Effective inclusion practice in mainstream schools revealed

A new report has been published laying out five principles of effective inclusive practice in mainstream schools.

The report by Inclusion in Practice and ImpactEd Group follows a national call for evidence to find examples of successful inclusive practice in mainstream schools.

In a system navigating a complex and challenging funding backdrop, the report details how a number of schools and trusts are successfully organising practice, professional development and resources to strengthen support for all children. 

The five emerging principles of promising practice identified are: 
 
Knowing children well, early and often. The foundation of inclusive practice is balancing knowledge of individuals, alongside knowledge of their barriers to learning. Schools are investing time in getting to know children early, particularly at points of transition, and being anticipatory as well as reactive in planning support that will help them succeed.  
 
High quality and evidence-informed teaching practice. Inclusion starts with expert teaching. When this is embedded consistently and paired with early, targeted support for children, more learners stay in class and make progress.  
 
Coherent and expert targeted support. Expert and evidence-informed targeted support is organised in clear and structured systems so schools can ensure support is available when needed, and that responsibilities are well understood. Graduated models are enabling earlier, more coordinated responses across settings.
 
Strengthening inclusion through relationships and partnerships. Inclusive schools do not work in isolation. Strong relationships based on trust with families, local authorities, and external services help create coherent and consistent support for children.
 
Inclusion as a strategic and shared responsibility. Leaders see inclusion as a core priority and principle across their settings, not a separate system. When responsibility is shared and guided by a clear ethos, schools align planning, development, and accountability to drive consistent, inclusive practice. 
 
Deep dive case studies and resources will be published alongside thte report from REAch2 Academy Trust and The Academy at Shotton Hall, with more to follow over the next few weeks to demonstrate how areas of promising practice are being implemented successfully in schools. 
 
Whilst the call for evidence illuminates promising themes, it also showed the inconsistency in training, support, evidence-based guidance and resources that schools are navigating. Across submissions, numerous frameworks and tools were cited, alongside a wide range of approaches to training and continuous professional development (CPD) of teams. 
 
Talking about the research Tom Rees said: “The need for significant reform of the SEND system is well understood and I am grateful that in recent months and through projects like Inclusion in Practice, we have had space to step back and consider what is working and where efforts need to be prioritised. 
 
“This report gives us hope and encouragement, in highlighting pockets of effective and evidence-informed practice being implemented in our schools which we can learn from and build on. But this project has also reminded us how much inconsistency exists within the SEND system in terms of frameworks, training, advice and resources.   

“We should be ambitious for much better support for teachers and schools in the future. This means clearer use of evidence, sharper accountability, smarter systems, and putting children’s needs – not labels – at the centre. 
 
“Schools are ready for reform and ready to act. There’s strong appetite to improve – and many schools are already changing how they work. System reform must accompany that and support and build on this momentum.” 

Inclusion in Practice is a collaborative initiative convened by Tom Rees, Chair of the Expert Advisory Group for Inclusion, Ambition Institute and the Confederation of School Trusts (CST) and supported by a range of sector partners committed to strengthening the educational experience of children and young people with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND).