Purpose of the Commission
The School Improvement Commission has brought together leading educationalists and experts to consider how the government can best support all schools to improve.
Context
In September 2018, NAHT published the report of the Accountability Commission, Improving School Accountability. The Commission called for a rebalancing of holding schools to account with helping them to improve. It set out a compelling vision for the future of inspection and outlined some high-level principles for how we can better help the school system to improve.
Many of the Commission’s recommendations (for creating a more proportionate and effective system of accountability) have subsequently been accepted by the government and adopted by opposition parties.
Yet while our thinking was well developed on the future of school accountability, less time was spent within Accountability Commission meetings considering how we can better help all schools to improve. NAHT, therefore, convened a new Commission to consider precisely that.
The Commission has reviewed a huge range of evidence to better understand what is getting in the way of schools improving further and faster and to provide pragmatic proposals for change. Our ambition is twofold: that schools that face the deepest of challenges in the most deprived communities are better supported to succeed; and schools that are already good are better supported on their journey to great.
Scope of review
The Commission:
- identified the barriers to, and enablers of, school improvement and against this considered the adequacy of current support arrangements in place in England, Wales and Northern Ireland;
- contrasted practice at home with practice internationally and considered what can be learnt from other sectors, through a review of published research and testimony of expert witnesses; and
- considered alternative approaches and, on the basis of the evidence available, proposed a direction of travel for the government and the profession, with concrete recommendations for change.
NAHT will publish a report setting out the Commission’s findings and recommendations in summer term 2020.
The Commission met on five occasions only, between October 2019 and February 2020.
Meeting details
The Commission met in London on the following dates:
- 23 October 2019
- 20 November 2019
- 11 December 2019
- 29 January 2020
- 26 February 2020
Themes for discussion
Through the five meetings the group considered:
1. Definitions of school improvement
2. The government strategy for building capacity in the system – past, present and future
3. Barriers to, and enablers of, improvement
4. Strengths and weaknesses of current approaches to school improvement
5. Alternative approaches – systems, structures and collaboration
6. Role of peer review within the school improvement system
7. Overcoming area-based challenges – impact of deprivation and isolation
8. Implementation challenge - cascading expert knowledge and developing expertise
9. Encouraging innovation and future-proofing school systems
The final report – April 28 2020
NAHT staff will produce the report of the Commission detailing findings and recommendations for change.
The report will attempt to faithfully represent the collective view of the Commission - identifying where there was consensus and where there were differences of opinion on the way forward.
Membership of the Commission
Chair:
- Nick Brook (NAHT deputy general secretary)
Members:
- Dame Alison Peacock (Chartered College of Teaching)
- Carole Willis (NFER)
- Chris Kirkham-Knowles (Scalby Learning Trust)
- Emma Knights (National Governance Association)
- Gary Wilkie (Learning in Harmony Trust)
- James Bowen (NAHT)
- John Blake (Ark and Now Teach)
- Judy Shaw (NAHT president)
- Julie McCulloch (ASCL)
- Kate Chhatwal (Challenge Partners)
- Matt Davis (Education Development Trust)
- Natalie Perera (Education Policy Institute)
- Richard Gill (Teaching Schools Council)
- Rob Williams (NAHT)
- Stephen Fraser (Education Endowment Foundation)
- Stephen Tierney (Headteachers’ Roundtable)
- Steve Munby (Munby Education)
- Professor Toby Greany (University of Nottingham)
- Tom Rees (Ambition Institute)
- Melanie Renowden (Ambition Institute)
- Tom Richmond (EDSK)
Review lead: Rob Williams (NAHT - policy)
First published 06 March 2020
First published 06 March 2020