Bees From Everywhere

A 12-week SEMH Curriculum.

LCE Academy

SEMH Curriculum

A worker bee is the city's oldest symbol of graft, soot and sparkle. We use it to teach SEMH learners that Manchester's industrial past and its migrant, multilingual present are one continuous story - and that they themselves are part of the hive.

Click the button to view the curriculum.

Frequently
Asked Questions

Our provision is designed for children and young people who:

  • Have identified SEMH needs

  • Require a more personalised and therapeutic learning environment

  • May struggle to thrive in mainstream settings

  • Need consistent relational support to feel safe, regulated and ready to learn

LCE Academy is built around:

  • A multi-disciplinary team with extensive expertise

  • Highly structured routines that reduce anxiety and promote confidence

  • Therapeutic, calm and sensory-aware environments

  • Small class sizes and personalised learning

  • A relational approach centred on trust, safety and wellbeing

Every aspect—from staffing to spaces—has been designed with SEMH needs at the forefront.

Pupils follow a broad, ambitious and carefully adapted curriculum, including:

  • Core academic subjects

  • Personal development and life skills

  • Therapeutic and wellbeing programmes

  • Creative and vocational learning opportunities

Our curriculum aims to close academic gaps while helping pupils build confidence, independence and emotional resilience.

SEMH support is woven into every part of their school day. This includes:

  • Key-worker relationships

  • Therapeutic interventions

  • Daily check-ins and regulation routines

  • Trauma-informed practice

  • Restorative approaches

  • Bespoke support plans tailored to each pupil’s needs

Our goal is to help pupils feel safe, understood and empowered.

LCE Academy has been designed specifically for SEMH learners, with:

  • Calm, low-stimulation classrooms

  • Breakout therapy rooms

  • Sensory-aware spaces

  • Outdoor learning areas

  • Safe zones for regulation

  • Structured routines and movement breaks

The environment is a key part of helping pupils regulate, feel secure and engage successfully in learning.