In his speech at the Association of School and
College Leaders' annual conference in Liverpool on Friday,
his Majesty's Chief Inspector, Sir Martyn Oliver, will reiterate
his focus on the most disadvantaged and vulnerable children, and
explain why inclusion sits “rightly and proudly”at the
heart of Ofsted's work.
Sir Martyn will go on to deplore “the quiet curse of low
expectations” - the notion that some children are destined
to achieve less because of their background - and firmly reject
the suggestion that Ofsted should accept a lower standard of
education at schools with a high proportion of disadvantaged
pupils.
Instead, he will set out that the renewed framework is setting a
“more exacting” standard, with more schools receiving
‘needs attention' grades as Ofsted raises expectations.
Sir Martyn will explain how inspection recognises the challenging
contexts many schools are working in, while still championing
outcomes for the most disadvantaged and vulnerable. He is
expected to say:
We see thousands of schools working in challenging contexts,
bucking the odds again and again to give children a life-changing
education. But we sometimes see disadvantaged and vulnerable
children who are not making the strides that they
should.
Some would have this be a dilemma for Ofsted. They argue we
should recognise the work and the effort – and downplay
disappointing outcomes.
But this is no dilemma.
Of course we will recognise the work, celebrate where that
school is doing well and identify the contextual challenges being
faced. But we can never downplay the disappointing
outcomes.
We will never acquiesce to the quiet curse of low
expectations that would see Ofsted prioritise context over
outcomes for the most disadvantaged and vulnerable children.
That isn't why I became a teacher, leader and Chief
Inspector. And it isn't why you joined our great profession
either.
Sir Martyn will say he recognises where this “pernicious - if
well-intentioned - thread of thinking comes from” but
reassert that outcomes matter and Ofsted will not expect children
to achieve less because of geography or socio-economic status. He
will continue:
Children don't take good intentions into their next phase of
education. They take exam grades, reading proficiency, the
character you imbue in them.
We can never – and will never – ignore these outcomes. But we
do know it is harder for schools working in challenging
communities.
Those who would lower the bar are right that Ofsted must
appreciate the context in which these schools are working. We
must consider starting points and recognise where great work is
taking place.
Their misplaced desire for Ofsted to lower the bar stems from
a deep empathy with the professionals working in the most
challenging contexts.
But that lowering of the bar masks an ultimately damaging
belief that some children ‘just won't get
there'.
I don't believe we can ever afford to accept
that.
Because when we expect less of certain children, whether
because of where they live, what they need, or what's happening
at home, what we are telling them is: ‘We expect less of you.
Society expects less of you.'
So my commitment to you is this: I will make sure our report
cards recognise where schools deliver against the odds. I will
ensure context is seen as a core part of the assessment.
But we will never succumb to the quiet curse of low
expectations.
Sir Martyn will say, as the Office for Standards in Education,
Children's Services and Skills, Ofsted's aim is always to raise
standards and improve lives. And the renewed inspection framework
and report cards are more exacting for that
reason:
We are coming from a place where more than 90% of schools
were previously judged good or outstanding at their most recent
inspection. That suggests less than 10% of schools in the country
need any improvement.
But our job is to point out where expectations can and should
be raised. The new report cards do this.
Take the 'needs attention' grade. We are seeing more schools
receive this grade than the old ‘requires improvement' because we
are raising standards. We are being more exacting. I make no
apologies for that.
I am proud that we, as a school system, have raised standards
in this country over recent decades. Children here are realising
some of the best results in the world – from primary reading to
secondary mathematics.
We did that! The hard work of great people in this
room.
And it is because of the progress we have made that Ofsted
can raise expectations higher still.
Sir Martyn will address the conference at 10.30am on Friday and
his full speech will be published on Ofsted's website soon after.