Birmingham Mail.Ms Carrie lodged a complaint with the nursery, which is rated Outstanding by Ofsted. An internal investigation took place which concluded the nursery acted in line with its protocol.
Ms Carrie has since moved her son to a new nursery where she says he is "very happy".But the 30-year-old feels her son was discriminated against and now she is planning to appeal the decision with the school's board of governors.
A new investigation by the nursery is now underway.Ms Carrie said: "He is not diagnosed autistic but he is on the pathway, he is in the middle of the diagnosis."He is non-verbal at the moment, he can't speak and uses sign language.
They excluded him and another non-verbal boy from the play because they said he couldn't talk and would spoil it for the 'normal kids'."Ms Carrie said she only found out about the decision two days before the event was due to take place, on December 18, when she was called to the nursery's office. "I had no idea they were going to exclude him," she said."They said 'Ace won't stick to the play, he will spoil it for the other children'.
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