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Opinion

How JCoss inclusion extends beyond religion

From the coming school term, ‘special needs’ children will no longer be invisible

August 19, 2010 10:17
2 min read

Among the several comments published in recent weeks in the JC concerning the "best" way to deliver education to children in the Anglo-Jewish community, only two or three letters have referred to the sizeable minority of students who have special educational needs.

We have also read that even the sophisticated Jewish community in New York has failed to include these special children within their own schools, and appears to keep faith-based education as the preserve of high achievers. The truth is that these children still remain largely invisible in the greater debate about ethics and communal responsibility in Jewish education.

Fortunately, here in Barnet, in London, something new and different is about to happen for some of these young people. It should be a cause for national recognition and communal celebration, yet not many people have noticed it and even fewer have lauded it. Nevertheless, it is surely the only way for Jewish education to progress and set an example for the future.

I am, of course, referring to JCoSS, the new cross-communal secondary school opening in September, and, in particular, its Pears Special Resource Provision (PSRP). Inspired and developed by Norwood, the PSRP will cater exclusively for students with autistic conditions and special educational needs. Specialist staff will work with each child to develop a personalised curriculum programme and the students will have access to all the necessary resources and expertise, within both the specially adapted and equipped PSRP building and the main school.