Participants also highlighted potential concerns:
Recommendations for effective implementation:
Nikki Smith said: “Supporting the research group gave me a valuable opportunity to see how research connects with real experiences in schools and communities. What stood out most was how important it is to listen directly to the children, families and professionals affected by these decisions – not just to hear their views, but to place lived experience at the heart of how support is designed.”
Professor Karen Guldberg said: “I’m incredibly grateful to Nikki for the depth, care, and rigour she brought to this work. Her consultations with schools, families, and local services provided vital insights into how strengths and needs assessments are being used on the ground to support neurodivergent children earlier and more effectively. These findings were an important part of the evidence considered by the Neurodivergence Task and Finish Group, as we worked to refocus the educational system on supporting neurodivergent young people to thrive and succeed.”
Nikki began her PhD at the University of Brighton in 2024 with a supervisory team led by Professor Michael Jopling. Funded by the South Coast Doctoral Training Partnership (SCDTP), her research explores the different experiences of autistic young people of any gender in mainstream secondary school, with a strong focus on participatory research – meaning research shaped by the people whose lives it affects. Before entering academia, she spent 15 years working in secondary education as a science teacher, PSHE leader, and autism specialist.
Nikki’s placement was funded through the University of Brighton’s QR fund and the SCDTP, and her work received the 2024–25 SCDTP Impact Prize, recognising its potential to influence policy and practice.
Her work contributes to a wider national evidence base informing current discussions about how best to provide timely and effective support for children with SEND. While strengths-and-needs approaches show promise, the collective research highlights the importance of careful implementation, adequate funding, and collaboration between education, health services, families, and neurodivergent communities.
For Nikki, the central message is simple: policy works best when shaped by the people it affects.