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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Hannah Richardson & Nisha Mal

'I had to give up my job to homeschool my son after council failed to provide suitable school place'

A mum has been forced to quit her job and homeschool her son after the local council failed to find a school suited to his needs. Corrine Toseland's son Harvey Leak was due to start secondary school in September and his parents had applied for two specialist schools.

They felt a specialist school would better suit their son's needs, as Harvey is autistic. He requires frequent breaks from work, additional teacher support, a visual timetable, and a distraction-free personalised workstation to help with his anxiety.

However, because he is above average for reading and writing, Leicestershire County Council assigned him a place at Lutterworth High School, a mainstream school. The school has said it cannot meet Harvey’s needs in a document sent to the council and seen by LeicestershireLive.

His mum, Corinne Toseland, who lives in Fleckney, said she feels completely helpless and, with many schools already back for the Autumn term, has no idea what she is supposed to do now. A spokesperson for Leicestershire County Council said they could not comment on individual cases.

They added: “We are working hard to ensure all children have a school place that suits their needs.” Last week I had to break it to my little boy that he is going to be homeschooled,” Ms Toseland told LeicestershireLive. “He loves school, he just wants to have a friend.

“The summer holidays are the worst time for him, so for him to have an extended summer holiday and not be at school… I’m completely helpless to watch a little boy break down and his anxiety go through the roof and know there is absolutely nothing you can do to help it and, with everything you are trying to do, there is nobody there to support you.”

Ms Toseland said she and Harvey’s father, with whom she shares custody, have tried to contact his caseworker countless times, but rarely hear back. She has now had to give up her job as a dental nurse so she can be at home with her son.

“We haven’t heard anything about it in the last two weeks,” Ms Toseland said. “I’m having to give up the job that I love so I can go home and be with my little boy because he’s just got no where to go at the minute.

“I’ve not been given any direction on what to do, how to homeschool, if he’ll get a tutor. I’m not a teacher, I’m a dental nurse and we’ve just been left.

“Harvey is very clever, he’s cleverer than me. I looked into getting a private tutor, but they’re £20 an hour. With me not working, I can’t afford that.

“I don’t know how I’m going to survive financially. And with the gas and electricity going up as well, we’re going to be at home more, it’s just a nightmare.

"People are making decisions over other people’s livelihoods and family and not realising the implications and then disregarding any accountability or responsibility for it by just not answering us."

The family are appealing the council’s assigned school place, although their tribunal date is not set until December. The two specialist schools they applied to are now full, say the family, though there may be a chance of a place opening up for Harvey in January.

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