Here are the new report cards being introduced at UK schools
From November, parents will be given more details about their children’s education with the introduction of new-look report cards, Education regulator Ofsted has confirmed.
This forms part of a drive to give parents better and more detailed information and help raise the standards for all students, the regulator said.
Inspectors will award grades on a 5-point scale across a wider range of areas, providing parents with more granularity and nuance about a provider’s performance and helping to raise standards for children and learners.
The very best practice across early years (EY), schools, further education (FE) and skills, and initial teacher education (ITE) will be recognised with a new ‘exceptional’ grade – indicating other providers could learn from it.
Following feedback from parents and education professionals, the 5 grades have been renamed ‘urgent improvement’, ‘needs attention’, ‘expected standard’, ‘strong standard’, and the new highest grade of ‘exceptional’.
Some of the key changes which will be introduced under the new system include:
- A new inspection report card to highlight excellence and identify areas for improvement – driving high and rising standards. The report card will provide more nuance for parents and providers, combining at-a-glance grades with narrative summaries of strengths and areas for improvement. Following extensive feedback and user testing of February’s proposed version, the report card has been redesigned to make it more accessible, particularly on mobile devices.
- A new 5-point grading scale to set high expectations, while encouraging improvement where it is needed. In response to feedback from professionals and parents about the proposed terminology, the final set of grades has changed to:
- Urgent improvement
- Needs attention
- Expected standard
- Strong standard
- Exceptional
- A wider range of evaluation areas than in the current reports. But following feedback, the number of core evaluation areas has been streamlined.
- A new ‘exceptional’ grade to identify the very best provision in the country. In a change from the initial proposals, providers will not be asked to submit case studies for approval. Instead, inspectors will evaluate ‘exceptional’ practice by applying the toolkit, subject to the usual quality assurance and consistency checking.
- A new ‘inclusion’ evaluation area to help break down barriers to learning and well-being. Inspectors will evaluate whether education providers are providing high-quality support for all children and learners, especially those from disadvantaged backgrounds, those who have SEND, and those who are known to children’s social care.
- New inspection toolkits for grading providers. In response to feedback, the definitions of grades have been tightened to more clearly differentiate between them. The standards covered in the toolkits have also been slimmed down to provide greater clarity on the evidence inspectors will assess.
- A new inspection methodology to reduce workload for the education workforce. The toolkits are designed to assess the professional standards, statutory and non-statutory requirements already placed on schools, early years and FE, and skills providers. New operating guides set out the times at which inspectors can arrive on site and the suggested latest times they should be departing, to cap the length of inspection days.
- Evaluation of providers’ work to support and promote leader and staff well-being. This will be considered as part of the leadership and governance evaluation area.
- Inspection findings are to be grounded in a clear understanding of each provider’s unique circumstances. The new operating guides set out how leaders and inspectors will reflect on a provider’s context and priorities.
- A new online insights platform – ‘Ofsted – Explore an Area’, giving parents key information about the education and care services in their local area.
- A new system for monitoring schools where improvement is needed, to offer reassurance to parents and carers. These inspections will allow providers to improve ‘needs attention’ grades and have improvements recognised more quickly.
- To drive consistent and fair inspections, school, independent school, and FE and skills inspections will be led by full-time His Majesty’s Inspectors. These experienced inspectors will oversee the inspection, building a professional relationship with the leaders (including any nominee) to deliver a more collaborative experience. In addition, Ofsted will introduce a programme of work to assess consistency in school inspections, including having a senior inspector shadow a sample of live inspections to guide and advise the inspection team. Post inspection, any initial differences between the senior inspector and the team will be analysed.
- Increased resources and training for inspection teams will drive quality and consistency: an additional school inspector will add capacity to the team, allowing the lead inspector to spend more time with leaders (including any nominee), as well as overseeing and quality assuring the inspection.ch to inspection.