Sustainability

Council trialling AI for special needs reports

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Media   来源:Headlines  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:The Conservatives have announced they plan to support policies such as tightening visas, which Badenoch argued were "watered down" versions of Tory policies.

The Conservatives have announced they plan to support policies such as tightening visas, which Badenoch argued were "watered down" versions of Tory policies.

But parents who were at the debate said the minister’s plan lacked detail.Koreen Fisher, who was watching from the gallery in Westminster Hall, has a 10-year-old son with autism, ADHD, and a speech delay.

Council trialling AI for special needs reports

Parents can ask local authorities to assess their child and give them a specialist care plan to support their special educational needs in school.Ms Fisher said delays to her son’s care plan meant she could not apply to any secondary schools.When asked what she thought about the debate, she said: “Everybody seemed to be in agreement but nothing is being done.”

Council trialling AI for special needs reports

She said if teaching staff were given training and more resources, many children would be in mainstream schools.Louise Polkinghorne also has a son with SEND and attended the debate to hear what MPs had to say about the problems many families like hers encounter.

Council trialling AI for special needs reports

She said her son needs “one-to-one support at all times” in schools and she is trying to update his care plan to reflect that.

As for the debate, she said MPs were “all saying the right thing”.''People want things to get better, and people want to know that there is hope on the horizon," he said.

''They want to be convinced that their government will fight to make things better.''He said Reform were riding high but do not "really have any policies on which to be challenged or to be scrutinised".

The former minister said the challenge for Labour was "showing that change is on the horizon, change can be made and things will improve"."That is the confidence barrier politics needs to get through by the next Senedd elections," he said.

copyright © 2016 powered by FolkMusicInsider   sitemap