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Enrolment options
Choosing the right school for your child is an important decision.
All children can enrol at their local state school. All students will be welcomed and reasonable adjustments made to enable your child to learn alongside their similar-aged peers and achieve their full potential. To enrol at your local state school you can contact the school principal. You can find your local state school on the department's
schools directory. If you are not sure which Queensland state school to contact, your closest
regional office can help. More information about
enrolling your child at your local state school is also available online.
If your child has intellectual disability that, either alone or in combination with other disabilities, severely impacts their ability to learn, you may choose to enrol your child at your local state primary or secondary school.
To apply for enrolment at a Queensland state special school—set criteria apply, information can be found in the
Queensland state special schools—parent/carer fact sheet (DOCX, 135KB). For further information regarding intellectual disability, please visit the
intellectual disability page.
Reasonable adjustments
Under the
Disability Standards for Education 2005 (Cwth), all Queensland state schools are required to make
reasonable adjustments for students with disability to enable them to access and participate in education on the same basis as students without disability.
Reasonable adjustments are strategies or supports that help students with disability to attend school, learn, participate in school activities and support their wellbeing while at school. Reasonable adjustments can be made in the classroom, in the playground, to the school environment or when students are participating in special events such as excursions or camps. Reasonable adjustments help to reduce the barriers students may experience due to their disability.
Teachers make reasonable adjustments for an individual student, but these adjustments can benefit others too.
Reasonable adjustments are made based on the student's individual learning needs. This means that reasonable adjustments made for one student might be different for another, or different in one school to another.
Under the Disability Standards for Education 2005 (Cwth), schools are required to make reasonable adjustments for students with disability to enable them to participate in education on the same basis as other students.
Reasonable adjustments apply to students with disability (or their parents or other associates) and relate to:
- applying and enrolling at a school
- participating in relevant learning activities, courses and educational programs
- using services and facilities.
A range of resources have been published by the Australian Government to support students with disability and their families to know their rights under the Disability Discrimination Act 1992 (DDA) and the DSE. They include resources about getting started in education; advocating; consulting about reasonable adjustments; and transitions. There are easy read and alternate language versions of these resources.
The
Disability Standards for Education: A practical guide for individuals, families and communities also provides more information about reasonable adjustments and the Disability Standards for Education 2005. You can hear about the standards by watching the
Disability Standards for Education video.
How decisions are made about reasonable adjustments
Schools must consult parents about reasonable adjustments before they are made. Students are also consulted as much as possible, with the student's age and individual circumstances guiding how best to include them in consultation.
For more information about reasonable adjustments, visit the
Nationally Consistent Collection of Data on school students with disability (NCCD) website.
The
Community Resource Unit Ltd (CRU) is supported by the department to provide information to
families about inclusive education. A
range of resources are available, including a fact sheet about
advocacy and meetings (PDF, 761KB). This may help you to be prepared for meetings with your child's school. Resources are also available that can help you to create a
vision for inclusive education.
School plans for reasonable adjustments
Schools document the reasonable adjustments that will be made for individual students with disability enrolled at their school. They may be presented in a personalised learning plan, an individual support plan or another type of plan developed by the school. Schools determine the best way to document the reasonable adjustments and supports they are providing according to their local context.
These plans assist schools to ensure that staff are aware of the reasonable adjustments being made to support your child's learning and participation needs.
Students with disability do not automatically require an individual curriculum plan (ICP). Most students with disability in Prep to Year 10 are assessed against the achievement standards for their enrolled year level, with reasonable adjustments. However, for some students with disability, an ICP may be required to enable assessment and reporting against a level different to their enrolled year level. This occurs when differentiated, focused and intensive teaching has been provided with rigour and has not met the needs of the student.
A decision to provide an ICP is a collaborative process and may include input from a range of stakeholders involved in the student's education.
An ICP is agreed between you and your child's school. More information about individual curriculum plans can be found in the
P–12 curriculum, assessment and reporting framework.
The school will discuss plans with you before they are finalised and will share it with you and your child. You can contact your child's school if you need more information about a plan for your child.
Types of reasonable adjustments
Reasonable adjustments are different in each school and for each student according to their different strengths and needs. The reasonable adjustments will be made to support your child to attend, learn and participate in school activities. They may be required in the classroom, the playground, the school environment or during school excursions and camps.
Examples of adjustments could include:
- teaching in a different way, for example, using diagrams and charts
- providing extra learning to address areas of difficulty, for example, small group learning
- using different resources and materials, for example, larger print, reference material, Braille
- using different approaches to assessment
- involving a teacher aide to support the classroom teacher at some times
- using assistive technology, for example, speech to text tool, slope board
- using different approaches to assessment
- teaching a different year level in an age-appropriate way and developing an Individual Curriculum Plan
- providing personal care supports, for example, to facilitate health or daily living needs
- arranging the classroom or other learning environments so that all students can access what they need and move around the environment
- making changes to areas of the school environment such as playgrounds or eating areas
- providing a quiet area for students that responds to sensory issues or to support emotional regulation
- using different strategies to ensure that all students are safe in emergency situations such as fire alarms
- providing additional supports to students during school or out-of-school activities.
There are a range of
podcasts on the NCCD website that outline the types of adjustments that could be made to respond to a range of conditions, disorders or disabilities, including Autism, Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), Down syndrome, Dyslexia, Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) and Tourette syndrome.