For many years, our work across further education has been driven by a simple but powerful belief: that inclusive learning environments are created by people – their values, their skills and their commitment to understanding learners as individuals.
As a Centre for Excellence in SEND, our role is not to present ourselves as having all the answers, but to create spaces where practitioners, leaders and governors can learn together, reflect on practice and build the confidence needed to ensure that learners with SEND experience genuinely inclusive, high-quality education.
Why we became a Centre for Excellence:
Our decision to apply to become a Centre for Excellence was strongly shaped by our own experience of the SEND peer review process in 2024. Engaging openly and constructively in the/a peer review provided invaluable external insight and professional challenge and contributed directly to our organisation being awarded Outstanding for High Needs in our most recent Ofsted inspection.
We also recognised a growing sector need for SEND leadership and practice that goes beyond compliance. While systems, policies and frameworks matter, it is the knowledge, confidence and wellbeing of staff that ultimately shapes learners’ day-to-day experiences.
Our perspective is rooted in practice. We work closely with learners, families, practitioners and senior leaders, and we see first-hand the difference that trauma-informed and values-led approaches can make. Becoming a Centre for Excellence has enabled us to share this learning more widely, contribute to national conversations and support providers at different stages of their SEND journey.
Our Centre for Excellence theme, ‘People’, focuses on one central question: how do we ensure that learners with SEND experience a fully inclusive learning environment, led and delivered by knowledgeable and skilled practitioners?
This theme recognises that inclusion is not the responsibility of a single team or role. It is shaped by leaders who prioritise inclusive values, practitioners who understand trauma and neurodiversity, support staff who feel empowered in their roles, and governors who ask the right questions.
Across our activity to date, we have deliberately engaged colleagues from across the sector – senior leaders, governors, teachers, learning support and professional services – reflecting the collective responsibility required to embed inclusive practice.
What we have been doing so far:
Since becoming a Centre for Excellence, we have delivered a programme of activity that has been well received and demonstrated meeting clear sector need.
Our live sessions have explored themes including trauma-informed practice, working with parents and carers, inclusive values-based leadership, and staff wellbeing and resilience. These sessions have attracted hundreds of participants from across the country. Feedback consistently highlights the value of hearing from experienced practitioners, engaging with research-informed approaches, and having time to reflect on practice in a supportive environment.
Alongside this, our Communities of Practice have created space for deeper collaboration. These sessions have brought together colleagues from mainstream and specialist provision to explore SEND quality, curriculum design, supported internships and inclusive systems. The strength of engagement has reinforced the appetite across the sector for peer learning that is practical, reflective and grounded in real-world experience.
We have also completed a number of SEND Peer Reviews, working alongside partner colleges to explore strengths, identify areas for development and share effective practice. These reviews have been approached as developmental rather than judgemental, reinforcing trust, openness and professional dialogue.
Looking ahead:
As we continue our work as a Centre for Excellence in SEND, our focus on ‘People’ will remain central. We will keep creating opportunities for learning, reflection and collaboration,
supporting the sector to move beyond minimum expectations towards environments where learners with SEND can truly thrive.
Join us at our next session:
Our next session – Raising the Bar on the Journey to Excellence: Leading Change so Every Learner Thrives is creating a culture where every learner thrives through purposeful strategy, collaboration, and insight. Through case studies and practical activities, participants will develop a clear, people-focused roadmap for excellence that integrates quality assurance, learner voice, and inclusive pedagogy.
Hartlepool Sixth Form College, as part of college group EPNE, receives an Outstanding rating across the board in its latest Ofsted inspection.
November 26, 2024
Students from Hartlepool Sixth Form College were invited to the Home Office to meet the Policing Minister Sarah Jones MP.
December 19, 2025
Education Partnership North East has announced the appointment of Toni Rhodes as its new Chief Executive
November 11, 2025
We are the College of the Year.
(*Top college nationally for BTECs, Pearson 2019)
100% pass rate in 20 A-Level subjects including Computer Science, Economics, History and Maths.
*Summer 2019
99.1% overall A-Level pass rate
*Summer 2019
We have recently invested in a brand new state-of-the-art digital suite and health simulation ward.