Schools facing an Ofsted visit before Christmas can ask to defer it until the new year after inquest heard inspection ‘likely contributed’ to death of headteacher Ruth Perry
- Schools in England due an Ofsted visit can request it is deferred until 2024
Schools can ask to defer Ofsted inspections until the New Year following the outcome of the inquest into the death of headteacher Ruth Perry.
All schools in England due an Ofsted visit this week can request their inspection is deferred until 2024 – and all requests will be granted, unless the watchdog has significant concerns.
It comes after Mrs Perry killed herself after an Ofsted report downgraded her Caversham Primary School in Reading from its highest rating to its lowest over safeguarding concerns.
Senior coroner Heidi Connor last week concluded that the inspection on November 15 and 16 last year ‘likely contributed’ to Mrs Perry’s death.
Two school leaders’ unions have called for Ofsted inspections to be paused immediately to allow time for ‘meaningful action to be taken’ following concerns raised in Mrs Perry’s inquest.
But the general secretaries of the Association of School and College Leaders (ASCL) and school leaders’ union the National Association of Head Teachers (NAHT) said simply granting inspection deferrals to schools at the end of term does not go far enough.
Last week an inquest into the death of headteacher Ruth Perry found an Ofsted inspection ‘likely contributed’ to her suicide
Mrs Perry killed herself after an Ofsted report downgraded her Caversham Primary School in Reading from its highest rating to its lowest over safeguarding concerns
An Ofsted spokeswoman said: ‘This is the final week for inspections this term. We will use our existing deferral policy to give headteachers the ability to defer their inspection to the New Year, if they don’t want it to go ahead this week.
‘We will explain this when we make the notification calls today.
‘It’s important that school inspections continue, in the interests of children and parents – but we are determined to work sensitively with headteachers and their staff.’
She added: ‘We recognise and understand the strength of feeling in schools, following the inquest into the tragic death of Ruth Perry.
‘We are immediately introducing a number of measures that we described last week and talked through with our lead inspectors today. And we are developing new training for all inspectors, to include external experts, that will take place in early January.
‘These measures address several areas of concern set out by the coroner. When we receive the coroner’s report we will urgently address all remaining issues.’
READ MORE: ‘Ruth Perry was more than a victim of an inhumane schools inspection system’: Headteacher’s family pay tribute as her husband says ‘marrying her was the best thing I’ve ever done’ – as inquest rules she took her own life after ‘callous’ Ofsted inspection
Paul Whiteman, general secretary of the NAHT, said: ‘Ofsted’s response to the coroner’s findings remains wholly inadequate. Granting schools deferrals from inspections in the last week of term completely misses the point.
‘We reiterate the need for Ofsted to pause inspections until meaningful measures are put in place to address the very serious concerns raised by the coroner last week.
‘It would be completely wrong for Ofsted to inspect schools at the start of the New Year when we know the harm those inspections can have. Beyond that, we need a fundamental review of how inspection works in England.’
Geoff Barton, general secretary of the ASCL, said: ‘We’re pleased that Ofsted has committed to using its deferral policy to give headteachers the ability to defer inspections this week. However, we do not think this goes far enough.
‘At the conclusion of the inquest into the death of Ruth Perry, the coroner set out seven areas of concern for a regulation 28 report she intends to issue to prevent future deaths. It is that serious.
‘Given the gravity of the situation, the government and Ofsted should immediately pause all inspections until they have a clear plan and timetable in place to address each area of concern. Continuing to inspect, without proper pause and review, is reckless and dangerous.’
Ruth Perry took her own life aged 53 in January after an Ofsted inspection downgraded her school from ‘outstanding’ to ‘inadequate’
On Monday, Education Secretary Gillian Keegan signalled further changes to Ofsted inspections in a bid to prevent a repeat of the Ruth Perry ‘tragedy’.
Speaking in the Commons, Ms Keegan highlighted reforms already introduced before saying Mrs Perry ‘dedicated herself’ to her school and the Government wants to ‘build on her legacy’ to help ensure ‘such a tragedy never happens again’.
A Department for Education (DfE) spokeswoman said: ‘Ruth Perry’s death was heartbreaking and the coroner’s findings make clear that lessons need to be learned.
‘As the Education Secretary said in the Commons yesterday, Ruth dedicated herself to her school and we will work with her family and Ofsted to build on her legacy ensuring the inspection system supports students and teachers.
‘Following the inquest it’s right that Ofsted is giving schools the choice to defer inspections until January, as an extension of their existing deferrals policy.’
For mental health support, contact the Samaritans on 116 123, email them at [email protected] or visit samaritans.org to find your nearest branch.
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