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Children, Schools and Young People’s Framework. SIAMS Training Tuesday 17 September 2013. Introduction to the day. The purpose of the training is to help you to: understand the principles that underpin the new evaluation schedule understand the structure of the schedule
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Children, Schools and Young People’s Framework SIAMS Training Tuesday 17 September 2013
Introduction to the day • The purpose of the training is to help you to: • understand the principles that underpin the new evaluation schedule • understand the structure of the schedule • Identify the changes for schools • Know how to access information about SIAMS inspections
Q. Why Change? • A. To address issues • Mind the Gap – Ofsted and SIAMS • More than Caring and Sharing – ‘Outstanding’ judgements • A clear distinction between good and outstanding • The importance of RE in both VA and VC schools
Why Change? • A. To raise aspirations • Ensuring the centrality and Christian distinctiveness of worship • Securing the effectiveness of RE – especially the teaching of Christianity • Ensuring that values are distinctively Christian • Requiring leaders to articulate and embed a distinctive Christian vision
Q. What has changed? • A. The shape of the evaluation schedule • Evaluation statements • These are the areas that inspectors must explore. • Evidence gathered for each statement contributes to a single judgement on the core question.
. • Using the grade descriptors • The grade descriptors are now presented as a list of bullet points rather than a grid. Schools and Inspectors should decide which grade is the ‘best fit’. • The descriptors for inadequate do not work on a ‘best fit’ basis.
Q. What has changed? • A. The content of the Evaluation Schedule • 1. Main additions • Overall Effectivenesssection • Supplementary guidance on Methodist and Anglican tradition and practice • RE in a VC school • Achievement (progress) • Attendance and exclusion
3. Key vocabulary • SIAMS Statutory Inspection of Anglican and Methodist Schools • Core (not key) questions • ‘Best fit’ • it is likely some criteria will be met both above and below the grade • 3 single word grades retained • outstanding, good and satisfactory • no place for conditional grades such as good with outstanding features • the descriptors for the grade of inadequate do not work on a ‘best fit’ basis
The Inspection ProcessThe impact of the new schedule on inspection practice • Pre-inspection evidence – consistency and fairness • Inspectors request from the school • The SEF, SIAMS Supporting Evidence document, SEES • The inspector accesses independently • School website • Most recent SIAMS and Ofsted reports – from Ofsted and NS websites • Provided by the Diocese • Data on school performance Send the SIB to school 24 hours prior to inspection*
Additional evidence on the day • To be requested during the phone call to the headteacher: • school’s own tracking data including Raise on Line on current performance, attendance and exclusion data – request discussion with appropriate member of SLT • RE and worship files – planning; evaluations; assessments; observations • school improvement plan • relevant policies • a selection of pupils’ RE books.
Check points – The Timetable • initial meeting with headteacher to discuss the SIB • regular updates for the headteacher • a learning walk • Joint observations of RE lessons in KS1 & 2 with headteacher • Observation of Collective Worship (headteacher leading) • at least one meeting with a group of students • a midday summary to reshape the inspection with headteacher • scrutiny of data with senior leader • discussion with foundation governors • time to prepare the formal feedback
Looking at data • The school makes available current information and this forms the basis of a dialogue with the inspector. • standards and progress for groups and cohorts • attendance • exclusions and incidents of poor behaviour
Summary of Key Points • A distinctively Christian understanding of shared human values • Achievement (progress) • RE in a VC school (as part of Core Question 1) • Focus on the teaching of Christianity • An explicitly Christian vision expressed by senior leaders and understood by all stakeholders
The explicitly Christian nature of worship • The role of governors in strategic planning and monitoring of the school’s Christian character