H’s AEE Journey

H’s journey started at AEE in June 2023 when he was referred to our Short Term Interventions programme, which was part of our partnership contract with Enterprise Learning Alliance. H then self-referred into our Visual Arts programme before joining the music programme in September 2023. H has faced barriers to mainstream and alternative education from a young age due to a range of differences that have led to his exclusion and marginalisation from statutory services, including diagnosis' of autism, Oppositional Defiance Disorder, partial sighting and mental health difficulties. Despite these factors H didn’t receive his Education Health Care plan (EHCP) until he was 17. The impact of this meant he didn’t receive the specialist care or support he needed throughout his time at school where he felt like an “outcast” and that he “was the problem”.

In September 2023 he was expelled from college, as the placement wasn’t able to support H and his complex support needs. As a result he became classified as Not in Education Employment or Training (NEET). During this period, with our support H continued to access his weekly 1:1 music sessions, attend art therapy and volunteer on a weekly basis at the Windmill Community Gardens. He also took part in creative music projects with the National Youth Jazz Orchestra (NYJO) and the Irene Taylor Trust and performed at Deal Art and Music Festival. AEE helped H to secure an interview at Liberty College, writing a statement for his EHCP. Based on the evidence of how well he had done at AEE over the year, Liberty agreed to meet with him. This resulted in them offering him a place to start in Sept 2024. He is now in college and really enjoying it!

H also became the start of our short documentary, Feels Like Hope, expressing his experience in school and AEE so articulately.
He concluded by saying:

But I’ve come to realise now there’s nothing wrong with me, it’s just the systems that are around us and the systems that are put in place are failing

Watch Feels Like Hope:

Previous
Previous

A Parent’s Perspective