Tag: Schools Network national conference UK

  • Inside the Schools Network National Conference UK – Where Special School Leaders Are Quietly Rewriting the Rulebook

    Inside the Schools Network National Conference UK – Where Special School Leaders Are Quietly Rewriting the Rulebook

    The way the National Network of Special Schools continues to schedule Liverpool seems a little obstinate. The same Delta Marriott on Queen Square, year after year. It was the same early-morning group of business managers balancing coffees that were obviously the second of the day while wheeling overnight cases through the lobby.

    Perhaps this consistency is the key. The conference circuit treatment that mainstream secondary heads receive is typically not extended to special school finance officers. They therefore appear when something is made especially for them. And they continue to appear.

    DetailInformation
    Event NameNational Network of Special Schools (NNoSS) Annual Conference 2026
    Dates29th & 30th April 2026
    VenueDelta Hotels Marriott, One Queen Square, Liverpool, L1 1RH
    Conference Day Timings08:00 – 16:00, Thursday 30th April
    Member Price (Day Only)£90 + VAT
    Non-Member School Price£190 + VAT
    1½ Day Package (with B&B)£344 + VAT
    AudienceSchool Business Professionals in special, hospital, and alternative provision settings
    FormatKeynote speeches, practical sessions, exhibition, networking
    Related NetworkSSAT — The Schools, Students and Teachers network
    Sister InitiativeNational Secondary Leaders Network (NSLN), £395 annual school subscription

    The 2026 edition takes place on April 29 and 30, with Thursday serving as the main conference day. The organizers are correct to claim that it’s the only event of its kind in the nation because most people outside the industry are still unaware of how isolating this work can be. SEND funding formulas, hospital placements, transport contracts, and a host of other tasks that don’t fit into any typical finance qualification are frequently handled by a business manager in a special school. Most of the time, they are improvising. No one else would provide a space for them to compare notes, which is why the conference was created.

    The perception that these networks are important to people other than their immediate members has gradually changed. Examine the bigger picture. With almost 3,000 member schools, SSAT was founded in 1987 as the City Technology Colleges Trust under Sir Cyril Taylor. Through the framework of the Church of England, the National Secondary Leaders Network provides support to more than 70 schools. The Trust Network hosts its own conference on estates. Each of these resulted from someone determining that a specific group of leaders weren’t being adequately served by the system.

    There’s a fascinating tale buried in the history of the SSAT. The initial goal for City Technology Colleges was 200 in 1992. Only fifteen were ever constructed. Cyril Taylor advocated for something different instead of calling the project a failure: technology colleges, specialized schools, and the entire architecture that came after. It serves as a helpful reminder that rather than making big announcements, British education reform typically comes in the form of workarounds and subtle rebrandings. Even though they wouldn’t characterize themselves as such, the networks gathering in Liverpool in April fit into that same pattern.

    Schools Network national conference UK
    Schools Network national conference UK

    You can also learn something from the NNoSS pricing structure. A member school delegate will pay £90 plus VAT. £300 for commercial attendees who are not students. The gap is intentional. It indicates who is welcome but expected to provide subsidies, as well as who the day is for. Given the current state of school budgets, even £90 is a decision that some heads must approve. To be honest, what so many people do is a form of voting.

    As this industry develops, it’s difficult to ignore the fact that the most insightful discussions seldom take place at the keynote address. They take place in the hallway outside, in between classes, when a business manager from a hospital school in Newcastle discovers someone from a Devon alternative provision who resolved the transport invoicing nightmare from the previous year.

    The brochures are unable to adequately convey that. As always, those little unplanned moments will determine whether the conference lives up to expectations this year. The justification is the program. The point is the people.