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County Durham Charity Puts On Seaside Special For Children And Young People With Special Educational Needs


County Durham Charity Puts On Seaside Special For Children And Young

People With Special Educational Needs


Children and young people with special educational needs have been

enjoying being by the seaside thanks to the work of a North East charity

and funding from a County Durham business.


Chester-le-Street-based Integrating organised a five-day holiday to

Butlin’s Skegness Resort for 24 of its young service users, after

members of its youth forum suggested it as a venue for the charity’s

annual trip.


A £10,822 grant from property and mining firm the Banks Group enabled

Integrating to cover the cost of taking the group and 12 support workers

on the trip and to ensure the cost to families could be kept to an

absolute minimum.


The holiday was organised to give the young people the chance to engage

with a range of different leisure activities of their choice in a safe

and supported way - and it was judged such a success that plans are

already being made for next year’s trip.


A video is currently being made by Integrating’s visual arts group which

will showcase what the holidaymakers did during their trip and what they

thought about their time away.


Integrating aims to involve children and young people aged between six

and 30 years old with a range of disabilities and learning difficulties

in mainstream activities which can help them build key life skills and

friendships, improve confidence, and enable them to interact better with

others.


The charity, which will celebrate its 25th anniversary next year, works

with up to 100 children and young people a year and offers over 15,400

core activity hours per annum during both term time and school holidays.


Activities are organised between Integrating’s staff, the young people

in question and their families, and include individual and team sports,

music, rowing, going to the cinema or theatre, shopping trips, or going

as a group to a restaurant.


Kathryn Gaudie-Jones, business manager at Integrating, says: “Our aim is

to seek to remove barriers that prevent children and young people with

SEND from engaging in community-based leisure activities that most of us

take for granted, like going on holiday with your friends.


“For some of our young people, this was the first time they’ve been on

holiday without their families, or even the first time they’d ever spent

time apart from their parents, so it was quite a big undertaking for

both them and us.


“Everything was set up to allow them to make their own choices about

what they did, with support available whenever it was needed, and the

feedback we had while we were there and since we’ve come back shows just

how much everyone enjoyed their holiday with their friends.


“We also know how much families valued the worry-free time to themselves

that this trip allowed them to enjoy when that can often be quite a rare

commodity, and just how happy and excited their family members were when

they got home.


“We simply couldn’t have made this holiday happen without the funding

that Banks has provided and we’re hugely grateful for everything it has

allowed us and our young people to achieve and enjoy.”


Lucy Hinds, executive assistant at the Banks Group, adds: "The positive

impact of Integrating’s excellent work is clear in the enjoyment that

their young people get from spending time with their peers and the

charity’s team.


“Planning this sort of experience takes a huge amount of time and care,

and it’s obvious from the young people and families’ comments what a

great time everyone had by the seaside.”


For more information on Integrating’s work, visit www.integrating.org.uk

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