Secretary of State Speech at CST
The Secretary of State for Education, Bridget Phillipson spoke last week at the Confederation of School Trusts (CST) conference. She spoke at length t...
Ofsted have published new research exploring the role of MATs during school inspections.
The research finds that trusts are an important part of school inspection and have some involvement at each stage of the process. However, Ofsted’s legal remit only permits inspections to operate at an individual school level, limiting the extent to which inspectors can report on the work of the trust and its influence.
‘How multi-academy trusts are involved in school inspections report’ finds that:
School trusts are an integral part of the education landscape, with some running dozens of schools. They oversee all aspects of schools’ work and often turn around some very challenging situations. The inspectors and trust leaders Ofsted spoke to highlighted that inspection only of individual schools did not hold the trust sufficiently accountable, or credit the trust enough for its work.
The report draws evidence from survey responses by 105 His Majesty’s Inspectors (HMI) and 11 semi-structured interviews with trust chief executive officers (CEOs) or their representatives.
The National Governance Association (NGA) holds the view that MATs should be inspected as single organisations to help ensure that large-scale collaboration works for their pupils and communities they serve.
Would you like to hear more from Ofsted about its expectations? DAG’s popular Summer Term Seminar will be held on 14th June 2023 with James McNeillie, HMI Regional Director, South West, book your place via [email protected].
14-05-2026