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Self-evaluation after the sef. What do governors really need to know about school development and progress?. If…. The sef is dead…. September 2010 Education Secretary Gove announces the death of the SEF, with effect from 22 nd July 2011:
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Self-evaluation after the sef What do governors really need to know about school development and progress?
If… www.thegovernor.org.uk
The sef is dead… • September 2010 Education Secretary Gove announces the death of the SEF, with effect from 22nd July 2011: • “The SEF asks teachers and heads to collect and verify facts and figures about their school in preparation for their Ofsted inspection…the process takes days out of heads’ time and can cost schools tens of thousands of pounds. The Secretary of State has asked Ofsted to ditch it.” www.thegovernor.org.uk
…long live the SEF • “Of course, inspectors will continue to take account of schools’ self-evaluation…Completion of the SEF has never been an Ofsted requirement. • Of course, it will be critical that schools continue to evaluate their performance. • We expect that schools should always be able to provide some summative evidence of self-evaluation, which might include an assessment of performance against the key inspection judgements, but there will not be a common way for schools to present this evidence.” • Ofsted consultation on current framework www.thegovernor.org.uk
Ofsted framework 2012 • What is the relationship between school self-evaluation and inspection? • Self-evaluation is now well established in schools, providing the basis for planning for development and improvement. • Inspection takes account of, and contributes to, a school’s self-evaluation. • Schools may present a written summary of their self-evaluation to inspectors. www.thegovernor.org.uk
Outstanding governance • Outstanding governance supports honest, insightful self-evaluation by the school, recognising problems and supporting the steps needed to address them. • Effective governing bodies systematically monitor their school’s progress towards meeting agreed development targets. Information about what is going well and why, and what is not going well and why, is shared. • Governors are well informed and knowledgeable because they are given high- quality, accurate information that is concise and focused on pupil achievement. • School governance: Learning from the best • Ofsted 2011 www.thegovernor.org.uk
Inspection focuses on.. • Overall effectiveness • Inspectors evaluate the quality of the education provided in the school. In doing this, they consider the evidence gathered to support their evaluations of the four key judgements: • achievement of pupils at the school • quality of teaching in the school • quality of leadership in and management of the school • behaviour and safety of pupils at the school. • They also consider: • the extent to which the education provided meets the needs of the range of pupils at the school • how well the school promotes all pupils’ spiritual, moral, social and cultural development www.thegovernor.org.uk
Ofsted: September 2012 • “We need clear and demanding criteria for a school to be judged ‘good’ or ‘outstanding’. A good school should have at least good teaching, and an outstanding school should have outstanding teaching. Good and outstanding leadership of teaching and learning drives improvement and knows that the culture of the school and the progress of pupils depend on it.” • Sir Michael Wilshaw • HMCI • 9 Feb 2012 www.thegovernor.org.uk
September 2012 • schools cannot be judged ‘outstanding’ unless their teaching is ‘outstanding’ • schools will only be deemed to be providing an acceptable standard of education where they are judged to be ‘good’ or ‘outstanding’ • a single judgement of ‘requires improvement’ will replace the current ‘satisfactory’ judgement and ‘notice to improve’ category • schools judged as ‘requires improvement’ will be subject to a full re-inspection earlier than is currently the case • a school can only be judged as ‘requires improvement’ on two consecutive inspections before it is deemed to require ‘special measures’ • inspections will be undertaken without notice being provided to the school • inspectors should undertake an analysis of an anonymised summary, provided by the school, of the outcomes of the most recent performance management of all teachers within the school, as part of the evidence for a judgement on Leadership and Management. www.thegovernor.org.uk
Is there more to life than ofsted? • Ofsted's focus has narrowed. • Should ours narrow? • What else might we look at? • As well as current Ofsted foci the old SEF included: • Every Child Matters themes • School’s engagement with parents and carers • Effectiveness of partnerships • The effectiveness with which the school deploys resources to achieve value for money • What else would you include? www.thegovernor.org.uk
Core elements of self evaluation • achievement of pupils at the school • quality of teaching in the school • quality of leadership in and management of the school • behaviour and safety of pupils at the school • Every Child Matters themes? • School’s engagement with parents and carers? • Effectiveness of partnerships? • Value for money? • Your suggestions here……… www.thegovernor.org.uk
What do you mean – too operational? www.thegovernor.org.uk
Where does your governing body sit? High support Partners or critical friends Supporters Club ‘We’re here to support the head’. ‘We share everything –good or bad’. Low challenge High challenge Abdicators Adversaries ‘We keep a very close eye on the staff!’. ‘We leave it to the professionals’. Low support
How do you know how well your school is doing? • What questions should we ask? • Who can we ask? • How do we know if the answers are reliable and honest? • What do we do if we find they’re not? • Doing…in what areas? • How well should it be doing? • How do we know? • What should we be looking for? • Where might we find it?
gathering evidence Inspectors Governors Which techniques are appropriate for us? • Data analysis • Validation of self-evaluation • Triangulation • Asking questions - teachers, parents, youngsters, governors, head… • Observation • Comparison • Work sampling • Discussion between inspectors
Sources of information • Subject leader report • Link governor report • School Improvement or Development Plan (and related progress reports) • School Awards • GB and committee minutes • Feedback from stakeholders • Self-evaluation • Raw data and league tables • Value Added (VA) data – RAISEonline • Pupil tracking data (anonymised) • Ofsted report • Headteacher’s report
Calls for an external perspective • It seems preposterous that we have no organised supply of expert advisors to support improvement. • Recommendation: a new nationwide support system to facilitate advice, support and collegiate school-to-school learning. • Support needs to be provided to ‘satisfactory’ schools, as well as those with NtI. • RSA 2011 • "It is no good just relying on Ofsted to give the judgment. By that time, it is too late. We need some sort of intermediary bodies which can detect when things aren't going well, look at the data and have their ear very close to the ground to determine when there is a certain issue.“ • Michael Wilshaw HMCI • Guardian Dec 2011 www.thegovernor.org.uk
The external, expert perspective • Who we’ve lost: • School Improvement Partner • Local authority adviser/inspector • We still have: • Ofsted inspection • Who else is there? • LA traded services personnel • Independent consultants • Colleagues in our collaborative www.thegovernor.org.uk
reflection • What’s happened to self-evaluation in my school? • How do we keep track of how the school is doing? • What performance indicators tell us best what we need to know? • How do we know if our head and colleagues are giving us the unvarnished truth? • What external perspectives do (and could) we access? www.thegovernor.org.uk
The governors were in complete agreement – everything was bloomin’ marvellous! They must be doing a great job! www.thegovernor.org.uk
What about us? • “The (outstanding) governing bodies constantly reflect on their own effectiveness and readily make changes to improve. They consider their own training needs, as well as how they organise their work.” • How well are we doing – as a governing body? • What IMPACT do we have? • When did we last evaluate ourselves as a GB? • What process did we use? • What did we do about what we found out? www.thegovernor.org.uk
spot the opportunities for self-evaluation • Full governing body • Matters arising • Headteacher’s report • School development plan • School self-evaluation • Committee reports • Subject leaders’ reports • Committees • Curriculum, assessment, teaching and learning • Finance • Staffing • Premises
Possible approaches • Poole Governor Services self-evaluation tool • Other self-evaluation tools on the web • Descriptors of governance – previous Ofsted framework • Ofsted’s characteristics of outstanding GBs • Governor Mark – including supporting and validating partner GB’s self-evaluation www.thegovernor.org.uk
Gb development plan www.thegovernor.org.uk