Government sets out plans to target ‘stuck’ schools
Stronger accountability, increased intervention in stuck schools
and faster school improvement are at the heart of this government's
plan to give every child the best start in life, the Education
Secretary has said today. Speaking at the Centre for Social
Justice, Bridget Phillipson laid out plans for a new era of school
standards building on the reforms of successive governments and
delivering on the Prime Minister's Plan for Change - breaking the
link between background and...Request free trial
Stronger accountability, increased intervention in stuck schools and faster school improvement are at the heart of this government's plan to give every child the best start in life, the Education Secretary has said today.
Speaking at the Centre for Social Justice, Bridget Phillipson laid out plans for a new
era of school standards building on the reforms of successive
governments and delivering on the Prime Minister's Plan for
Change - breaking the link between background and
success.
This includes an excellent teacher for every classroom, a
high-quality curriculum for every school and a core offer of
excellence for every parent so that every child can achieve and
thrive.
The Secretary of State announced new plans to tackle
forgotten schools as part of proposals for a significantly
strengthened school accountability system that works for
parents.
There are more than 600 ‘stuck' schools in England that have
received consecutive poor Ofsted judgements, and which are
attended by more than 300,000 children. Those attending these
schools leave primary school with results 14 percentage points
worse on average and secondary school with results a grade per
subject worse on average.
Plans unveiled by the Education Secretary today provide for a
stronger, faster system, spearheaded by an initial £20m
investment in new regional improvement teams, known as RISE teams
which will prioritise these stuck schools. They will draw up
bespoke improvement plans with those schools, with government
making up to £100,000 available initially to each school for
specialist support. This compares to a £6,000 grant that was
available previously for similar schools. In her speech, Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson said: “Stuck schools are the new front in the fight against low expectations. “I will not accept a system that is content for some to sink, even while others soar. “The opportunity to succeed must be the right of every child. “We simply can't allow stuck schools to disappear off the radar.”
The government will continue to use structural intervention -
converting to an academy, or moving to a new, strong trust -
where Ofsted identifies the most serious concern or does not
identify rapid improvement. It has also proposed closer
monitoring of schools with the most serious problems to track
progress.
The government expects the number of schools that receive
mandatory intervention – including structural and from RISE teams
- to be around double than before, securing swift improvement for
children and driving high and rising standards in every part of
the country. Leora Cruddas, Chief Executive of the Confederation of School Trust, said:
“There is a lot to be proud of about our school system in
England. We are a good school system on a journey to great. This
is because we have built on the evidence of what works – thirty
years of curriculum development, teacher development,
accountability, structural reform, and innovation. But the school
system does not work for all children: the gap between
economically disadvantaged pupils and their peers has widened;
the system does not serve children with SEND well; and not enough
of our children feel like they belong in our schools. Some of our
schools are not on a secure improvement trajectory. If we are to
build a great school system, then we must design it so that all
our children achieve and thrive. We are committed to working with
government to design a system that is built on excellence,
equity, and inclusion. “ Sir Hamid Patel, Chief Executive of Star Academies, said: “The Government is right to focus on strong and supportive accountability to deliver high standards and expectations. While we take pride in the significant strengths, achievements, and international reputation of our school system, the entrenched disadvantage gap is a national crisis that requires urgent and persistent action from us all.
“The introduction of RISE Teams to support the work of our
outstanding school trusts, along with additional funding for
tailored school improvement and enhanced monitoring of schools
facing serious performance challenges, will contribute to an
aspirational system that benefits all children and families.” Jon Coles, Chief Executive of United Learning, said:
'Turning around schools which are not doing a good enough job for
children is a critical priority for our school system. It is
therefore good to see the government's determination to ensure
rapid improvement in a larger number of struggling schools while
continuing with structural intervention in the weakest schools by
using all the resources and capacity available. ' Jason Elsom, Chief Executive of Parentkind said: “Parents will welcome efforts to make sure that there are high standards in every classroom.
“Schools will be at the centre of significant social change
during the decade ahead and we will need a robust, responsive
system that not only recognises when schools are excelling but
steps in with meaningful support when they struggle.
“When we engage with parents about school inspections, their
message is clear: they want a framework that is firm yet fair,
one that places the success and well-being of every child at its
core and acknowledges the essential role of parents in making
this vision a reality. Dr Vanessa Ogden, Chief Executive Mulberry Schools, said:
“We see an ambitious plan announced today that invests in the
quality assurance, leadership and resources to build on existing
success and improve standards for all. Those schools that need it
will get the expert challenge and support required to achieve
turnaround. Those that already hold this knowledge can help.
Working together in this way, we can ensure that every child gets
the great school they deserve – and we can reach higher and
further than ever in education, for a thriving economy, regional
prosperity and fulfilled secure lives.” Tom Campbell, Chief Executive Office, E-Act, said:
“I welcome the government investment in support for schools who
have been left to struggle in recent years. The RISE teams
and their focus on support rather than intervention makes high
quality school improvement available to all schools, irrespective
of which trust or LA they are in or which geographical region
they are based.”
While RISE teams will immediately prioritise stuck schools, the
proposals also set out that they will engage with schools that
have concerning levels of pupil attainment, including large
year-on-year declines.
The teams will also work across all schools providing a universal
service, signposting to best practice and bringing schools
together to share their knowledge and innovation.
The measures today come as Ofsted has unveiled the
new report cards which they propose will evaluate schools
across nine separate areas. They also set out proposals for
evaluating areas from 'exemplary' to 'causing concern', holding
schools to a higher standard and providing far greater
information for parents.
School report cards will start to be introduced from this autumn.
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