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Exam Support

If your child has SEND, they may qualify to have extra support when sitting tests and exams. This includes SATS, GCSEs and A Levels.

This extra support is sometimes called access arrangements.  The most common arrangements are for extra time, or provision of a computer, or a person to read or write for the pupil (except for exams that specifically test these skills, such as English).  A child does not need to have an EHCP in place.

The school must apply to have some exam support or tell the testing agency about their plans in the months before the exam or test takes place.  Well before any exams or test is due to happen, ask your child’s teacher or SENCO about whether and how your child will be supported.

It is left with the discretion of the examination board to agree to the support, and it is for the school to apply on behalf of the student to the board and provide the evidence on the support they feel the student needs.

Support during SATS

Key stage 1 SATs are taken at the end of year 2 and Key stage 2 SATs are taken at the end of year 6. You can find videos and booklets about the tests on the Gov.uk website.

Support for these tests is based mainly on the support your child would usually get in the classroom and it isn’t allowed to give your child an unfair advantage. 

When planning for the tests, school staff should be thinking about the needs of their pupils and whether they normally get any extra support in lessons. For SATS taken in year 6, your child’s teacher may need to apply to have extra support in advance and include evidence that shows your child’s needs, such as assessment reports or an EHC plan.

These are some of the types of support schools could use for SATs:

  • extra time to take the tests
  • having an adult (usually a teaching assistant) write things down
  • having an adult read for your child – this does not include the English reading test where only the general instructions can be read out
  • being able to use a word processor or other technical or electronic aids
  • rest breaks
  • taking the test somewhere else other than school
  • compensatory marks for spelling – this is support for children who can’t take the spelling test, such as those who are hearing impaired
  • making transcripts – this is where a child’s answers are written out neatly by an adult and both copies are sent to the exam board
  • written or oral translations – these are for children without English as a first language who have been in the UK for less than two years
  • the use of prompts – this is for children who find it hard to focus well without help

For key stage 2 SATS, if your child has an EHC plan or uses a modified large print (MLP) or braille versions of the tests they will automatically get extra time to take the tests

Children with an EHC plan are allowed up to 25% extra and children who use the MLP or braille versions of the tests get up to 100% extra. That means if an exam is one hour long, children with an EHC plan will get up to 15 minutes extra time and children who use MLP or braille versions of the tests will get up to an extra hour.

If your child is waiting for an EHC plan to be confirmed, then they may also be able to have extra time, but their teacher will need to apply for it.

Support during GCSE’s, AS and A levels

For your child to get extra support for these exams, the SENCO at your child’s school or college usually needs to apply for it before the exams start. The deadlines vary each year, but it’s usually around January or February for summer exams and tests.    

The SENCO will need to show evidence that your child needs the extra support. As with SATS, the support your child gets is usually like the support they get in the classroom, and the way they normally work. Ideally the SENCO will collect this information from year 7 including anything that has been passed on from previous schools. You can’t use a private assessment as evidence unless the SENCO knows about it and you’ve discussed it with them.

Once they have been agreed, then exam support arrangements will apply for up to 26 months.

These are some of the kinds of extra support that school or college can give:

  • rest breaks – these are always supervised
  • extra time to take the exam
  • a computer reader or an adult to read the questions
  • being able to read aloud and/or use an exam reading pen
  • having an adult to write things down for you or use speech recognition technology
  • using a word processor to write with
  • a sign language interpreter
  • practical assistant
  • taking the exams somewhere else other than school
  • Braille, enlarged or coloured exam papers
  • making transcripts – where a child’s answers are written out neatly by an adult and both copies are sent to the exam board
  • written or oral translations – these are for children without English as a first language who have been in the UK for less than two years
  • the use of prompts – this is for children who find it hard to focus well without help

Your child is unlikely to need all of these! The kind of support your child might get will depend on their specific needs. For example, if your child has autism, they may need rest breaks and extra time or to take the exam somewhere other than where everyone else is taking it. Whereas if your child has a specific learning difficulty such as dyslexia, they may need to use a word processor to write with, a computer reader or a coloured copy of the exam paper.

For certain subjects some arrangements are not allowed, for example if the exam is testing reading then a reader may not be allowed. Some types of support may not work well for some subjects, so for example, using a word processor may not be helpful for a maths exam. Your child would still be able to use these types of support in other exams if they need to.

If your child has an injury, has a disability diagnosed or develops a learning difficulty after the deadline for applying for extra support has passed, they may still get support. The SENCO can make a late application and whether extra support can be given is decided for each young person, based on their individual needs.