Everyone thinks that teachers/schools/headteachers are scared of no
notice Ofsted inspections, and the cowardly Michael Gove back-tracked on
those in front of an audience of headteaches in Harrogate.
Let's
get one thing straight, most teachers have absolutely no problem with
no notice Ofsted inspections at all, as long as ridiculously detailed
lesson plans aren't required, as they currently are. The lesson plans
apparently required by Ofsted inspectors are of no use to teachers, and
if the inspectors themselves can't tell what the teacher is teaching then
either that teacher deserves an inadequate grade or the inspector
shouldn't be observing or judging lessons - my guess is that the latter
is almost always the case.
The only people who don't
want no notice inspections are poor teachers and headteachers - I have
said for years that inspections should be like "drop-ins" so that the
inspectors see what usually happens rather than to souped up, one-off
lesson as a show.
The problem is, and this is the
real problem that teachers have with Ofsted,
many inspectors have little or no recent classroom experience, if any at all, and often
have no knowledge of the subject they are observing. Their judgements
can make or break schools as well as teachers and are ill-informed and
generally pre-judged.
Add to that the negative rhetoric
of new Chief Inspector of Schools Sir Michael Wilshaw and Ofsted are
now totally unfit for purpose, doing the exact opposite of their
apparent mission to "aid the improvement of schools". Their new mission seems to be the demoralisation and destruction of the teaching profession, with Wilshaw himself saying that teacher morale is "unimportant".
Ofsted reports are good for nothing other than toilet paper, and they are not even very good for that.
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