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NAHT middle leaders

 

For middle leaders 

NAHT has a category of membership specifically for middle leaders. We offer tailored support and services for middle leaders, online advice and resources, and full trade union protection to give you peace of mind.

Am I eligible? 

To be eligible to join NAHT, you need have a leadership responsibility within an education setting. Roles that are eligible include ALENCO, SENCO, phase leaders and subject leaders. This is not an exhaustive list and if you would like further clarification please email joinus@naht.org.uk.

Join

If you would like to join NAHT, or you’re a current member and would like to speak to someone on the phone, please give us a call on 0300 30 30 333, email us on info@naht.org.uk or click here

Help and advice

 

Classroom 

If you have responsibility in a specific area of the curriculum or are simply interested in best practice, our guides can help. 

Employment

If you want to know about your employment rights and whether you're being treated fairly and consistently, you can find help and advice on matters which may concern you as an employee. 

Management 

If you line manage staff or have accountability for a specific area, you can access help and advice to assist you in making informed decisions when carrying out your role.

 

Latest news 

Response from Professor Julia Waters, on behalf of the family of Ruth Perry, to the statement from His Majesty’s Chief Inspector Amanda Spielman on calls for Ofsted reform

On Friday 21 April 2023, NAHT was asked to help share a statement from Prof Julia Waters with the media, on behalf of Ruth Perry's family, responding to a statement by Ofsted on calls for inspection reform.

That statement is as follows:

“I have heard many assurances from the Chief Inspector for Schools and the Secretary of State for Education that their thoughts are with Ruth’s family. But we have yet to be contacted by either. Not only that, but neither Ofsted nor the Department for Education has yet suggested anything like a meaningful response to the growing calls for reform. 

“My sister’s death demonstrates the tragically high stakes, and yet Ofsted has so far done nothing.

“This latest response from the Chief Inspector for Schools is yet again totally insensitive to the situation and deaf to the urgency of the calls for change.

“Ofsted has marked its own homework and is telling us that everything is under control. I think many people would score Ofsted’s current system as “requires improvement” and their response to calls for reform as “totally inadequate”.

“It is not acceptable to continue to defend the indefensible in this way. If Ofsted will not do it, we ask education Secretary Gillian Keegan immediately to order a pause in all upcoming Ofsted inspections. We ask her to commission a review into what went wrong with the Ofsted inspection at Caversham Primary School and to learn the lessons. And we ask for a thorough, independent review of the Ofsted framework, structures and culture, to ensure that the wellbeing of the staff in schools, as well as of children, is considered more carefully. 

“Children should always be the priority, as they were for Ruth. But children are made more vulnerable to harm, not less, when teachers are worried more about the threats of Ofsted than about what’s genuinely best for their pupils.”

First published 21 April 2023
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