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Student Support Plan Collaboration and Reviews: Inspectorate Checklist

Use the 2026 Inspectorate reflective questions to improve student support plan collaboration, access, and review records in Irish schools.

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#Student Support Plan#Student Support File#Parent Consultation#Student Voice#Review Records#SET#Continuum of Support#Inspectorate
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A student support plan is only useful if the right people shape it, the right teachers can access it, and progress is reviewed clearly.

That is one of the strongest messages in the 2026 Department of Education and Youth Inspectorate report, Strengthening Student Support Files: Inspection Findings and Reflective Questions.

The report does not treat the Student Support Plan as a private SET document. It frames it as a working plan that should be developed collaboratively, used by teachers, and reviewed against progress.

This guide turns the Inspectorate's reflective questions into a practical checklist for collaboration, access, and review records.

Student support plan collaboration and review cycle showing SET, class teacher, parents, student voice, professionals, access, teaching use, and progress review

Why Collaboration Matters

The 2026 report found that priority learning needs were usually recorded where files existed, but target quality was much weaker. Collaboration is one way schools can close that gap.

Targets become stronger when they are informed by different views:

PersonWhat they know
SETTargeted intervention response, diagnostic teaching, support strategies
Class or subject teacherDaily classroom demands, curriculum access, participation, peer context
Parent or guardianStrengths, needs, routines, concerns, and progress outside school
StudentWhat feels hard, what helps, what they want to improve
External professionalAssessment findings and recommended strategies

If one person writes the plan in isolation, the plan can miss the student's real context.

Collaboration Checklist for Student Support Plans

Use these questions before finalising a plan.

SET and Class Teacher Collaboration

Ask:

  • Did the SET and class or subject teacher agree the priority learning needs?
  • Does the plan reflect what is happening in mainstream lessons?
  • Are strategies realistic for both support and classroom settings?
  • Is one teacher clearly responsible for coordinating the plan where more than one SET is involved?

Weak evidence:

  • informal conversation not recorded anywhere
  • SET-only plan with no reference to classroom context
  • targets that can only be practised outside the classroom

Stronger evidence:

  • brief consultation note
  • agreed priority needs
  • classroom strategy included beside each target
  • review note includes SET and class teacher observations

Parent or Guardian Involvement

Ask:

  • Were parents or guardians meaningfully involved in developing the plan?
  • Did they contribute observations about strengths, needs, interests, or progress?
  • Were targets explained in plain language?
  • Did the review include parent or guardian input?

Meaningful involvement does not mean a signature added at the end. It means parent knowledge helped shape the plan.

Student Voice

Ask:

  • Was the child or young person involved in identifying strengths, challenges, or targets?
  • Was the method age-appropriate and accessible?
  • Does the plan record what the student says helps them?
  • Can the student understand at least part of what they are working on?

Student voice can be captured through:

  • conversation
  • visual choice boards
  • scaling questions
  • drawings
  • "what helps me learn" prompts
  • observation of preferences and responses
  • assisted communication methods

The student does not need to write the target. But the target should not ignore the student's perspective.

External Professionals

Ask:

  • Are relevant professional recommendations reflected in the plan?
  • Are recommendations translated into school actions?
  • Does the plan distinguish between professional advice and teacher observation?

A professional report is not useful if it sits in the file but never shapes teaching.

Example:

Report recommendationPlan action
Use visual supports for transitionsStudent will use a now/next board before 4 identified transitions each day
Provide movement breaksTeacher will offer a 3-minute movement break after 20 minutes of seated written work
Pre-teach vocabularySET will pre-teach 6 topic words before the class science lesson each Monday

Access: Can the Right Teachers Use the Plan?

The Inspectorate's reflective questions ask whether all teachers who teach the child or young person can access the student support plan, and whether mainstream and support teachers use it to inform teaching and assessment.

That is a practical test.

If a plan is technically stored somewhere but teachers cannot find it, it is not accessible in practice.

If a plan is accessible but too generic to guide teaching, it is not useful.

Use this access check:

QuestionGood evidence
Who needs access?SET, class teacher, relevant subject teachers, school leader where appropriate
Where is the current plan stored?Agreed secure location, not multiple conflicting versions
How do teachers know it changed?Review note, update message, planning meeting, or shared workflow
What should teachers do with it?Use targets and strategies in planning, teaching, assessment, and review

Review records are where a plan becomes a cycle rather than a one-off document.

The 2026 report asks whether progress made by the child or young person in meeting previous learning targets is recorded clearly in the student support plan.

Clear review records help teachers answer:

  • Did the student make progress?
  • Which strategies helped?
  • Which barriers remain?
  • Should the target continue, change, or be replaced?
  • Does the support level still match the student's needs?

What a Strong Review Note Includes

A strong review note is short, specific, and evidence-based.

Review elementExample
Target reviewedDecode 8 out of 10 taught CVC and CVCC words in a levelled passage
EvidenceSET reading records from 8 sessions and class teacher observation during guided reading
ProgressStudent reached 8 out of 10 or higher in 6 of 8 SET sessions
What helpedSound boxes, repeated reading, and pre-teaching target words
DecisionTarget met. Next plan will apply decoding strategy to unfamiliar words in short text

Weak review notes include:

  • "ongoing"
  • "continue"
  • "some improvement"
  • "needs more support"

Those phrases might be true, but they do not give the next teacher enough information.

Individualised and Meaningful Targets

Use the 5-part target test before writing your next plan.

A Termly Student Support Plan Review Workflow

This workflow keeps review work manageable.

Week 1: Gather Evidence

Collect:

  • work samples
  • teacher observations
  • intervention notes
  • assessment data
  • student feedback
  • parent or guardian comments

Do not wait until the review meeting to gather evidence. The review should interpret evidence, not hunt for it.

Week 2: Review Targets

For each target, record whether it was:

  • met
  • partly met
  • not met
  • no longer appropriate

Then write one sentence explaining the evidence.

Week 3: Agree Next Priority Needs

Use the evidence to decide the next 1-3 priority learning needs.

Avoid carrying forward the same broad needs automatically. If the student's profile has changed, the priorities should change too.

Week 4: Set New Targets and Strategies

Write targets that are:

  • individualised
  • meaningful
  • measurable
  • linked to the priority need
  • realistic within the next review cycle

Agree who will do what. A target without an adult action is not a plan.

Template: Collaboration and Review Questions

Copy these into your internal SEN review checklist.

AreaQuestion
SET/class teacher collaborationHave support and mainstream teaching perspectives shaped the plan?
Parent or guardian voiceWhat did parents or guardians identify as strengths, needs, or priorities?
Student voiceWhat does the student say helps them learn or participate?
Professional inputWhich recommendations have been translated into classroom actions?
AccessCan every relevant teacher find and use the current plan?
Teaching useAre targets and strategies visible in planning and assessment?
ReviewDoes the plan clearly record progress against previous targets?
Next stepsAre new targets based on the review evidence?

How SENScribe Helps With Collaboration

SENScribe helps teachers structure the information that often arrives in fragments:

  • teacher observations
  • parent notes
  • student voice
  • professional recommendations
  • previous targets and reviews
  • support strategies

It turns that information into a draft Student Support Plan that teachers can review, edit, and share through the school's agreed process.

The value is not just faster writing. It is more consistent planning language, clearer targets, and a better record of why decisions were made.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who should be involved in a Student Support Plan?

The SET, class or subject teacher, parents or guardians, and the student should be involved where appropriate. External professionals may also contribute when their reports or recommendations are relevant to the student's support.

Does parent involvement mean parents have to write targets?

No. Parents do not need to write the targets. Their role is to contribute knowledge about the child's strengths, needs, interests, progress, and priorities. Teachers use that information to develop appropriate targets and strategies.

How can student voice be captured for younger children?

Student voice can be captured through simple conversations, pictures, visual choice boards, scaling questions, drawings, or observation. The method should match the child's age, communication profile, and needs.

How often should Student Support Plans be reviewed?

Review frequency depends on the target and the student's needs. Some short-term targets may need monthly review. Others may be reviewed termly. The important point is that progress is monitored and recorded clearly.

What makes a review record useful?

A useful review record names the target, evidence checked, progress made, strategies that helped, barriers that remain, and the decision for the next plan. It should give the next teacher enough information to continue support.

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