Survey – OFSTED inspection of Outstanding Schools
DFE consultation on OFSTED inspection of currently Outstanding schools
Please respond to our Quick survey for DFE consultation on OFSTED inspection of currently Outstanding schools consultation
Ofsted are consulting on behalf of DFE on whether to remove the exemption of Inspection for Outstanding schools and to inspect all publicly funded schools within 5 years.
This change if it takes place will impact a number of Bucks schools, many of which have not been inspected for 10 years or more. The rationale is that this will be a fairer system because all schools will be evaluated by the same new EIF and it will provide more up to date information to parents.
BASG is proposing to respond on behalf of all Bucks Governors and is collating your collective views and comments to do. Group responses can carry more weight in these consultation processes.
Please can you respond to the 3 questions below. It should only take you 5 minutes or less. Please respond by Monday 10th February. Please add as many comments as you wish so we can put together a full response which fully reflects your views.
Questions for consultation
We welcome your views on whether we should remove the exemption for outstanding schools, colleges and other organisations delivering publicly-funded education and training. In particular we invite views on:
We will post back collated response for information to everyone
An extract from the full consultation document of the rationale for the change is posted below for your convenience and the full document is here
OFSTED rationale extracted from DFE Consultation Document
Proposed approach for inspections of currently exempt outstanding schools, colleges and other organisations delivering publicly-funded education and training
19. We propose an approach based on that which applies to schools, colleges and other organisations delivering publicly-funded education and training that are judged good. For schools, Ofsted’s approach is that each school receives a section 8 inspection usually every 4 years.14 This will mean in most schools, there will be at least one inspection during the period that a pupil is attending that school. Colleges and other organisations delivering publicly-funded education and training receive a short inspection within 5 years of the publication date of the last inspection report.
20. Where schools or colleges or other organisations delivering publicly-funded education and training have been inspected and judged outstanding within the last five years,15 we propose that the first inspection should normally be a section 8 inspection (in the case of schools) or a short inspection (in the case of colleges or other organisations), which seeks to confirm whether the school, college or other organisation remains outstanding. 16 Where the inspection confirms this, the next inspection will normally be a further section 8 inspection or short inspection within the next four to five academic years.
21. If, on the section 8 inspection, inspectors find evidence that the school is no longer outstanding, inspectors will return to conduct a section 5 inspection in the next year or so.
22. If the section 8 inspection identifies serious concerns about a school, Ofsted will convert the inspection to a section 5 inspection, usually within 48 hours.17
23. With respect to outstanding colleges or other organisations delivering publicly- funded education and training, if, following a short inspection, the inspection team has insufficient evidence to satisfy itself that the college or other organisation remains outstanding, or there are concerns arising from evidence gathered that the college or other organisation may not be outstanding, the short inspection will be extended to a full inspection within 15 working days.
Schools, colleges and other organisations delivering publicly-funded education and training not inspected within the last five years
24. Outstanding schools, colleges and other organisations delivering publicly-funded education and training not inspected within the last five years have, as a result of the exemption, missed at least one framework of inspection. They have therefore missed out for a considerable time on the insight and information a section 5 or full inspection provides. We therefore propose that the first inspection of these (those that were last inspected before September 2015) should be a section 5 inspection (in the case of schools) or a full inspection (in the case of colleges and other organisations).
25. If the inspection judges overall effectiveness to be outstanding or good, the next inspection will normally be a section 8 (in the case of schools) or a short inspection.