The Royal College of speech and language therapists commissioned a cost-saving matrix to help
services demonstrate the value of SLTs
to national and local decision makers,
while at the same time showing evidence
of efficiency and value for money. All public services, and the
professionals who deliver them, are under
increased financial scrutiny and the pressure which ensues. As you no
doubt know, there is more pressure
than ever before to show how taxpayer funded
services are cost-effective and how
they meet local and national priorities.
The language unit at Flash Ley in Stafford has been a great example of specialist provision for children who are bright but have disordered speech and/or language skills. Specialist teachers and speech and language therapists have worked together to maximise the child's potential and they then return to mainstream school to be with their peers when they are more able to cope. I know several who have been. I met them when they were in nursery and knew they'd find it hard to cope in mainstream schools but they had normal learning ability so a generic special school would not be the answer.
Flash Ley had teachers who were more qualified and experienced in SLCN plus enhanced input from specialist SLTs. Working together gives the best way forwards.
Having worked for 30 years, I witnessed the first language units and the fights to have more. We knew then, as we know now, they are the answer for many children with disordered speech and language.
When I first worked, my NHS head of department was a lady whose views were never questioned. Partly because counsellors or managers daren't but also because she was the professional so she knew best. That's a long-gone scenario and, I for one, would never have managed a typical Judith Waterman peer over her glasses, half as well as she did. It said 'stupid man' without need for words!
There are 2 reasons why closing language units are not a good idea:
1. It's not good for the long term outcome of the children. These children have great potential.
2. The savings are only short term. For every £1 invested in enhanced speech and language therapy for children with SLI generates £6.43 through increased lifetime earnings.
This is in comparison to routine speech and language therapy, where enhanced therapy results in an additional 5,500 students achieving five or more GCSEs A* - C (or equivalent).
PLUS: parents will fight to take up specialist school places out of county (it's one of the few clinical areas where there is an evidence base to say they need enhanced!) so the LEA will have to pay thousands in legal fees to fight this. If and when parents win, these are the figures they might need the LEA to cough up:
What will the provision look like for the children who should go to a language unit? It maybe a half-termly visit from a SLT to school with extra TA support. This is not what the evidence say works best: the children who require the most specialist teaching are in the charge of the least qualified members of staff (absolutely no disrespect to the TAs but that's the fact).
As an independent SLT, whose team can offer weekly or more regularly, I'm not complaining as we can offer what they need BUT it's short sighted. Let's hope the other language unit in Staffs is more successful at fighting it.
The language unit at Flash Ley in Stafford has been a great example of specialist provision for children who are bright but have disordered speech and/or language skills. Specialist teachers and speech and language therapists have worked together to maximise the child's potential and they then return to mainstream school to be with their peers when they are more able to cope. I know several who have been. I met them when they were in nursery and knew they'd find it hard to cope in mainstream schools but they had normal learning ability so a generic special school would not be the answer.
Flash Ley had teachers who were more qualified and experienced in SLCN plus enhanced input from specialist SLTs. Working together gives the best way forwards.
Having worked for 30 years, I witnessed the first language units and the fights to have more. We knew then, as we know now, they are the answer for many children with disordered speech and language.
When I first worked, my NHS head of department was a lady whose views were never questioned. Partly because counsellors or managers daren't but also because she was the professional so she knew best. That's a long-gone scenario and, I for one, would never have managed a typical Judith Waterman peer over her glasses, half as well as she did. It said 'stupid man' without need for words!
There are 2 reasons why closing language units are not a good idea:
1. It's not good for the long term outcome of the children. These children have great potential.
2. The savings are only short term. For every £1 invested in enhanced speech and language therapy for children with SLI generates £6.43 through increased lifetime earnings.
This is in comparison to routine speech and language therapy, where enhanced therapy results in an additional 5,500 students achieving five or more GCSEs A* - C (or equivalent).
The resulting benefit of providing enhanced therapy for
all children aged six to 10 who currently have SLI exceeds the cost of the
speech and language therapy by £741.8 million.
Further analysis shows the estimated annual net benefit is
£623.4m in England, £58m in Scotland, £36.1m in Wales and £24.2m in Northern
Ireland.
Alderwasley From £57,689.00
Bladen House £82,223
Dawn House 25k (2013 figures)
(figures from google so may not be up to date)What will the provision look like for the children who should go to a language unit? It maybe a half-termly visit from a SLT to school with extra TA support. This is not what the evidence say works best: the children who require the most specialist teaching are in the charge of the least qualified members of staff (absolutely no disrespect to the TAs but that's the fact).
As an independent SLT, whose team can offer weekly or more regularly, I'm not complaining as we can offer what they need BUT it's short sighted. Let's hope the other language unit in Staffs is more successful at fighting it.
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