➡️ Inside one of the first ‘no headline judgement’ Ofsted inspections A very interesting insight into the experience of an 'interim' period Ofsted inspection "It definitely felt like a shift in approach." www.tes.com/magazine/ana...
The ‘interim’ Ofsted inspection process shows signs of a different approach, says Rebecca Cramer, whose school was one of the first to be visited this year
Danger of reproducing the hierarchy, moving towards the person with the greatest power. Community defining the terms, framing the solutions, collectively having the financial power to do so. Formed three prototypes; asset building, "black ofsted", rethinking funding. #npcignites24
I think it’s referring to the OFSTED report referenced and exclusions persay rather than from PRUs. I feel that the more promotion of relational approaches towards those who have been excluded from school in general the better. It’s a drop in the ocean, but it’s a start to changing the narrative
Yes! Another cool way of looking at SOW is @hughrichards.bsky.social taught me at an HA conference. Just used it this evening to reassure an ECT +1 going through Ofsted. In every SOW we are building ON what has been learned and building TOWARDS later learning. Could focus formative Q on these?
Very odd coincidence today…the two Bromley schools that I worked in directly before moving to my current school have both had the Ofsted call today 😬 good luck my friends!
What Ofsted have shown us is that there is still a long way to go to understand children’s play. They have done us a favour really as we now know they don’t truly understand it themselves. We can collectively make a stand that play matters. #PlayMatters
‘It took all of my strength and courage to walk back through the doors’: the impact of Ofsted on teachers, in their own words https://theconversation.com/it-took-all-of-my-strength-and-courage-to-walk-back-through-the-doors-the-impact-of-ofsted-on-teachers-in-their-own-words-240515
‘It took all of my strength and courage to walk back through the doors’: the impact of Ofsted on teachers, in their own words https://theconversation.com/it-took-all-of-my-strength-and-courage-to-walk-back-through-the-doors-the-impact-of-ofsted-on-teachers-in-their-own-words-240515
Submissions made to the Education Committee detail bullying behaviour and unprofessionalism.
This is government driven. It was the government who insisted children with Covid should start being in school. It was the government that started the drive to improve attendance (supported by Ofsted) without dealing with the causes of absence. The new government is continuing the same way.
But- this is much easier to do in some schools than others. Agree people for whom things aren’t in reality that hard… But also- doesn’t the pubic/political society perception of the state of schools matter? If we hide that (like we do during Ofsted inspections) then less pressure for more £££?