Having listened to some of the most amazing and like minded speakers @Fededucation summit over the past few days, I felt I needed to record my thoughts.
In May 2020 I published my blog ‘Time for Change’ https://chilledheadteacher.school.blog/2020/05/23/time-for-change/ following a second RI judgement in March 2020, the week before the first lockdown. When the lead inspector says he wouldn’t hesitate to send his son to your school yet you’re labelled ‘in a category’ something isn’t right with the system. The only reason we didn’t get graded ‘good’ was our 2019 data. L&M was strong as was behaviour welfare and personal development. They were also impressed with our wider curriculum but with a quality assurer, the outcome was known before they stepped into the school.
Having a double RI judgement, I began to question everything. Was it me? Did I need to leave the profession? Was it wrong that my passion is inclusivity, opportunities, character and well-being? Why would I have a voice if I was that bad at the job? (Note 2018 ks2 data was above National) Did I need to work to Ofsted rather than my heart? As a confident and competent leader should I have to attach my self worth to a cliff edge judgement?
Balancing all these thoughts and battling through running a school during a pandemic made me very reflective. I found my Twitter family and started to have a voice. I realised there were many other amazing heads in a similar position (funnily enough, with similar schools in deprived areas.) Throughout this Ofsted journey my network have stood by me. My trust and colleagues have seen the strengths, encouraged me and my career has developed. How many great heads would we have lost in similar situations?
In February 2021 (the day the PM made the announcement pupils would return) we had the call for a remote monitoring inspection the next day. It was a positive experience completed with rigour and compassion. The most important part for me was that parent voice was extremely positive. Suddenly my mojo returned. I held my head higher and engaged louder with my networks. I felt I now had the collateral to back up my opinions.
But it could have been so different. Without the networks around me and the most amazing staff, I could easily have walked away. What other profession lives in such dread as the Ofsted call? What other profession is there so little trust? What other profession has such high stakes accountability it breeds a recruitment crisis?
Don’t get me wrong, I’m not against accountability. We have children’s futures in our hands and public funding but there has to be another way. We have to build a system that encourages collaboration not competition. A system that is equal. A system that encourages schools to open their doors to all. A system that focuses on the whole child. A system based on trust.
With a SOS who has just stated we need to focus on behaviour and children sitting in rows, I’m not sure how quickly things will change. However, having listened to a raft of intelligent, articulate educators over the past few days who back up their ideas with evidence (a broad set of evidence not just selective) I have regained my hope. With Kevan Collins leading the recovery from Covid and the growing voices for change, I am feeling positive about the future.
The past year has taught me that showing vulnerability isn’t a bad thing and I truly believe I am an authentic, compassionate and transparent leader who can do the job well.
NOW TRUST US AND WATCH US SHINE!
