GFTU BGCM 2019 Minutes
He said: Good morning, conference, President. Chris Wilson, President of
Voice, the union for education professionals moving Motion 15, mental health
in education. Conference, education is about liberation, freeing individuals
from bonds of poverty and of prejudice, allowing each and all to be nurtured, to
develop, becoming fulfilled and competent adults. Every day educators in all
parts of the profession strive to make that goal a reality. Every day members of
my union (Voice) from early years to adult education are doing all that they can
to encourage learning and growth and, President, as I know the GFTU
recognises, education is key to all social progress, but here is the truth. Our
ability, indeed the ability of all education professionals to do their job, in
whatever sector, has been made infinitely more difficult by austerity and far too
often when budgets are squeezed, it is targeted support which goes first.
Conference, for the individual to flourish individual needs must be met. One
size does not fit all and this is no more the case than for those with SEND
(special educational needs or disability). When cuts come they, the most
vulnerable, are often the first to feel the blade and there have been cuts.
According to the Institute of Fiscal Studies, school funding has been cut in real
terms by 8% since 2010. Some have fared even worse. Sixth form colleges
have seen funding cuts in real terms of 21% in the same period, another
shocking figure, and the Guardian has stated clearly the consequences.
Children with special education needs are hardest hit when those cuts happen
as schools facing deficits struggle to fund additional discrete support. Some
schools are closing, including 15 closing early, including 15 Birmingham
primaries. Others are simply now closing. Conference, behind the public
drama private lives are damaged. One special education needs co-ordinator in
the south west with 200 SEND pupils reported that half of her teaching
assistants had been made redundant, half, and none of the 20 teachers who
had left the school would be replaced. Staff are suffering.
According to the Education Support Partnership, 19% of education staff have
now suffered from panic attacks, 56% insomnia, 41% recorded having difficulty
concentrating and half simply wanted out. Children are suffering. The Mental
Health Foundation says 26% of children were worried about parents not having
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