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This article discusses the duties owed by Education Authorities to disabled children under the Equality Act 2010. It covers topics such as direct and indirect discrimination, discrimination arising from disability, and reasonable adjustments. It also explores the interaction with the Education (Additional Support for Learning) (Scotland) Act 2004 and the protected characteristics for schools.
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Equality Act 2010Education Authority’s Duties towards Pupils with Disabilities Elaine Falconer Legal & Democratic Services Aberdeen City Council
OBJECTIVES • Duties owed by EA’s to disabled children under the Equality Act 2010 • Who is disabled • Direct and Indirect discrimination • Discrimination arising from disability • What are reasonable adjustments ? • Interaction with the Education (Additional Support for Learning) (Scotland) Act 2004
Protected Characteristics for Schools • Disability • Sex and sexual orientation • Race – colour, nationality, ethnic origin • Religion or Belief • Gender reassignment • Pregnancy and maternity • Not marriage/civil partnership or age
Who is covered by the Act? • Prospective pupils so pupils applying for admission to a school • Pupils already attending local authority schools including those absent or excluded • Former pupils in certain circumstances e.g. provision of references • The duty not to discriminate applies to Independent Schools too
What is covered by the Act ? • Admission arrangements • Provision of education • Access to benefits, facilities and services • Failure to provide education • Failure to afford access to benefits, facilities and services • Exclusion from school • Subjecting a pupil to any other detriment
Provision of education and access to a benefit, facility or service • The duty to pupils covers everything that is provided for pupils and goes beyond formal education covering all school activities such as extra curricular and leisure activities, after school and homework clubs, sports activities, school facilities such as library and IT facilities, work experience, school uniform, assessments, exams and disciplinary procedures
Who is disabled ? • A person has a disability for the purposes of the Act if s/he has a physical or mental impairment which has a substantial and long-term adverse effect (has lasted or is likely to last 12 months) on her/his ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities • ‘Impairment’ – no need for a medical diagnosis • ‘Physical’ includes diabetes, asthma, epilepsy • ‘Mental’ includes dyslexia, ASD, ADHD, Down’s • ‘Substantial’ – more than minor or trivial • ‘Normal day-to-day activities –, attending class, dressing, memory or concentration difficulties
Types of discrimination • Direct Discrimination • Indirect Discrimination • Discrimination arising from disability • Failure to provide reasonable adjustments
Direct Discrimination • When a person treats another less favourably that they treat (or would treat) others because of a protected characteristic • Covers stereotyping, perception and association • Direct discrimination cannot be justified
Indirect Discrimination • When an apparently neutral provision, criterion or practice (PCP) is applied which puts, or would put, people who share a protected characteristic at a particular disadvantage compared to relevant pupils who do not share that characteristic • Disadvantage includes denial of opportunity or choice, deterrence, rejection or exclusion • E.g. a school has a policy of automatic detention if a pupil breaks the school rules on 3 occasions – ADHD pupils break the rules more often • ASNTS – spare places on Paris trip announced by tannoy – disabled pupils in the learning centre didn’t hear about it until after the trip was already full
What is a PCP • Not defined in the Act • Includes arrangements e.g. who to admit • Policies e.g. swimming policy – no bikinis • Procedures e.g administration of medicine • Rules e.g. disciplinary rules – 3 strikes and you’re out • The way education is provided – e.g. in practical classes • One-off decisions – not to allow a disabled child to attend a school trip • Proposals or directions to do something in a certain way • Can be justified if the PCP is a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim
What does proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim mean ? • ‘Objective justification test’ • The aim of the provision, criterion or practice (PCP) must respond to a real and lawful need e.g. ensuring the health, safety and welfare of pupils and staff • Proportionate means appropriate and necessary but necessary doesn’t mean that the PCP is the only possible way of meeting the legitimate aim • Is there a less discriminatory way to achieve the aim ? • The need to reduce or minimise cost cannot by itself amount to a legitimate aim but cost can be taken into account as part of a school’s justification for adopting a PCP along with other good (not trivial) reasons.
Discrimination arising from Disability • An Education Authority/school discriminates against a disabled pupil where they treat a pupil unfavourably because of something arising in consequence of their disability and • they cannot show that that the treatment is a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim • unless they can show that they did not know, and could not reasonably be expected to know, that the individual was disabled • ‘in consequence’ – a connection between whatever led to the unfavourable treatment and the disability
Duty to make reasonable adjustments • Where a disabled pupil is placed at a substantial disadvantage to non-disabled pupils because of a PCP or the absence of an auxiliary aid or service, there is a duty to take reasonable steps to avoid that disadvantage • Eg a pupil with a visual impairment requiring printed materials in large font will be at a substantial disadvantage if materials are provided in small print • Purpose of the duty is to enable disabled pupils to have access to an education as close as is reasonably possible to the education normally offered to pupils at large • Cannot justify a failure to make a reasonable adjustment, the only question is whether or not the adjustment is reasonable
What is meant by reasonable steps? Something which is reasonable for the school to have to do considering • The extent to which taking any particular step would be effective in overcoming the substantial disadvantage suffered by the pupil • The extent to which support will be provided under the ASL Act • The resources of the school and the availability of financial or other assistance • The financial and other costs of making the adjustment • The practicability of the adjustment • The effect of the disability on the individual • Health and Safety requirements • Academic, musical, sporting and other standards • Interests of other pupils and prospective pupils
Interaction with the ASL Act • Many pupils who are disabled will also have additional support needs • In some cases the additional support a disabled child receives will amount to reasonable adjustments • In other cases reasonable adjustments will have to be made in addition to the additional support the child receives
EHRC • Equality and Human Rights Commission’s website – downloadable publications • What equality law means for you as an education provider: schools • Reasonable adjustments for disabled pupils – Scotland • Technical Guidance for Schools in Scotland