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EPI: Suspend Ofsted inspections until 2021 and launch retired teacher volunteer scheme

Suspending Ofsted inspections until next year and asking retired teachers to volunteer would help disadvantaged pupils “catch up” when schools reopen, a think tank has suggested.

Education Policy Institute researchers warn poorer children could fall “seriously” and further behind as a result of school closures and disruption to the economy, wiping out over a “decade’s progress” in closing the education gap.

The think tank has published a series of recommendations for the government today, calling for a “catch up plan” to provide critical support to pupils who learning may have stalled during lockdown.

One of these suggestions is that Ofsted inspections, which are currently suspended until at least the end of summer, should continue to be paused until the end of the Autumn term, with the potential for that to be extended.

It also calls for a one-year national ‘Teacher Volunteer Scheme’, targeted at retired and inactive teachers who may want to give their time to help schools support the most disadvantaged and vulnerable pupils, plans first tabled by education select committee chair Robert Halfon.

EPI stated this could work via a website where teachers can register their interest and skills, so schools needing help can contact them, similar to the NHS volunteer scheme.

Before closures, EPI research found that poorer pupils were already on average one and a half years of learning behind other pupils by the time they take their GCSEs. It also warns there could be more vulnerable children after the crisis.

Therefore, it has also recommending the government spend £500m to double pupil premium rates for at least one year for pupils currently in reception, year 6 and year 10 who are facing transition or national examinations, as well as looked after children.

Schools should be able to use the extra funding as they see fit, such as on supply teachers or tuition from external providers.

laptops schools tutoring
Natalie Perera

Natalie Perera (pictured), executive director at EPI, said the pupil premium increase could give teachers the resources they need “to implement proven interventions which can raise the attainment of disadvantaged children.”

Speaking at education questions yesterday, education secretary Gavin Williamson said he is looking “very closely” at how to ensure children have the ability to catch up.

He didn’t reveal further details, but said his department is exploring how they can make use of the “enormous goodwill that is held by the British public to help support children to be able to make sure that they don’t miss out as a result of this crisis”.

Meanwhile, EPI has also called on exams regulator Ofqual to review its plans on issuing grades this year, stating they do not meet their test for “fairness and equity”.

Instead, schools should be shown what their ranked order would look like if pupils followed national patterns from recent years, based on prior attainment and characteristics, for teachers to use as a starting point.

This would allow teachers to then apply their professional judgment to make final decisions on rankings based on internal assessments, classwork and homework.

The paper also says that the government needs to communicate with schools “much earlier” when faced again with a national emergency, pointing to the weeks of waiting for information on the free school meals vouchers and laptop schemes.

Ofqual said they had been engaging with organisations and groups that have raised concerns about potential for bias and has plans to provide additional information for schools on the issue.

“The guidance we have developed sets out how teachers can work together to best make objective, evidence-based judgements of student performance and we are confident that schools and colleges will be able to apply this fairly and consistently.”

A DfE spokesperson said the government has committed over £100 million to support children to learn at home, and said pupil premium funding, which is being paid during closures, is at “the highest ever rate per pupil”.

 “We are considering, with a range of partner organisations, what more is required to support all pupils who have been affected by school closures.”

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8 Comments

  1. Janet Hood

    Planned catch up provision for vulnerable pupils is a moral imperative.
    This can only be achieved by a collaborative approach using teacher expertise catch up support and voluntary support.
    Retired teachers would be a wonderful supportive back up but this need to be guided by professionals.

  2. The proposal to recruit retired teachers to help ‘close the gap’, would surely be a non starter under social distancing rules. Not only would they be in a vulnerable age group, but working with children one to one requires staff to be in very close proximity to a child, which again would increase the risk to their health.

  3. Jen Derbyshire

    This is the opportunity to make education work for all. Abolish all testing and league tables for primary pupils. Have maximum class sizes of 16 and concentrate on basic life skills and access to a broad range of activities. Hear children read every day. You will see a happier more skilled school population. I tried this model in a school in the 70,s The results were amazing. Trust teachers.

  4. Janet Downs

    The best way to help disadvantaged pupils is to take steps to lift them out of poverty not expect schools to be solely responsible for reducing the gap.

  5. Khalil

    Suspend Ofsted until 2022 and allow us to focus on the job of helping students recover from the effects of being away from school during lockdown. This does affect poorer students more and schools can only do so much. Government needs to initiate schemes to tackle poverty.

  6. An ideal solution for making real and permanent progress: scrap that entirely useless thing OFSTED and replace it with an organisation interested in improving education rather than lowering morale by what is often entirely destructive and ill founded criticism.

  7. Tracy

    An emergency interim primary curriculum should be introduced once schools are back in normally, that focuses heavily on maths, literacy and PHSE (for mental health) and less on the ‘deep dive’ OFSTED expectation of the foundation subjects, for at least 12 months.