From Volunteer to SEN TA: How to Use School Experience to Get Hired

08.11.25 09:22 AM - Comment(s) - By Admin

From Volunteer to SEN TA: How to Use School Experience to Get Hired


From Volunteer to SEN TA: How to Use School Experience to Get Hired

Thinking about becoming a Special Educational Needs (SEN) Teaching Assistant in the UK? If you’re already volunteering in a school or planning to start, you’re in the perfect place to build the skills and evidence schools look for. This guide shows you how to turn everyday classroom tasks into job-winning proof, so you can confidently move from volunteer to employed SEN TA.

Understand what schools actually look for in SEN support staff

Schools hire SEN TAs for their impact with pupils, not just their enthusiasm. While a formal qualification can help, headteachers and SENCOs prioritise candidates who show:

  • Consistent safeguarding awareness and professional conduct 
  • Practical strategies for supporting pupils with diverse needs (e.g., autism, ADHD, speech and language needs, SEMH) 
  • Clear, concise communication with teachers, therapists and parents 
  • Resilience, patience and the ability to remain calm under pressure 
  • Evidence of progress: how you help pupils access learning and regulate emotions 

Make sure you’re familiar with UK expectations around SEND. Reading the SEND Code of Practice will help you understand EHCPs, reasonable adjustments and the graduated approach (Assess–Plan–Do–Review). Even basic knowledge sets you apart in interviews.

Turn your volunteer experience into evidence schools value

The difference between a strong and weak application is how well you translate your volunteering into outcomes. Don’t just say “I supported a child with autism”. Show how you supported, what changed and how you worked within the classroom team.

Track your experience with brief, factual notes. Focus on the situation, what you did and the result. Try the STAR method (Situation, Task, Action, Result) when writing bullet points for your CV.

  • Behaviour support: “Used a first–then visual and a 3-step prompt to help a Year 3 pupil re-engage with writing; reduced time out of class from 15 to 5 minutes over two weeks.” 
  • Communication: “Supported speech targets by modelling Makaton for core words during circle time; pupil initiated signs independently by week three.” 
  • Differentiation: “Adapted maths tasks using concrete manipulatives and Now/Next boards; pupil completed all steps with minimal adult prompting.” 
  • Collaboration: “Shared daily observations with the class teacher and SENCO; contributed to the ‘Do’ section of the APDR cycle.” 
  • Record keeping: “Logged triggers and successful de-escalation strategies; notes informed the next half-term’s support plan.” 

When you apply, weave in two or three concise examples like these. They demonstrate real classroom impact and make your experience easy to assess.

Build the right skills while you volunteer

Use your time in school to develop specific, in-demand SEN skills. Agree goals with the class teacher or SENCO so your volunteering is structured and purposeful.

  • Communication and interaction: learn to use visuals, timetables, Now/Next boards, and simple AAC methods. Explore Makaton and picture exchange systems. 
  • Autism support: practise predictable routines, sensory breaks and clear language. The Autism Education Trust offers widely recognised CPD. 
  • SEMH strategies: practise co-regulation, emotion coaching and restorative conversation scripts. 
  • Attention and focus: use task chunking, movement breaks and timers; learn to reduce cognitive load. 
  • Literacy and numeracy interventions: deliver phonics or precision teaching with fidelity; record baseline and review data. 
  • Observation and data: take simple, objective notes (ABC charts, frequency counts) to inform the APDR cycle. 

Ask to shadow therapists or attend briefings when possible. Even 10 minutes spent learning how a SALT programme is delivered can boost your confidence and credibility.

Get the right checks, training and references in place

Most schools will ask for an Enhanced DBS (often with Children’s Barred List check). If you’re volunteering, the school may support the process. Learn more about DBS checks via gov.uk.

Entry-level certificates that strengthen your application include:

  • Safeguarding Children (Level 1 or 2) and Keeping Children Safe in Education awareness 
  • Prevent Duty awareness training 
  • Basic First Aid or Paediatric First Aid 

Use school volunteering to secure two strong references—ideally from your class teacher and SENCO. Ask them what evidence would help them write a detailed reference and then gather it.

Craft a UK-ready CV and cover letter that highlight impact

Your CV should be clean, two pages maximum, and tailored to SEN TA roles. Keep the profile short and skills-based, followed by recent experience with achievement bullets.

  1. Profile: “Volunteer SEN classroom assistant with experience in autism support, visual communication and APDR. Trained in safeguarding and Prevent. Proven success in behaviour regulation and literacy interventions.” 
  2. Key skills: safeguarding; behaviour support; visual strategies; Makaton basics; data tracking; EHCP awareness; teamwork; parent communication. 
  3. Experience: include school name, dates and 3–5 achievement bullets using STAR-style evidence. 
  4. Training: list DBS, safeguarding, Prevent, First Aid and any SEN CPD. 
  5. Referees: “Available on request” unless the school asks otherwise. 

In your cover letter, mirror the language of the job advert and reference the school’s ethos or SEND priorities. Use one paragraph to show you understand their context, one to evidence your skills with examples, and a final paragraph to show readiness for the role and availability for trial days.

Ace the SEN TA interview and trial day

Expect a mix of questions, tasks and a classroom observation. Schools want to see how you communicate with pupils and staff, maintain boundaries, and apply strategies in real time.

  1. Prepare scenarios: de-escalating behaviour, supporting a non-verbal pupil, adapting a lesson, and what to do if a pupil makes a disclosure (follow safeguarding procedures, report to DSL, record facts only). 
  2. Bring examples: a brief note of strategies you’ve used, simple visuals you’ve made, or anonymised observation formats. 
  3. During the trial: position yourself to maximise access to learning, use low-arousal language, and feed back to the teacher succinctly at the end. 
  4. Afterwards: send a short thank-you email restating one observed need and how you’d support it—this shows reflection and professionalism. 

Know where to find SEN TA jobs in the UK

Search widely and set alerts so you don’t miss suitable roles:

  • Teaching Vacancies (DfE) – free, official listings 
  • TES and eTeach – popular school job boards 
  • Local authority websites and individual school sites 
  • Special schools and alternative provision trusts (often advertise directly) 
  • Ethical agencies with SEN specialisms (ask how they support training and trial days) 

When you apply, reference the school’s specific needs. For example, mention experience with sensory regulation for a specialist autism provision, or literacy interventions for a mainstream setting with high reading support needs.

Common pitfalls—and how to avoid them

  • Only describing duties, not impact: always add outcomes, even small ones. 
  • Generic applications: tailor to the job description and school context. 
  • Overpromising: be honest about your level of training; emphasise your willingness to learn and take guidance. 
  • Weak safeguarding answers: revise KCSIE basics and escalation routes to the DSL. 
  • Missing references: line up referees early and keep them informed. 

Your next steps this month

  1. Ask your school contact for two target skills to develop over the next four weeks (e.g., visual supports and data notes). 
  2. Complete online safeguarding and Prevent courses; add them to your CV. 
  3. Create three STAR examples from your volunteering; add to your CV and cover letter. 
  4. Set job alerts on the DfE Teaching Vacancies website and TES. 
  5. Request a brief reference framework from your SENCO so you know what evidence to collect. 

Breaking into SEN support work is absolutely achievable with focused volunteering, visible impact and solid safeguarding practice. The goal is to show you can help pupils regulate, access learning and make progress—then back it up with examples.

Ready to move from volunteer to SEN TA? Download our free CV template and set up job alerts to get roles straight to your inbox. Get the CV template or browse SEN TA roles today.


Admin

Admin

Share -