Borough told off for smugness
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Borough told off for smugness
https://www.tes.com/magazine/archive/borough-told-smugness
A LOCAL authority, whose schools are popular and over-
subscribed, is facing a re-inspection after inspectors criticised it for “complacency”.
Enfield, north London, has allowed a “lingering sense of under-expectation” to develop in its schools, a team from the Office for Standards in Education concluded.
Inspectors found that most of the council services performed at least competently, with many described as good or very good.
There was a strong partnership between schools and the authority, and high morale in both.
Director Liz Graham was described as exerting “quiet and purposeful leadership” and the service overall was well-managed, with strong support for literacy and numeracy in primary schools, and for school management.
Yet the council was allowing its schools to set overly-modest improvement targets.
Although low-performing schools set demanding goals, most of those at the top of the league tables were allowed to set targets below their most recent exam results.
The authority’s advice and development service was criticised for being “supportive rather than challenging”
In two schools, governors said performance reviews carried out by the authority had not alerted them to weaknesses identified by inspectors six months later.
Overall, pupil performance was broadly in line with national averages, but ought to be higher given the “enviable bedrock” provided by the authority’s many good services. Inspectors also described Enfield’s school admissions arrangements, which were having to cope with significant numbers of refugees and homeless families, as “highly problematic”.
At any time, there were 100-150 pupils who did not have a place at secondary school, for whom the council was forced to arranged “limited” tuition in, for example, libraries.
Inspectors concluded that the authority had the capacity to address its weaknesses. They promised to return within 18 months.
Strengths
Communication and
consultation with schools
Support to schools in special measures
Support for newly-qualified
teachers
Support for in-service training
Support for governors
Weaknesses
School target setting
Education development plan
Identification of schools
causing concern
Aspects of support for ICT
Special educational needs
strategy
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