Minister expects priority to be children’s life chances as Ofsted plans unveiled

Minister expects priority to be children’s life chances as Ofsted plans unveiled

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Minister expects priority to be children’s life chances as Ofsted plans unveiled
Author: Caitlin Doherty
Published: Feb, 03 2025 13:36

Bridget Phillipson has said she expects the “first priority” of unions to be “children and their life chances”, after her new proposals for Ofsted inspections were criticised for being worse than the system they would replace. The Education Secretary said she will “always seek to engage in dialogue” with unions, but she “won’t let anything get in the way” of her responsibility to families and children.

Image Credit: The Standard

At a speech in central London on Monday, Ms Phillipson rejected criticism of her plans to revamp inspections with a new “report card” style scale. Asked by reporters what her message to unions would be given they have criticised the plans and unhappiness over pay proposals, the Cabinet minister said: “My first priority is children and their life chances, and that’s what I’d expect their first priority to be as well.

Image Credit: The Standard

“Of course I’ll always seek to engage in dialogue and have a constructive relationship where that’s possible, but my first responsibility as Secretary of State is to children and families and to their life chances and I won’t let anything get in the way of that.”. Pushed further on whether she was listening to teachers and their concerns, she added: “I think there’s been a lot of discussion about how I as Secretary of State am apparently in hock to the trade unions. I think we’ve seen today from the reaction to what we’re setting out that that’s very far from the truth.

“I will always seek a constructive relationship with trade unions representing our teachers and workforce, they’ve got an important role to play. “But my first priority will always be children and their life chances. That has to be my focus and that’s my first responsibility.”. Under the plans unveiled on Monday, schools in England could be graded across a variety of different areas – including attendance and inclusion – using a colour-coded five-point scale.

Schools would receive ratings – from the red-coloured “causing concern” to orange-coloured “attention needed”, through the green shades of “secure”, “strong” and “exemplary” – for each area of practice under proposals for Ofsted’s new report card system. The reforms come after criticism of the inspection system following the death of headteacher Ruth Perry. Mrs Perry took her own life after an Ofsted report downgraded her Caversham Primary School in Reading from the highest to the lowest overall effectiveness rating over safeguarding concerns.

Pepe Di’Iasio, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, said: “Ofsted and the Government appear to have learned nothing from the death of headteacher Ruth Perry and have instead devised an accountability system which will subject a beleaguered profession to yet more misery. “Rather than securing high and rising standards – something we all want to see – this is a sure-fire way of doing the exact opposite. People will vote with their feet by leaving teaching which will worsen an already severe recruitment and retention crisis. We will end up without teachers to teach children and leaders to lead schools.

“Astonishingly, Ofsted’s proposed school report cards appear to be even worse than the single-word judgments they replace.”. Ms Phillipson defended the report cards and the “rich, granular insight” they can provide as she launched the 12-week consultation on the plans. “I think parents are more than able to understand and to take on board greater information about what’s happening within their children’s school,” she said.

“Both in terms of strengths and areas of weakness and where there is further work required on improvement. “So I just fundamentally reject this idea that somehow providing more information shining a light on areas where there is a need for improvement, but also where there is excellence, is somehow not something that parents want when all the evidence is clear that they do.”. Under the old system, Ofsted awarded one of four single-phrase inspection judgments: outstanding, good, requires improvement and inadequate.

In her speech at the Centre for Social Justice in Westminster, the Education Secretary said that “good” as a judgment has become “too vague” to serve its purpose, and also described more than 600 schools as “stuck receiving consecutive poor Ofsted judgments”. The Government has said that it will “intervene swiftly” with schools with the most serious issues, and the Department for Education (DfE) is consulting on new arrangements for intervention in state schools – including its plans for regional improvement for standards and excellence (Rise) teams.

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