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Secondary education

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Beechen Cliff Bath- 'Inadequate' Ofsted

278 replies

LovelyBath77 · 03/07/2018 09:32

Just seen this, doesn't look very good.

www.beechencliff.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/Ofsted-2018-Full-Inspection-Report.pdf

and previously-
files.api.beta.ofsted.gov.uk/136520__4.PDF

OP posts:
admission · 16/07/2018 23:08

Newdocket,you ask whether Ofsted were too hard because of the reported incident. Having read the report it is clear to me that there was a lot more safeguarding issues other than the reported incident. If the school had been able to show appropriate actions arising from the reported incident and there were no other safeguarding issues then I believe that it would not have feature hardly at all in the report, just a mention. But because of all the other safeguarding issues, the school was always going to be in special measures no matter how good teaching, learning and progress were. This is what the school do not seem to realise.The inspection was triggered by concerns around safeguarding and was therefore always going to be based around that.

localbathmum · 16/07/2018 23:12

Oldfield never actually had an inadequate report published. I imagine this was because the immediate steps to get rid of the head or whatever it was they did meant that this wasn't needed. Ofsted could see the school had taken change hugely seriously.

localbathmum · 16/07/2018 23:14

I think that the "it was outstanding four years ago" thing is a big red herring. No matter that the head is the same, it is hard to maintain outstanding and absolutely doesn't take long for a big slide to happen.

BubblesBuddy · 17/07/2018 00:08

The Oldfeld case is interesting. Despite an inadequate report in December 2013 largely due to safeguarding and other issues, it was not published. However snippets of it were leaked on www.learningspy.com if you want to read it. Obviously some sort of deal was done and the HT removed but it’s very odd!

Schools are being inspected under a new framework and I think there is a problem that the school insisted it was a highly academic school to the RI. In effect they didn’t know that their results and outcomes were not stellar and had not benchmarked. They hadn’t taken steps to improve because they thought they were “highly academic” and didn’t need to. Hence the RI has taken them down a peg or two because they had not done any rigourous evaluation of their outcomes and shortcomings.

BubblesBuddy · 17/07/2018 00:09

Second para refers to Beechen Cliff.

arealltheusernamestaken · 17/07/2018 07:53

The iGCSE thing is political, they are used as a wheeze by private schools to gain an advantage in the university admissions process. It is morally wrong for a state school to try and gain an unfair advantage over other state schools. The government don't want it's new GCSE undermined. Beechen has now wasted time preparing pupils for the much harder new GCSEs.

localbathmum · 17/07/2018 08:05

Having read the leaked oldfield report, I think the key difference is that the failings were so clearly to do with Kim Sparling and her governors that, once she'd gone, it really was possible to say it was outstanding. The achievement of the pupils was outstanding. These days, it wouldn't be possible to grade achievement of pupils outstanding if safeguarding not right, but nonetheless, they did not find the problems they did at Beechen.

arealltheusernamestaken · 17/07/2018 08:08

I meant ...by not preparing...

localbathmum · 17/07/2018 08:31

I have never bought the "igcse is harder so we will enter our students for a course that will potentially lower our grades". If you have very able students, you teach beyond the GCSE syllabus so that they are challenged and achieve high grades. Win win. Igcse was/is great for schools for whom high grades are their currency.

newdocket · 17/07/2018 09:44

admission that isn't really what I was asking. I appreciate safeguarding is a big issue and that on that alone they should be given the lowest possible grade. My question was about whether there is a chance they could have been motivated to give a hammering across the piece, not only related to safeguarding.

localbathmum · 17/07/2018 10:20

Ofsted has no interest in "hammering" schools that are meeting the needs of all their pupils. It is very often the case that leadership teams will be working very hard to find evidence to counteract the findings of the inspectors and are given every chance to do so. I have been in situations where that is the case. Early on, Beechen will have been aware this is the way it was heading and either couldn't, or chose not to, present evidence to support an alternate view.

arealltheusernamestaken · 17/07/2018 10:48

iGCSEs are easier, they are easier to get good grades in than the new GCSEs

LovelyBath77 · 17/07/2018 10:50

Well they are supposed to be re-inspected in 18 months I understand so guess we will need to wait and see what happens then.

OP posts:
BubblesBuddy · 17/07/2018 17:02

Yes. Evidence is key. They clearly could not substantiate their assertions and believed their own rhetoric. Ofsted is very evidence based. I always suggest posters read the Ofsted Handbook for a little light night reading!!!

Until the new GCSE syllabus, iGCSE had an extended syllabus above the standard GCSE. Getting an A* in iGCSE was better prep for A level because the syllabus overlapped a bit at the top end so students hit AS level running. Now that’s not the case and one assumes the inspectors felt the iGCSE was now redundant in terms of the needs of the pupils.

Clavinova · 18/07/2018 10:24

Evidence is key
Results in the open element of Progress 8 were in the bottom 20% of all schools in both 2016 and 2017. This indicates that pupils are not gaining qualifications in a wide range of high-quality courses. Indeed, nearly one third of pupils in Year 11 in 2017 did not achieve the open element in the Progress 8 measurement. As a result, leaders are limiting pupils’ potential to achieve well

Am I right in thinking that IGCSE English Language/Literature has also affected this measure - as the lower of the two English results is included in the open element? So, if you've got GCSE maths, triple science, geography, French, IGCSE English Language/Literature (8 subjects) - you haven't achieved well and you're in the bottom 20%?

noblegiraffe · 18/07/2018 10:30

IGCSE English counted in the league tables in 2016 and their open score was crap then too.

arealltheusernamestaken · 18/07/2018 13:59

I think the high volume of good results in the school's key subjects, maths and science, is a distraction from the deficiencies of its streaming system. My year 9 son, top set maths bottom set English, definitely would not fulfil his potential at BC. Not only this but any boy feeling inferior or superior based on their status within the streaming system is having their personal development damaged. This will not be the way the current school leadership see it.

localbathmum · 18/07/2018 14:03

I would agree. Quietly, some of my friends who have sons at the school say just the same. The thing is, it's very easy to come out in wholehearted, public support of the school. Those with concerns are balancing their desire to speak out against the way this will be regarded by the school.

LovelyBath77 · 18/07/2018 14:16

Previous Head in the local paper today in support of the school - he was there for 15 years I think prior to this one.

www.somersetlive.co.uk/in-your-area/former-beechen-cliff-school-head-1768393

OP posts:
LovelyBath77 · 18/07/2018 14:17

I also feel the same about the streaming system, and how the boys find it. Mine is quite aware in a lower stream and feels demoralised by it.

OP posts:
arealltheusernamestaken · 18/07/2018 17:00

Perhaps now you know the school is working with Midsomer Norton MAT you could find a contact there and confidentially get your concerns across. I thought the tone of BC's latest statement was a bit better and wondered if that was outside influence.

LovelyBath77 · 18/07/2018 17:35

Maybe. Kind of interesting to remember the post I wrote when looking t the school a few years ago...

www.mumsnet.com/Talk/secondary/2292955-Beechen-Cliff-school-Bath

OP posts:
arealltheusernamestaken · 18/07/2018 19:44

I read your original thread with interest. When I was choosing schools I heard a story about the BC Head taking pupils into his office to show them guns. Then on an open morning they were showing a bizarre photo to promote the school, it showed the Head surrounded with pupils posing/posturing with guns. He looked like the leader of a cult with brainwashed child soldiers. If this photo is still on display maybe it gave Inspectors the same impression it gave me.

Clavinova · 18/07/2018 20:01

The school's website suggests that streaming only occurs in Year 7.

For Year 8:
^The year splits in half (8A and 8x) depending on the language choice made.The two halves of the year run in parallel.
Pupils are set on attainment/ability in Maths and Computing and to some extent in Science, Humanities and English.
Other subjects have mixed ability classes. Year 7 assessment results will help to determine setting in subjects where it occurs.^

Summer exams in Year 8 and 9 also determine setting for key subjects. Is this not the case?

newdocket · 18/07/2018 20:35

That's my experience, yes. My son is in 8x. I remember being quite surprised to find out in the Y7 parents' evening that they streamed for Maths in Y8 and not for English or Science.

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