Weekly round-up: No ‘revolution’ for embattled Ofsted
This week’s education news round-up includes Sir Martyn Oliver’s pledge to ‘change the way’ Ofsted inspects and a challenge to the watchdog from former inspectors
Catch up on the week’s must-read news and analysis right here:
Ofsted chief: It’s not a ‘revolution’ at watchdog
Chief inspector Sir Martyn Oliver this week said his aim was “evolution” rather than “revolution”, and voiced concerns about trusts being wary about taking on challenging schools “because of anything to do with Ofsted”.
‘Alternative Big Listen’ to probe single-word Ofsted ratings
An alternative to Ofsted’s Big Listen consultation has been launched by former inspectors who think the watchdog has avoided asking important questions about the future of school inspection.
Ofqual: Sunak’s ABS plan means ‘unprecedented’ change
Ofqual has responded to prime minister Rishi Sunak’s plan to launch a new Advanced British Standard qualification, highlighting the scale of the change and the complication that private schools will likely continue running A levels.
How to reform childcare to truly benefit teachers
As a female-dominated sector, teaching is being hit particularly hard by the lack of accessible childcare - but there are ways schools can help staff with young children, says the founder of the Maternity Teacher/Paternity Teacher Project.
Growing oracy focus could benefit maths teaching
Improving students’ ability to explain their reasoning in maths could help evolve their understanding from the procedural to something much more foundational, says Axiom Maths’ David Thomas.
Leadership: are you really being inclusive? In the latest instalment of Tes’ Leading and Learning webinar series, Nadia Nagamootoo explores the immense benefits, but considerable challenges, of leading in a genuinely inclusive way.