Hero Inclusion

The most important observations in school are never recorded.

Teaching assistant
Post-it on desk: "Amir finally joined group today — first time in 3 weeks"
Teacher
Notebook, p.14: "Zara struggling with transitions since timetable change. Worth flagging."
Parent message
WhatsApp, 8:43am: "He had a really hard night. Just wanted you to know."
The problem starts with the people closest to learners

Every day, TAs and teachers generate something extraordinarily valuable.

Observations, emotional check-ins, session notes, moments of breakthrough or struggle. That information takes many forms — handwritten notes on post-its, jottings in lesson plan margins, a quick message to the SENCO, a corridor conversation.

In a busy school day, there is rarely a moment to convert those insights into records. Through no lack of care or commitment, that information stays hidden — observed but not captured, captured but not connected.

It never builds into a coherent picture of a learner, feeds the plan, or reaches the SENCO or the parent.
For TAs

Their work is invisible.

They hold some of the most intimate, consistent knowledge of any learner in the school — the one who withdrew on Tuesday, the one who finally connected with a peer on Thursday.

"They do careful, important work that nobody ever sees."

None of it is captured in a way that builds a coherent narrative. It stays in memory — until it's lost.

For teachers

The knowledge is there. It's just stuck.

Teachers carry detailed knowledge of how their SEND pupils are doing — academically, socially, emotionally — but have no efficient way to record it, share it with the SENCO, or connect it to the formal plan.

That knowledge stays in their head, or in a notebook, or buried in an inbox, until it's needed. And when it's needed, it's rarely at hand.
The consequences ripple outward

SENCOs are spending most of their time chasing, not supporting.

50+
students on a typical SENCO caseload
Manual
evidence assembly from multiple scattered sources
Spread­sheet
where provision mapping currently lives

With caseloads of 30, 40, or 50+ students, maintaining the APDR cycle meaningfully is close to impossible. Plans are produced from templates rather than from a living, continuously updated picture of the learner.

Inclusion is a whole-school responsibility. The review cycle was never designed to be the SENCO's job alone — every adult who works with a learner holds a piece of the picture. When that information flows, the review becomes what it was always meant to be.
What we've been building

Hero Inclusion is built around how inclusion actually works in schools.

Two distinct parts. One continuous workflow. Designed to make high-quality SEND practice a natural byproduct of the work people are already doing — not an extra layer on top.

Part one
The Capture App
A simple mobile tool for TAs and teachers — designed to be used in the moment, not at the end of the day. Take a photo of a handwritten note, speak a memo, or type a quick note. AI structures it instantly. No retyping. No extra steps.
Part two
The Inclusion Hub
A web-based case management tool for SENCOs, built around the APDR cycle. Registers, student cases, outcomes, provision, and review evidence — all in one place. Information flows in from the Capture App automatically. No chasing, no collating, no waiting.

Hero Inclusion works alongside your existing MIS — Arbor, BromCom, and others. It fills the gap they were never designed to fill.

How it works

Capture · Summarise · Review · Analyse

01

Capture

Staff capture what they observe using the Hero Inclusion mobile app — a quick photo of a handwritten note, a piece of student work, a voice memo, or a typed note. Digital evidence is just as easy: a forwarded email, a screenshot. The aim is zero friction. Staff don't need to change how they work — they just need a way to make what they already know visible.

In the classroom
📷 Photo of observation sheet — "Layla — maintained focus for 20 mins on phonics task. Asked for help unprompted."
✦ AI processing
Student: Layla Ahmed · Date: Today
Outcome: Self-regulation & learning engagement
Note: Sustained focus for 20 minutes during phonics. Independently sought adult support — notable progress against outcome 2.
02

Summarise

From the stream of daily captures, Hero Inclusion automatically generates weekly summaries for each learner — drawing together observations from TAs and teachers, measuring progress against the learner's identified outcomes, and surfacing patterns over time. The SENCO sees a living picture of every learner on their caseload, updated continuously, without having to chase anyone for it.

Weekly summary — auto-generated
LA
Layla Ahmed
Year 3 · 7 captures this week
Progressing ↑
Consistent engagement in structured tasks this week. Self-regulation outcomes showing positive trend. Peer interaction remains an area for continued focus.
03

Review

When review time comes, the work is already done. Hero Inclusion generates reviews from the weekly summaries — linked to the learner's plan and formatted to the required template, whether that's a termly plan, Individual Support Plan, or EHCP. Reviews become a genuine reflection of what has happened, built from the collective knowledge of everyone who has worked with that learner.

Termly review — ready to share
ISP · Spring Term · Auto-generated from 38 captures
Progress this term
Layla has shown consistent progress against self-regulation outcomes, with 12 independently initiated adult interactions recorded — compared to 3 last term.
Next steps
Continue structured peer interaction opportunities. Review sensory support needs in transition periods.
04

Analyse

The Inclusion Hub gives SENCOs and school leaders a view across the whole SEND cohort — not just individual learners. See which interventions are working, where provision needs to be adjusted, and how outcomes are tracking across the school. Reports for governors, trusts, and Ofsted can be auto-generated from the same rich data set.

Inclusion Hub — school overview
34
Active SEND cases
91%
Reviews up to date
Intervention outcomes this term
Reading support
78%
SEMH programme
63%
Speech & language
85%
The benefits

What changes for every person in the school.

For teaching assistants
Their observations are captured, structured, and seen. The work they do every day — the most intimate, consistent knowledge of any learner — finally builds into something shared and visible.
For teachers
The knowledge they already carry gets recorded without adding to their load. Sharing insight with the SENCO happens automatically, not through a chase.
For SENCOs
No more assembling evidence from memory and spreadsheets. Reviews are ready when you need them. Time shifts from administration to the learners and staff who need you.
For school leaders
A clear, evidence-based picture of SEND across the school. Reporting to governors and trusts becomes straightforward. Ofsted readiness is a byproduct of good practice, not a separate exercise.
For learners: a plan that reflects who they actually are, updated continuously by the people who know them best — and adults who spend less time on paperwork and more time with them.
Inclusion

The goal isn't better paperwork. It's knowing each learner well enough to make every moment with them count.

Purpose-built for SEND and inclusion management in English primary schools. Working alongside Arbor, BromCom, and every MIS you already use.