(UK) Belfast: Autistic 5yo has no school place; 5 others without places
- Aug 28, 2025
- 2 min read
Aug 28, 2025, BBC News: 'My son is constantly asking when he's due to start school'
The mother of a five-year-old boy with special educational needs has said she is "angry" that he is still without a school place this year.
Catherine Quinn's son Séadhna is autistic and is due to start Primary One this September.
Catherine, who is from east Belfast, told the BBC she is still "currently waiting" on a place.
"His statement was changed so that he was allowed to attend a specialist unit and now there is no spaces for him," she said.
The Education Authority said it "fully understands the concerns and frustrations of parents with the SEN placements process".
"We are actively working to confirm a specialist provision place for Séadhna," it added.
"We are still currently waiting on a space becoming available for him but we don't know when he's going to be able to start school," Catherine said.
"It's really difficult, it's really stressful you just feel like you're in fight or flight all the time. You are working to time frames that they are giving you which they are exceeding," she added.
On Wednesday, the Education Authority (EA) said six children with special educational needs are still without a September school place.
The education body said it was continuing to work with schools "to ensure that all children can access education". . . .
Catherine said she is "stressed" and "angry" and adding, she doesn't believe there is enough being done to help children like her son get into school.
"It's been a long time coming and I'm tired, I'm tired fighting. I just want Séadhna to have an appropriate place to go, somewhere where he can feel safe and he is supported correctly."
"Séadhna is going to have to be supported somewhere and it's our legal right for him to be supported somewhere, why make me wait all this time and potentially have to take legal action against the education authority," she added.
"Why not just open a place for him, and allow him to start school at the same time as every other child starting."
'I had to intervene'
The education minister said it is "not acceptable" that some children still don't have a place.
Speaking on Radio Ulster's The Nolan Show, Paul Givan said: "It's a manifestation of the pressures that we have within our education systems."
He called on all schools in Northern Ireland "to come on board and to work with us" in accepting SEN children.
"We had to do work identifying schools that would be working with us in order to create the places," he said.
"I had to intervene and personally write out to schools appealing for them to do this," he said.
"This is an education system response that is needed, it can't be solely a solution from the department or the education authority."
Givan also said that next year the demand for SEN places "is going to be higher than what it was this year" and said more schools need to provide support or "we're not going to be able to meet that need".
In June, the EA wrote to principals informing them it was considering an unprecedented move to instruct some schools to admit SEN children . . . .





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