Europe South Asia Asia Pacific Americas Middle East Africa BBC Homepage World Service Education



Front Page

World

UK

UK Politics

Business

Sci/Tech

Health

Education

Sport

Entertainment

Talking Point
On Air
Feedback
Low Graphics
Help

Tuesday, June 9, 1998 Published at 12:36 GMT 13:36 UK


Education

From 'well done' to 'must do better'

Do inspection reports provide an accurate portrait of a school?

Two inspection reports published by the Office for Standards in Education appear to provide a snapshot of the variation in standards between different schools.

In one, governors are commended for their work in turning around the school's financial position and for their efforts to push up standards, while in the other report, the governors are criticised for their inexperience and failure to monitor progress.

Yet the two governing bodies are one and the same.

The governors of Dogsthorpe Junior School in Peterborough, praised by one team of Ofsted inspectors, are also responsible for Dogsthorpe Infants - on the same site - which fared less well under the scrutiny of another team of inspectors.


[ image: Ofsted admits its inspectors may have made a mistake]
Ofsted admits its inspectors may have made a mistake
Nigel de Gruchy, general secretary of the National Association of Schoolmasters and Women Teachers, said the case underlined the need for an "inspector of inspectors".

"Inconsistencies in reports between Ofsted inspectors is not a new problem, but this is a spectacular example," he said.

A spokesman for the National Union of Teachers, John Perry, said he wanted an audit of Ofsted to make sure all inspectors were working to the same set of rules.

"There needs to be monitoring of the Ofsted system to make sure that inspection teams are all approaching schools in the same way, with the same parameters," he said.

The chairman of Peterborough's education committee, Harmesh Lakhanpaul, said he was amazed at the differences between the two reports.

"Ofsted may have very good reasons for coming to these conclusions, but it is baffling," he said.

Accuracy

A spokesman for Ofsted admitted it was possible that the inspectors had made a mistake.

"We have never said that the inspections are 100 per cent right or that the inspectors are always spot on, but the majority of inspections are accurate and schools are happy with the fairness of the comments that are made," he said.

"The inspection teams would have worked to the same Ofsted framework, which gives very clear and well constructed guidance about how teams should gather evidence.

"In this case, it could be that the governors do play different roles in the two schools and that they are more effective in one than the other. But the inspectors would not have made any snap judgements."





Advanced options | Search tips




Back to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage | ©


Education Contents

Features
Hot Topics
UK Systems
League Tables
Relevant Stories

19 May 98 | England and Wales
Inspections

28 May 98 | Education
Woodhead takes teachers to task over inspections





Internet Links

The Office for Standards in Education

National Union of Teachers: advice on Ofsted inspections

East Anglia Net: Peterborough schools


The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.




In this section

'Golden hellos' fail to attract new teachers

Children join online Parliament

Pupils 'too ignorant to vote'

Red tape toolkit 'not enough'

Poor report for teacher training consortium

Specialist schools' results triumph

Ex-headmaster guilty of more sex charges

Blunkett welcomes Dyke's education commitment

Web funding for specialist teachers

Local authorities call for Woodhead's sacking

Dyslexic pensioner wins PhD

Armed forces children need school help

Black pupils 'need better-trained teachers'

College 'is not cool'