Speaking at school leaders’ union NAHT’s Annual Conference in
Telford today (Fri 28 April), new NAHT President Elect, Simon
Kidwell, hits out at Ofsted, saying they “do more harm than
good.”
Addressing 400 school leader delegates at 3pm, Mr Kidwell will
say:
“My most recent Ofsted inspection was last week. It was a graded
inspection with several inspectors working excessive hours and
leaving no stone unturned. The process was led by a highly
skilled lead inspector who conducted the inspection with
intelligence and humanity, but despite her approach it still
almost broke two valuable and brilliant members of staff.
“I know we will all have our own stories to tell about how the
punitive accountability system has affected us personally. My own
physical health has been impacted by the job – 16 months ago I
was rushed into hospital and for three days was signed off work,
because of physical complications that doctors thought was
directly caused by the stresses and pressures of work.
“Ruth [Perry]’s death has sadly made me question if I have enough
in the tank to lead my school through another Ofsted cycle.
“Let me be clear, Ofsted does not raise standards. It is the
tireless work of the staff in schools that does that. At best,
Ofsted offers little more than a snapshot of a school’s
performance, and there are serious questions about how well it
can do even that.
“The reality for many is that it the current approach to
inspection compounds inequality between schools. The current
model is a workload creation vehicle for subject leaders, and it
causes unacceptable collateral damage to school leaders’ mental
and physical health.
“When we return to school on Tuesday, let’s take some collective
actions to put Ofsted back in its box. Let’s remove any Ofsted
banners from our railings, erase Ofsted logos from our school
stationary, delete Ofsted quotes from our websites, and when
Ofsted reports are published tell our communities that Ofsted is
a snapshot of school performance judged against a framework that
urgently needs a serious reform.”
Mr Kidwell will also speak out on school funding, as the dispute
between school staff and government continues, saying:
“Much noise is made about schools’ funding being restored to 2010
levels. But we all know that the job is unrecognisable from what
it was in 2010. Schools have become front doors to children’s
services, providing solutions to challenges as diverse as
children's mental health to feeding families during the school
holidays. Local authority budgets have been reduced by billions
and many services have been decimated.
“The additional £2.3 billion given to schools in the autumn
budget provided some headroom for schools after the unfunded 2022
pay award, but now we are being told that the additional funds
will have to cover future pay awards too, so many of us are back
to square one with no resources to fund the additional front-line
staff that will keep children’s services afloat.
“My message to the Secretary of State is clear: we cannot
continue to do more with less and the mythical magic money tree
does not grow in school grounds.
“It breaks my heart that many of us cannot recommend teaching and
school leadership to future generations without considerable
health warnings about excessive workload, the toxic effects of
punitive accountability, falling real terms pay, and the lack of
opportunities for flexible working. Real terms pay has fallen
behind other professions, too many young teachers aspire to work
abroad, and teaching assistants are leaving for jobs in Costa
Coffee.
“In our recent electronic ballot, 92% of our members told us that
the Government’s proposed pay award was unaffordable and 78% of
our members told us that they are willing to take industrial
action to resolve this. A demonstrable signal that we won’t stand
by and let the long-term erosion in terms and conditions and the
invisible hand of toxic accountability and underfunding continue
to suffocate our profession.”
Mr Kidwell’s speech will be livestreamed at 3pm on Friday
28th April 2023 on NAHT’s social media platforms,
including Twitter (@NAHTnews). The full
speech text is available on request.
Over the two days of NAHT’s Annual Conference (28-29 April),
delegates will hear from speakers including Ruth Perry’s sister,
Professor Julia Waters; Shadow Education Secretary ; and NAHT general
secretary Paul Whiteman. They will also debate and vote on a wide
variety of motions, including the pay dispute and Ofsted.
Simon Kidwell officially becomes NAHT President in September, in
a change to the timing of the union’s usual presidential year. He
therefore becomes NAHT President Elect today (Friday 28 April),
and he and current NAHT President Dr Paul Gosling will continue
in the role concurrently until September.