I interviewed headteacher Claire Wills to find out how the school managed the COVID-19 pandemic and supported families at home.
Mill Ford is a school for children and young adults aged 3-19 with complex needs, including severe and profound and multiple learning difficulties, complex medical needs and autistic spectrum conditions. The first national lockdown declared all schools to be closed except to vulnerable children, which was a challenging time.
"We rapidly had to make a decision that we would open to what we consider to be the most vulnerable so there were about three families that had to have us five days a week, normal school days, and then there were a number of families who had to have us just a few days a week.
Were meant to socially distance, our children cant socially distance, and we cant; the building isnt big enough to put them into single rooms So we made sure that in a classroom, you could socially distance if they agreed to stay apart from each other. [At this time] the classes are not very big, no more than about 3 or 4 in each class. Claire added that the pupils are still learning about selfcare and hygiene: they find it difficult to wash their hands adequately or correctly even with supervision... They cant tell you if they are in pain, they cant tell you if they are getting a sore throat. They cant tell you those things, so there is always a greater risk with health to children who have learning disabilities.