Less than two years ago, he toldTesthat England’s educationsystem is “not yet good enough for everybody”.
Now Sir Kevan Collins, former head of the Education Endowment Foundation (EEF), has been asked to step in andoversee the recovery from arguably the biggest crisis our schools have everfaced.
Yesterday, the governmentannounced the appointment of Sir Kevan as its education recovery commissioner to lead a comprehensive programme of catch-up aimed at young people who have lost out on learning during thepandemic.
Related:PM appoints Sir Kevan Collins as Covid catch-up tsar
Profile: Meet Sir Kevan Collins -champion of education research
Previous role: Sir Kevan Collins to step down from EEF
But who is the man charged with remedying the enormous impact of prolonged school closures on our pupils’education?
Sir Kevan was most recently chief executive of the EEFbut has worked in the education sector for 30 years.
The fifth of six sons born into an army family, Sir Kevan went to primary schools in Germany, Cyprus and the UK before attending secondary school in Preston, Lancashire.
After a degree in economics and politics at Lancaster University and a PGCE at Bradford and Ilkley Community College, he started teaching in Tower Hamlets. Hethen moved to Bradford and taught on secondment in Mozambique before going into adviser roles.
Sir Kevan’sfirst national role was in 2003, when he headed up the Labour government’s Primary National Strategy. He left two yearslater to become Tower Hamlets’first director of children’s services.
In 2009, he was madechief executive of the London borough, managinga £1 billion budget and around 8,000 staff - and had the job of finding £50 million worth of cuts at the council over three years.
His decision-making process wasfilmed for the Channel 4 documentaryUndercover Boss, in which he served meals-on-wheels alongside his employees and told the cameras that his priority was to “minimise the impact of cuts on thefrontline”.
Then in 2011, Sir Kevan became chief executive of the EEF. He was knighted for his services to education in 2015, andstepped downfrom his leadership role at the charity aftereight years in 2019.
But when speaking to Testhat same year, Sir Kevan saidthere is one job title that means more to him than any other.
“In the end,”he said. “I am a teacher.”