Um, well, satisfactory means satisfactory, good enough. Of course, the government has decided that it doesn't believe in satisfactory, and all such schools are now branded 'requiring improvement' not just from when the framework was changed, but retrospectively.
I just do not believe that a satisfactory school sends children's life chances down the plug hole. That's the government line. The last person I heard say that was the academy broker who came to try and force us down the academy route.
The truth is that education is only one factor in children's life chances: where they are born, who their parents are, whether they live in an unhealthy environment, whether there are any jobs for them to do once they leave school. It's all very well to talk about the life chances of struggling children when all that awaits so many after they leave school is part-time, poorly paid, insecure service sector jobs.
Don't get me wrong. Education can change people's lives, I know that as an education professional. But it can't work miracles, and schools can't change the world.
In any case, the Ofsted framework is now so skewed and punitive that I am very dubious as to whether its judgements should carry any authority at all -- they do, of course, because the DfE is determined to use the full weight of its power to back them up, going over the heads of the wishes of parents, the views of professionals and the democratically expressed wishes of the community to do so.