New data shows that 88% of schools are now rated good or
outstanding, up from 68% in 2010.
Ofsted ratings are an important factor in helping parents
understand the standards of schools in their areas – and we’re
making changes so the picture parents get is even clearer.
Here’s what you need to know.
When a school was rated outstanding by Ofsted between 2012 and
2020, that meant it was exempt from future routine inspections,
unless there were specific concerns about the school.
We have now removed that exemption, so all schools can be
evaluated under Ofsted’s new framework.
Parents rely greatly on schools’ Ofsted ratings to give them
confidence in choosing the right school for their child, and this
change will give parents even greater confidence, knowing that
every Ofsted rating is up to date and relevant to their child.
Exempting outstanding schools deprived parents of up-to-date
information. It also left a lot of schools without the challenge
that regular inspection provides.
Ofsted resumed its routine inspection programme in September
2021, which includes inspection of formerly exempt schools.
It has now published commentary on inspection
outcomes for previously Outstanding schools that have been
reinspected since the legal exemption on further inspections was
dropped.
Inspectors prioritised schools that have gone the longest without
being inspected.
The commentary finds that:
-
88% of schools are now rated as Good or
Outstanding compared to 68% in 2010.
- Of the schools inspected last year that were previously rated
Requires Improvement, 70% have improved and are
now providing a Good or Outstanding education.
-
371 previously exempt schools had a graded inspection
in 2021/22. On average, their last inspection was over
13 years earlier. When inspected, 17% remained
outstanding, 62% became good and 21% were judged requires
improvement or inadequate.
To ensure parents can have confidence in these ratings, Ofsted is
continuing its mission to inspect every school in the country by
summer 2025, meaning parents will have an up-to-date assessment
of their child’s school.
We will continue to invest in education with an extra £2 billion
next year and the year after - the highest real terms spending on
schools in history totalling £57.3 billion by 2024/25.