I was on Look North on Wednesday evening following the publication of Sir Michael Wilshaw's second Annual Report which for the first time contained regional reports.
It was great Seeing Harry Gration again… he was such a great supporter of the programmes we developed to encourage better outcomes, attendance and behaviour, when I was working in Leeds. In case you missed it, these were the questions Harry and Amy Garcia asked and my responses…
How will OFSTED sending in HMIs to all schools which are “not yet good”
ie 78% of barnsley’s schools – impact on heads, teachers and pupils? Will it
work? What will they do?
It won't, and it is worrying that OFSTED see
themselves becoming the middle tier and replacing local authority school
improvement teams. Inspection doesn't improve education... you don't fatten the
pig by constantly weighing it!! HMI and OFSTED used to be a force for good but the current model is a disaster for education and this bullying and command and control
approach will only develop mediocrity. We need to develop a coaching culture
where deliberate practice and hard work builds success.
OFSTED do say we have more good schools though than we’ve ever had – do
you think so?
I don't think we know but interesting that
OFSTED should claim any credit for it! OFSTED observed 137,000 brief
lessons last year out of a total of 100,000,000 teacher days. We do need to
constantly ask ourselves how we can do better and work hard to improve what we
are doing looking carefully at the data. I think the research suggests in
school variation is four times more than across school variation so it doesn't
matter very much which school you go to but it does matter which classroom you
are in!
The OFSTED Regional Director Nick Hudson talked about schools and
authorities having “poverty of expectation; poverty of aspiration” –
do you agree with that?
No and it is offensive. The schools I am
working with and the vast majority of teachers I know have high expectations
and want the very best for their students. We need a different approach
based on what works! The London Challenge, Education Leeds, and the City of York’s
Schools Learning Together were all highly supportive and encouraging approaches
in which headteachers, teachers and teaching assistants came to feel more
valued, more confident and as a result more effective. The approaches were
based on research, evidence and data not dogma and recognised three different
views of a school: OFSTED's, the local authority and the school itself! All are
important and complimentary but the most important is the school's own view because after all they are the ones who will turn up tomorrow morning to do the job!!!
Harry asked what we need to continue to improve schools. The answers aren't rocket science and we simply need:
- Strong, successful and passionate learning leadership, we are currently over-managed and under-led;
- To develop personalised approaches that recognise that schools are unique and special places and need different things at different times;
- To identify outstanding practice and develop school to school and teacher to teacher sharing of successes and best practice;
- To focus on what happens in classrooms; it doesn't matter much which school you attend but it does matter which classroom you are in!
- Intelligent accountability based on trust, support and encouragement;
- Teachers need to be engaged, motivated and inspired and passionate about teaching and learning?
This is one of the biggest issues facing
communities and councils in Yorkshire and the Humber and the North East. Children's
services has been a disaster for education and school improvement because local
authorities have understandably focused on keeping children safe and taken
their eyes off the school improvement ball.
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Chris