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Satisfactory is not good enough, Ofsted warns schools (From Oxford Mail)
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Satisfactory is not good enough, Ofsted warns schools
7:00pm Tuesday 4th September 2012 in Countywide
SATISFACTORY is no longer good enough.
That is the message Oxfordshire schools will hear when they face Ofsted inspections under the new framework, launched this week.
Up to now schools received one of four judgements, outstanding, good, satisfactory or inadequate, with inadequate schools issued with notices to improve or placed in special measures.
Now ‘requires improvement’ will replace the ‘satisfactory’ judgement and schools which receive the new grading will get support from Ofsted to drive standards until they meet the criteria to be judged ‘good’.
Oxfordshire County Council education cabinet member Melinda Tilley welcomed the new regime.
She said: “If you tell people they are satisfactory they assume everything is alright and I don’t think some of the ones that have been judged as satisfactory are alright. This new judgement will make people think a bit about what they need to do.”
Schools will also have less warning of inspections, being told inspectors are coming the afternoon before the visit.
Previously schools had between one and two days’ notice.
Her Majesty’s Chief Inspector Michael Wilshaw said: “I make no apology for introducing an inspection framework that raises expectations and focuses on the importance of teaching.
“The new short-notice inspections allow inspectors to see schools as they really are.”
The most recent figures, dating back to the end of March this year, show 63 per cent of Oxfordshire schools are rated outstanding or good.
Comments are closed on this article.
Comments (9)
8:15pm Tue 4 Sep 12
lcfc says...
9:12pm Tue 4 Sep 12
lcfc says...
As for comparing an inspection in food prep with an inspection in educating the next generation is like comparing apples and fish
10:57pm Tue 4 Sep 12
FlyFishing says...
10:31am Wed 5 Sep 12
Quentin Walker says...
She said: “If you tell people they are satisfactory they assume everything is alright and I don’t think some of the ones that have been judged as satisfactory are alright. This new judgement will make people think a bit about what they need to do.”....'
Well, it's back to school for you, Melinda. The definition of 'satisfactory' in the Oxford English Dictionary is as follows:
satisfactory |ˌsatisˈfakt(ə)r
|
adjective
fulfilling expectations or needs; acceptable
10:45am Wed 5 Sep 12
xjohnx says...
If you don't mean it when you say it, use the term 'unsatisfactory'.
5:12pm Wed 5 Sep 12
King Joke says...
I don't see why a head or a deputy needs to be present when inspectors arrive; admin staff are quite capable of checking credentials and escorting inspectors to the relevant teaching rooms.
7:23pm Wed 5 Sep 12
lcfc says...
6:37am Thu 6 Sep 12
King Joke says...
11:40pm Thu 6 Sep 12
Severian says...
Turning up unannounced to inspect a school and discovering that the Head is away for the day, and the Chair of Governors is at work, is hardly going to allow them to gain an accurate picture of the way the school is managed and run.
And Melinda Tilley needs to return to school and take a maths module on statistics, so she can understand why all schools can't be better than average.