How to Become a SEN Teaching Assistant Without a Degree
Thinking about supporting children with special educational needs (SEN) but worried you don’t have a university degree? The good news is that many UK schools hire SEN Teaching Assistants (TAs) without requiring a degree. With the right skills, training and experience, you can build a rewarding, stable career helping pupils thrive in mainstream and specialist settings.
Do you need a degree to be a SEN Teaching Assistant?
In most UK schools, a degree is not essential for SEN TA roles. Employers focus on your suitability to support children with diverse needs, your safeguarding awareness, and your ability to work well with teachers, therapists and families. Many job adverts ask for good literacy and numeracy (often GCSEs or equivalent in English and Maths), relevant training, and evidence of working with children or vulnerable young people.
You will need an enhanced DBS check, strong references, and to follow statutory guidance such as Keeping Children Safe in Education (KCSIE). If you don’t yet have school-based experience, you can start with volunteering, short courses, and entry-level roles, then progress into permanent posts.
Essential skills and qualities schools look for
SEN is broad: you may support pupils with autism (ASC), ADHD, dyslexia, Down’s syndrome, speech and language needs, sensory processing differences, physical disabilities or social, emotional and mental health (SEMH) needs. Schools value people who are calm, proactive and committed to inclusive practice.
- Clear, patient communication (including visual supports and simple language)
- Empathy and genuine interest in pupil wellbeing and independence
- Behaviour support using positive, trauma-informed strategies
- Ability to follow Education, Health and Care Plans (EHCPs) and record progress
- Teamwork with teachers, the SENCO and therapists (OT, SALT, EP)
- Adaptability to different ages, needs and learning environments
- Safeguarding awareness and professional boundaries
- Basic IT skills to use learning platforms and track interventions
Qualifications and training routes you can take without university
You can boost your employability with recognised, accessible courses that do not require a degree. Many can be completed online and funded by employers or apprenticeships.
- Level 2 or Level 3 Supporting Teaching and Learning (often called “Teaching Assistant” qualifications)
- Apprenticeships in supporting teaching and learning, which combine paid work with training (Find an apprenticeship)
- Autism, ADHD and dyslexia awareness CPD (check nasen training)
- Positive handling/behaviour programmes such as Team-Teach
- Makaton or PECS for supporting communication (Makaton training)
- Safeguarding Level 2 or 3 (e.g., via NSPCC Learning) and Paediatric First Aid
You’ll also need an enhanced DBS check to work in schools. Learn more or start the process via the official Disclosure and Barring Service.
How to gain experience if you’re starting from scratch
Practical experience is often the difference-maker. Here’s a simple plan to build it quickly and credibly:
- Volunteer in a local primary, secondary or special school. Email the SENCO to offer weekly support with reading, in-class assistance or lunchtime clubs. Ask about their safeguarding induction and DBS requirements.
- Support youth or disability charities and holiday schemes to gain hands-on experience (for example, Scope or local SEND family support groups).
- Register with reputable supply agencies for day-to-day or long-term SEN TA assignments. Supply work builds diverse experience and references quickly.
- Tutor or mentor pupils (phonics, numeracy, social skills). Even short, structured sessions show you can deliver targeted interventions and track progress.
- Shadow therapists or experienced TAs if possible, and keep a reflective log of strategies you observe (visual timetables, sensory breaks, task analysis).
Crafting a CV and cover letter that stand out
Tailor every application to the role and school. Use concrete examples that show impact:
- Include a clear profile: “SEN TA focused on autism support, sensory regulation and communication aids (Makaton)”
- Use the STAR method (Situation, Task, Action, Result) to evidence progress and outcomes
- Reference EHCPs, individual targets, differentiation and recording procedures
- Highlight safeguarding, confidentiality and following the DSL process for concerns
- List relevant training (Level 2/3 TA, Safeguarding, Team-Teach, First Aid) and your DBS status
- Show collaboration with teachers, SENCOs and parents (home–school communication)
- Keep it concise (2 pages max) and proofread for accuracy and UK spelling
Where to find SEN Teaching Assistant jobs in the UK
Look beyond general job boards to target education-specific vacancies and trustworthy sources:
- Department for Education’s free Teaching Vacancies site (set job alerts for “SEN Teaching Assistant”)
- TES Jobs for mainstream and special school roles nationwide
- Local authority portals (find yours via Find your local council)
- General boards such as Indeed and LinkedIn for agency and direct school adverts
- Specialist charities and trusts (e.g., trusts for autism or SEMH schools) often list opportunities directly
- Supply agencies that specialise in SEND can provide rapid routes into classroom experience
Interview and trial day tips
Expect scenario questions and a classroom trial. Prepare to demonstrate practical, pupil-centred support:
- Explain how you’d use visual schedules, chunked instructions and modelling to scaffold learning
- Describe positive behaviour strategies (clear routines, choices, praise, de-escalation, reasonable adjustments)
- Prepare a safeguarding answer: if a pupil discloses a concern, you listen, don’t promise confidentiality, record facts and report to the DSL immediately
- Show how you align with the teacher’s plan, support independence and maintain dignity and respect
- Reflect on inclusive practice: adapting tasks, allowing processing time, and collaborating with therapists
- Dress practically, arrive early, and ask thoughtful questions about the school’s SEND provision and values
Pay, hours and career progression
Pay varies by region and school type. Many SEN TAs are paid on local government scales; typical full-time equivalent salaries can range around £20,000–£25,000, with pro‑rata take-home reflecting term‑time working (usually around 39 weeks). London weighting and specialist responsibilities can increase pay. Clarify whether the post is term-time only and how holidays are calculated.
Progression pathways include Higher Level Teaching Assistant (HLTA), specialist TA roles (e.g., communication or SEMH), interventions lead, learning mentor, pastoral support, or moving into therapy assistant roles. If you later aim to become a qualified teacher, you will need a degree for QTS routes; some TAs study part-time while working to achieve this.
Next steps: start today, grow steadily
You can become a SEN Teaching Assistant without a degree by combining targeted training with hands-on experience and a strong, pupil-centred approach. Take your first step now: set up alerts on the Department for Education’s Teaching Vacancies, complete a short safeguarding course via NSPCC Learning, and contact local schools to volunteer with their SEND teams. Small actions add up quickly—your new career could be just a term away.
