EOTAS in Wales – Part 1

 

This is Part 1 of a 5-part series on EOTAS in Wales.
➡️ Next: Part 2 – How EOTAS Decisions Are Made  
https://learnwithoutlimitscic.blogspot.com/2025/12/eotas-in-wales-part-2.html

What EOTAS Actually Is — and What It Is Not

(Education Other Than At School)

For many families in Wales, “EOTAS” has become a lifeline word, whispered in Facebook groups, suggested by exhausted ALNCOs, recommended by other parents, or chased desperately when school has become impossible.

But it is also a word surrounded by confusion, myths, and expectations that rarely match reality.

This guide is here to tell the truth with kindness.
Not the version families are sometimes sold, and not the version people imagine.
The real version.

Because understanding what EOTAS really is, and what it is not, is the first step in helping your child receive the right support.


What Does EOTAS Actually Mean?

EOTAS stands for Education Other Than At School.
Under the ALN Act and the Education Act 1996, a Local Authority (LA) must provide EOTAS when:

✔ A school cannot meet a child’s needs

✔ A school cannot provide suitable education, even with support

✔ Attendance has become impossible due to medical, emotional or complex needs

✔ Placement breakdown is either happening or unavoidable

✔ No school placement is currently suitable or safe

EOTAS is not a punishment.
It is not a downgrade.
It is an alternative form of education designed for children who cannot receive suitable education in a school environment at that time.


What EOTAS Is Not

Let’s be completely clear and kind but real.

EOTAS is not:

❌ child care
❌ wrap around supervision
❌ a nanny coming into the home
❌ someone to give breakfast or look after the child all day
❌ a replacement for parental care
❌ a blank cheque
❌ unlimited 1:1 support
❌ a way to keep full time employment hours going

Many parents arrive at EOTAS discussions believing it will provide a personalised full-day home programme with multiple tutors, therapeutic staff, and continuous supervision.

This is a misunderstanding — and not their fault.
It is how the term is often presented, especially online.

EOTAS does provide education.
It does not replace parenting, wraparound care, therapy, or social services.

The sooner expectations match the system’s reality, the easier the journey becomes and the more empowered parents are to advocate for what truly matters.


Why Families Consider EOTAS

Parents often turn to EOTAS after months — sometimes years — of trying to make school work. Common reasons include:

✔ Anxiety or emotionally based school avoidance

✔ Autistic burnout

✔ Long Covid or chronic illness

✔ Demand avoidance profiles

✔ Trauma

✔ Sensory overwhelm

✔ Repeated exclusions

✔ Unsafe behaviour in school

✔ School refusing to meet ALN needs

✔ Placement breakdown

No parent reaches EOTAS lightly.
By the time this option is raised, exhaustion is the norm, and families often feel unheard, blamed, or desperate.

This article is here to give you clarity and confidence.


Myth-Busting: What Parents Often Think EOTAS Provides

Here are the most common expectations parents arrive with.
These are not silly assumptions — they are understandable misunderstandings caused by how poorly the system is explained.

Myth 1: “EOTAS means the LA will send a tutor all day.”

Reality: Most EOTAS packages provide only part-time hours.

Myth 2: “EOTAS tutors will act as 1:1 support throughout the day.”

Reality: Tutors provide education, not supervision or wraparound care.

Myth 3: “I will be able to continue full-time work during EOTAS hours.”

Reality: EOTAS rarely covers a full school day.
Some parents must adjust work patterns.

Myth 4: “If school cannot cope, EOTAS is automatically approved.”

Reality: LAs approve EOTAS cautiously, often slowly, and only after alternative school-based supports have been attempted.

Myth 5: “EOTAS guarantees a bespoke therapeutic programme.”

Reality: Therapeutic input is extremely limited, unless written into an IDP, usually after a professional assessment.

Myth 6: “EOTAS is permanent.”

Reality: EOTAS is meant to be flexible and reviewed often. Some children remain in EOTAS long term; others return to school or move to specialist placements.

Understanding these truths early helps parents advocate effectively.


So What Does EOTAS Usually Look Like?

While provision varies by Local Authority, most packages include:

✔ 1:1 tuition in core subjects (part-time)

✔ small group online sessions

✔ short sessions with tutors for creative or vocational subjects

✔ therapeutic education programmes where available

✔ coaching in emotional regulation or anxiety management

✔ gradual re-engagement plans

✔ multi-agency involvement (ALNCo, social worker, CAMHS etc)

Some regions offer more innovative provision.
Some offer less.
All are bound by the legal duty to provide suitable education.


What “Suitable Education” Really Means (The Legal Requirement)

Under Section 19 of the Education Act 1996, the LA must provide education that is:

  • suitable to age

  • suitable to ability

  • suitable to aptitude

  • suitable to ALN

  • full-time, or as much as the child’s health or capacity allows

But “full time” does not mean school hours.
For children unable to tolerate traditional learning loads, part-time is legally acceptable.

This is where many misunderstandings occur.


Who Is EOTAS Suitable For?

EOTAS works best for children who:

  • cannot be educated safely or meaningfully in a school setting

  • need recovery time before any kind of school can be tolerated

  • require specialist support delivered outside a traditional classroom

  • have severe anxiety, PTSD, autistic burnout, or medical collapse

  • do not cope with sensory input or group environments

  • are awaiting placement in a specialist school

It is a protective option, not a downgrade.


Who Is EOTAS Not Suitable For?

It is rarely appropriate when:

  • the child is thriving in school

  • school issues relate primarily to friendship dynamics

  • parental expectations are for childcare or supervision

  • the child is capable of accessing school if support were improved

  • the school has not yet attempted meaningful ALN adjustments

  • the request is based on convenience rather than need

EOTAS is a specialist intervention, not a preference.


Case Studies (Composite Examples)

These are based on common patterns seen across Wales.

⭐ Case Study 1: Autistic Burnout and Complete School Refusal

Child aged 13.
Could not enter the school building for five months due to autistic burnout and panic attacks.
School attempted phased returns, but even ten minutes triggered shutdowns.
Paediatrician supported medical needs.
Outcome: EOTAS approved with 3 hours per week tuition while stabilising mental health.
Parent remained primary supervising adult.

⭐ Case Study 2: Medical Fatigue After Long Covid

Child aged 12.
Severe fatigue, brain fog, and post-exertional crashes.
School attendance at 20 percent.
Reduced timetable failed.
Paediatric evidence supported limited capacity.
Outcome: EOTAS with a mix of online and 1:1 tuition, total 4 hours weekly, gradually increasing as health allowed.

⭐ Case Study 3: Explosive Behaviour Linked to Trauma

Child aged 10.
Unsafe behaviours triggered by school environment.
Multiple exclusions.
Team Around the Family involved.
Outcome: EOTAS approved as an interim plan while LA sought a therapeutic specialist placement.

These illustrate the range of EOTAS realities in Wales.


Why LAs Are Often Hesitant to Approve EOTAS

Understanding this helps parents anticipate hurdles.

LAs hesitate because:

  • it is expensive

  • it is difficult to coordinate

  • it requires ongoing monitoring

  • tutors can be in short supply

  • it may set expectations for other families

  • they fear that EOTAS will become long-term

  • they prefer in-school solutions where possible

This does not mean EOTAS is impossible.
Just that parents need to be strategic and well-informed.


Template Letter: Requesting an EOTAS Consideration Meeting

Subject: Request for EOTAS Consideration Under Section 19 EA 1996

Dear [ALNCo / LA Officer],

I am writing to request that the Local Authority consider whether Education Other Than At School (EOTAS) is now required for my child, [child’s name], in accordance with Section 19 of the Education Act 1996 and the ALN Act 2018.

Despite the support already in place, [child’s name] is currently unable to access suitable education in a school environment due to [brief reason: medical needs / anxiety / autistic burnout / safety concerns].

I request:

  • an urgent IDP Review

  • a multi-agency meeting

  • a referral to the EOTAS panel or equivalent decision-making group

Please confirm:

  • the next available meeting date

  • who will attend

  • what evidence you require

I look forward to working with you to ensure that [child’s name] receives suitable education as required by law.

Kind regards,
[Your Name]


✦ Upcoming free session

If you’d like live support or want to ask questions directly, join our EOTAS in Wales: Online Parent Clinic this Monday (free).

👉 Register on Eventbrite
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/eotas-in-wales-online-parent-clinic-learn-without-limits-cic-tickets-1977554212885?aff=oddtdtcreator

__________________________________________________________________________________
📚 **EOTAS in Wales – Full Blog Series**

Part 1 – Introduction to EOTAS  

Part 2 – How EOTAS Decisions Are Made  

Part 3 – What EOTAS Provision Looks Like  

Part 4 – Specialist Interventions Under EOTAS  

Part 5 – Multi-Agency Working & Provider Support  

___________________________________________________________________________________
Sources 
  • ALN Act 2018

  • Education Act 1996, Section 19

  • Welsh Government: EOTAS Framework for Action

  • Welsh Government: Inclusion and Pupil Support Guidelines 2016

  • Estyn thematic reports on EOTAS


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