The policy will move to keep vulnerable pupils in school as the focus shifts to the root causes of exclusions
Isolation booths, frequent suspensions and strict behaviour regimes look set to be phased out in England as the Labour government shifts focus on how to keep the most vulnerable pupils in school.
Education leaders close to the new government say ministers are planning to change the inspection regime so that all schools are judged on whether they are properly representative of their local community, and aiming to stop schools telling parents their child with special educational needs would be better off at another school, or being repeatedly suspended because they aren't meeting strict behaviour rules.
Anne Longfield, the former children's commissioner whose Centre for Young Lives has been working with the Labour education team, said: "Looking at the data and talking to young people it is clear that a large group of kids have been made to feel school isn't for them and that has to change.