SEN Interview Red Flags: What to Avoid and Watch For
Applying for Special Educational Needs (SEN/SEND) roles in the UK can be exciting, but the interview is also where you assess whether a school or setting is right for you. Whether you’re aiming to be a Teaching Assistant, Learning Support Assistant, or an SEN Teacher, knowing the red flags to watch for can protect your wellbeing, your career progression, and—most importantly—the pupils you’ll support.
Why red flags matter in SEN roles
SEN work is rewarding, complex and highly regulated. Good schools and provisions put safeguarding, inclusion and staff development at the centre of everything. Red flags—like vague answers about behaviour support or a dismissive attitude to reasonable adjustments—suggest gaps that can lead to high stress, unsafe practice, or poor outcomes for learners with additional needs.
In the UK context, you should expect clear references to statutory guidance such as Keeping Children Safe in Education (KCSIE), the SEND Code of Practice, and robust safer recruitment processes (including DBS checks). If these aren’t mentioned, treat it as a prompt to ask more—or walk away.
Employer-side red flags during the interview
As you meet the panel—often including the Head, SENDCo, or a member of SLT—look for transparency, consistency and a pupil-centred ethos. These warning signs should give you pause:
- No clear safeguarding or safer recruitment message: If they don’t reference safeguarding, DBS checks or KCSIE, that’s a serious concern in any UK education setting.
- Vague or non-existent behaviour policy: If they can’t explain how de-escalation is taught (e.g., Team Teach) and recorded, you may face unsafe situations.
- EHC Plans treated as paperwork only: Dismissing EHCP targets or not knowing how plans drive daily provision suggests weak SEND practice.
- Unrealistic pupil ratios or scope: Promising “1:1 support” but expecting you to cover multiple pupils or classes simultaneously is a workload red flag.
- Minimal training or induction: “You’ll just pick it up” isn’t enough for needs like ASD, SEMH, SLCN or complex medical conditions.
- Disrespectful language about pupils or families: Terms that stereotype or blame signal a poor culture of inclusion.
- High turnover brushed off: If lots of staff leave and the reason is unclear, there may be deeper leadership or workload issues.
- Ambiguous contracts and pay: Vague hours, incorrect holiday pay for term-time roles, or unclear responsibilities can lead to disputes.
- No supervision or reflective practice: SEN work requires regular supervision or check-ins, especially in SEMH, PRU or alternative provision settings.
- Lack of reasonable adjustments for staff: If they resist supporting your needs, they may also neglect pupil adjustments.
- Weak multi-agency links: Little collaboration with therapists, EPs, or social care can undermine holistic support for pupils.
- Non-committal about CPD: No pathway for training (e.g., PECS, Makaton, autism-specific approaches) limits your growth and pupil outcomes.
Individually, a red flag may just be a prompt for more questions. Together, they can indicate systemic issues—poor leadership, insufficient resources, or non-compliance with statutory guidance.
Candidate-side red flags you might accidentally give off
Interviews are two-way, but you also need to avoid signalling risk to employers. Common missteps include:
- Downplaying safeguarding: Not referencing KCSIE, reporting lines, or boundaries can worry panels.
- Focusing only on “managing behaviour”: SEN is about communication, regulation and learning—not just control.
- No evidence of reflective practice: Avoid saying “that’s just how I do it” without linking to training or outcomes.
- Neglecting data and impact: Be ready with examples tied to EHCP outcomes, attendance, engagement or progress.
- Unclear about personal boundaries: Be precise about what you will and won’t do and how you escalate concerns.
- Not asking questions: This suggests low interest or that you haven’t researched the school’s context or Ofsted report.
Smart questions to ask to uncover issues
Use your questions to verify culture, compliance and support. Try:
- How do you implement your behaviour policy day to day, and what training do staff receive in de-escalation?
- How are EHCP targets translated into daily provision and reviewed with the SENDCo?
- What induction and ongoing CPD do SEN TAs and teachers receive in their first term?
- How do you record and review incidents, and how are parents/carers involved?
- What does staff supervision look like? How often are reflective meetings held?
- How many pupils would I support at once, and what are typical class sizes or ratios?
- How do you work with external agencies (EP, SaLT, CAMHS) and share strategies with staff?
- What does success in this role look like after three months and at the end of the year?
Their answers should be concrete, consistent and aligned with UK guidance. If responses are evasive or overpromising, probe further.
How to respond if you spot a red flag
Not all red flags are deal-breakers. If something feels off, ask for examples and written policies. Summarise what you heard and invite correction to avoid misunderstandings. If the concern is serious—such as weak safeguarding—trust your instincts and withdraw. You can also speak with current staff (if appropriate), review the Ofsted report, and check the school’s website for policies (safeguarding, behaviour, SEND information report). For contract clarity, you can consult ACAS guidance before accepting an offer.
Green flags: what good looks like
Counterbalance red flags with positives that signal a healthy culture:
- Clear safeguarding narrative: Induction references KCSIE, DSL contacts, and reporting flowcharts.
- Instructional support for inclusion: Regular training in communication, sensory needs and regulation (e.g., Makaton, TEACCH, Social Stories).
- Joined-up EHCP practice: Targets drive daily plans, with termly reviews and pupil voice captured.
- Transparent workload and ratios: Honest about complexity, with duty rotas and time for preparation.
- Supportive supervision and wellbeing: Scheduled check-ins, debriefs after incidents, and access to EAP or mentoring.
- Evidence of impact: Data and case studies showing progress in engagement, attendance and learning outcomes.
UK specifics worth checking
Because education in the UK is tightly regulated, it’s reasonable to ask about these:
- DBS and references: Expect full pre-employment checks and safer recruitment questions.
- Pay and holiday for term-time roles: Clarity on salary, weeks paid, and how it’s annualised.
- Reasonable adjustments: For staff and pupils, in line with the Equality Act.
- Positive handling policy: If physical intervention may be required, training and recording must be robust.
- Curriculum and key stages: How SEN provision adapts across EYFS, KS1–KS4 or post-16.
- Use of funding: How pupil premium and top-up funding support targeted interventions.
Ultimately, a strong setting balances ambition for pupils with realistic support for staff. By preparing good questions and staying alert to red flags, you’ll find the right environment to grow your practice and make a difference.
Ready to take the next step? Browse current SEN roles, prepare your questions, and make your shortlist. For more on safe, compliant hiring and best practice, see KCSIE, the SEND Code of Practice, and ACAS. If you’d like tailored advice or to be matched with UK schools that prioritise inclusion and staff development, register your interest today.
