadvantage
No guidance can remove or weaken these duties.
2. Guidance cannot be used to justify exclusion or reduced access
If a school says:
- “We can’t meet needs because the new guidance says…”
- “We’re following the new inclusion model, so your child needs to be elsewhere”
Parents should know this is not how the law works. Guidance cannot override a child’s legal right to reasonable adjustments or to be educated without discrimination.
3. Inclusion bases are optional, not a replacement for mainstream access
The new guidance talks about inclusion bases, but these are not a legal requirement and not a gatekeeping tool. A child does not need to “earn” their place in mainstream education – EVER!
4. Your child’s rights do not depend on funding
Funding guidance may change, but a school’s legal duties do not. A lack of funding cannot be used as a reason to refuse adjustments. This sadly, has always been a barrier as schools historically advise “we have no funds”. This does not mean that they can not adjust under the Equalities Act 2010 and SCOP 2014! Failure to adjust can still mean – discrimination!
Professional Point of View
1. Guidance is there to support practice, not replace statutory duties
The new documents offer structure and clarity, but they sit underneath:
- the Equality Act
- the SEND Code of Practice
- safeguarding legislation
Professionals should treat the guidance as a framework, not a rulebook.
2. Reasonable adjustments remain non‑negotiable
Even if a school is developing an inclusion base or revising its inclusion strategy, the duty to make reasonable adjustments applies to every pupil, every day.
3. Policies must be checked for indirect discrimination
A policy that appears neutral can still disadvantage disabled pupils.
The new guidance does not change this.
Schools should continue to review:
- behaviour policies
- uniform policies
- attendance approaches
- curriculum access
4. Inclusion strategies must reflect the law, not the other way around
The new guidance encourages schools to publish an inclusion strategy.
This is an opportunity to:
- embed legal duties clearly
- strengthen staff confidence
- improve consistency
- reduce disputes with families
A strong strategy aligns with the law first, and the guidance second.
Where Both Perspectives Meet
Parents want clarity – Professionals want workable expectations.
The law provides the foundation for both.
The new guidance can be helpful, but it does not replace:
- reasonable adjustments
- the right to be free from discrimination
- the right to be included
- the right to have needs met
If everyone understands the difference between law and guidance, inclusion becomes far more stable and far less confusing. Law supersedes “Guidance”
Parents – You’re welcome to join our free parent community for peer support, lived‑experience guidance, and a space where you never have to explain your child’s needs.
If you’d like more focused help, you can access our website to book 1:1 support with an experienced mentor who will walk with you through any stage of the SEND process. And if you want practical tools you can use straight away, our Resource Hub gives you instant access to templates, CPD‑accredited training, step‑by‑step guides, and bespoke apps that support you from your very first request for help all the way through to tribunal case management.
Understanding SEND
Communicating With School
- LETTER 4: To School following receipt of Formal Attendance Letter
- LETTER 3: To School Based on 3rd Attendance Letter Received
- LETTER 2: ATTENDANCE RESPONDING TO (BELOW 90% ATTENDANCE LETTER)
- LETTER 1: Responding to EARLY AWARENESS Letter from School (before 90% absence)
- LETTER: To School Requesting Reasonable Adjustment for Mobile Phone
All Things EHCP
- LETTER: To LA When They Refuse to Reassess
- LETTER: Stage 1 LA on Grounds of Maladministration During EHCP NA Process
- LETTER: To LA – Refusal to Assess Decision Made via Misapplied Law
- LETTER: Post 16 SECTION 19 – Formal Letter to LA or Stage 1 Complaint
- LETTER: To LA (Formal Notice) When Amendments Not Applied to Draft
Attendance, Exclusions & Sanctions
Complaints
- LETTER: To LA When They Refuse to Reassess
- LETTER: Stage 1 LA on Grounds of Maladministration During EHCP NA Process
- LETTER: Post 16 SECTION 19 – Formal Letter to LA or Stage 1 Complaint
- LETTER: To School Requesting Reasonable Adjustment for Mobile Phone
- RESOURCE: How To Write A Structured / Impactful Complaint (LA or School)
