Category: Speeches

  • Lucy Neville-Rolfe – 2023 Speech at Deloitte Digital Conference (Baroness Neville-Rolfe)

    Lucy Neville-Rolfe – 2023 Speech at Deloitte Digital Conference (Baroness Neville-Rolfe)

    The speech made by Lucy Neville-Rolfe, Baroness Neville-Rolfe, on 17 January 2023.

    I am delighted to be here today. I have spent a lot of time with Deloitte over the years and have seen their spectacular growth and success and I have an enduring passion for small business – my father was a farmer who went bust, but he rose from the ashes and founded a successful small consultancy business – in Brussels as it happens trading on his brilliant language skills.

    Before entering politics I spent a long time in business. I was a main board and executive director at Tesco but I also worked at much smaller companies, including Dobbies garden centres and most recently at Crown Agents which provided overseas development services most brilliantly on vaccine delivery and in the Ukraine war. I know the challenges SMEs face every day, and I also know the  opportunities we can unlock by making the right changes in government – particularly to the complex procurement rules that are the bane of the small businesses.

    Happily I am now helping make these changes happen through the Procurement Bill which I have steered through the House of Lords and today is a great chance to discuss how the Bill and the changes I have pioneered will help small businesses get a bigger slice of the public procurement pie, both directly and through the supply chain. It’s good for you and it’s good for the country as a whole. By supporting your enterprise we help to grow the economy  – one of the Prime Minister’s five core pledges to kickstart the New Year.

    I want to start with some good news. Our determination to support small businesses through opening up public sector opportunities has led to record central government spending with SMEs – the £19.3 billion spent in 2021/2022, the latest data available, was the fourth consecutive increase. I’m sorry to say it’s not yet 1 in 3, it’s 27%, but progress has been made and obviously we’re determined to make further progress.

    And it’s been thanks to some fantastic collaborative working with you – the SMEs – and across government. Along the way, we have been holding departmental feet to the fire and challenging our own colleagues. What are they doing to increase their spend with SMEs and start-ups? How are they helping to overcome obstacles involved with bidding for work or contracting with central departments and agencies?

    We have been listening and learning. Working with industry, trade bodies, and the Cabinet Office’s own SME Advisory Panel – which hears first hand from 25 SME owners and entrepreneurs about the challenges and barriers they must overcome.

    And we have been taking practical steps, such as government departments having the power to exclude suppliers from the procurement process if they cannot demonstrate a history of prompt payment to their supply chain, and using the Public Procurement Review Service, based in the Cabinet Office, to unblock overdue payments on cases that are raised with them.

    But there is so much further for us to go together. After all, procurement accounts for around a third of all public expenditure each year: £300 billion, everywhere from huge projects like HS2 to local government, schools and prisons. Our focus is always on delivering the best possible value and outcomes from that investment: it is a major contributor to driving efficiency in public services. We want to see your portion of that public procurement pie chart grow even bigger – by using the Procurement Bill to help you, as well as venture capital and start-ups making a debut in contracting with the public sector.

    I remember when I was at Tesco I was asked if we could help with schools, I looked into it and it was a nightmare of bureaucracy, so I said it wasn’t for us, but we have to change this. Your enterprise and innovation is the hallmark of companies represented here today. It is a sad fact that productivity has largely flatlined ever since the financial crisis and we are determined to change that paradigm. If we could get productivity up we could grow the economy without pain so we do need to work on that and we want to change that paradigm.

    I know how important it is to get the details of the new rules right – and to support the underlying cultural change – so that public sector contracts are properly accessible and attractive for SMEs. We understand the limitations and restrictions of a regime – or rather, regimes: there are no fewer than four,  comprising 350 EU-based rules – designed primarily to support the EU single market rather than what we put first: value for money, efficiency, and doing a lot more to  support British jobs. And that’s why we consulted widely to get a clear sense of what needs to improve. I know we’ve had too many ministers in the Cabinet Office but there has been a thread of constant officials and we’re moving in the right direction. We heard, for example, about:

    • The inflexibility of the procedures, and the inability to negotiate and evolve bids – something that  would be standard practice in the private sector;
    • A cultural reluctance to work with potential suppliers, to test the market and help develop in partnership, before embarking on the procurement;
    • Less obvious barriers to SME participation: seen in some procurers’ practice of insisting that bidders provide three years’ audited accounts when their size means they aren’t required to file any; or that they have insurance to cover the contract even before putting in a bid, in case they win the contract. And possibly most important,
    • The perennial problem of late payment, a particular curse  for indirect suppliers.

    The new consolidated regime we are putting in place – which covers everything from paperclips to hospital buildings – directly addresses these challenges, and more. Even as the Bill moved through the House of Lords, I made a number of amendments to improve it, acting on feedback from the sector and with a surprising degree of cross party support.

    I know that SMEs welcomed the new provision that I instigated which explicitly requires contracting authorities to think about SMEs as routine. It means procurement teams will have to make sure there are no unnecessary barriers that might hinder smaller companies in the contract; and ensure that bidding timelines are realistic.

    It also means there is more consistent and helpful feedback to unsuccessful bidders, showing how their bid compared to the winning bid, and this is something I’ve had complaints from not only SMEs but local government bidding for central government contracts, we always lose and we don’t know why, this is not good practice. And I know many here will welcome the application of 30-day payment terms to public sub-contracts the entire length of the supply chain, regardless of whether they are written into the contract.

    We have also put provisions on the face of the Bill for the new single central online platform that underpins the new system, and will achieve a step change in transparency.  The platform, which will be free for all to access, will make life easier for suppliers in a range of ways. For example, it will let suppliers see forward pipelines. This will allow them to find out more, plan which contracts to go for, where to invest, and when to prepare to bid or work with partners to develop consortia and joint bids. It will establish a single place for suppliers to register and self-authenticate their key bidding information –  a “tell us once” approach that will cut out needless repetitive bureaucracy.

    One point in particular, for this audience, is the greater flexibility coming your way, and the simpler processes you will see, that will support innovation. Commercial teams will have more flexibility to design and run a procedure that suits the market in which they are operating, tailoring a procurement to their exact needs. Contracting authorities will find it easier to contract with partners to research, develop and eventually buy a new product and service in a single process; and they will be able to build in stages to the procurement process such as product demonstrations – something I know the tech sector has been pressing for – so for example a contracting authority would be able to invite bidders to come in, meet the buyer and showcase the new app they’re developing, so that they can get a really thorough appreciation of solutions being offered by suppliers and understand what those solutions do in practice, not just on paper.

    The new rules will also make clear that innovation in procurement does not apply just to buying something brand new: it can be about developing an existing product to meet fresh requirements.

    We recognise, however, that changing the law is only one half of the story. Changing the culture and behaviours of public sector buyers is another. Having the flexibility to work innovatively is not the same thing as working innovatively. That’s why we are investing in what I trust will be clear guidance, but also a significant training programme for contracting authorities ahead of implementation in 2024.

    Businesses have a key role in unlocking value from public contracts –  we look forward to continuing our work with business groups and trade associations, and our regional Growth Hubs, to ensure that the supplier community is also well prepared. I was at our Darlington economic campus last Friday and in York talking about how we can make a real difference from the Cabinet Office.

    This is because I want to see SMEs right across the UK helping the recovery by being more successful and winning much more of that procurement pie.

    There are exciting times ahead, from which we can all benefit.

    Thank you for listening. I look forward to your comments and questions.

  • Amanda Spielman – 2023 Speech to the University of Oxford’s Department of Education

    Amanda Spielman – 2023 Speech to the University of Oxford’s Department of Education

    The speech made by Amanda Spielman, the Chief Inspector of Ofsted, on 18 January 2023.

    So I have been asked to talk today about the use of research evidence in education and I’m going to talk mainly about how Ofsted uses research, but I am also going to be talking about its wider use in the education sector.

    Overall, I think there is a tremendous amount for the sector to be proud of: England is really ahead of many countries in harnessing research effectively in education. And Ofsted has clearly been part of that movement in recent years.

    I must declare at the outset that I am not myself an education researcher. But I have now spent more than 20 years in education, and in all of that time I have been working in different contexts to make good use of available evidence, and to encourage others to do the same, and have made sure that at Ofsted we now have the capacity to do that well.

    And of course, we have several big stakes in good use of research evidence.

    First, we want to ground our inspection approach as securely as we can in evidence about education itself.

    In this way inspections can encourage schools (and of course nurseries, colleges and the other entities we inspect) to align their models and practices with what is already known about quality. That is a big part of being a force for improvement.

    Secondly, we aim to build and iterate inspection models that achieve the intended purposes with sufficient validity and reliability and minimal unintended consequences. Of course, we don’t have total freedom here: we have to work within our statutory framework and within the policy constraints that are set by government, including funding. So that’s 2 stakes.

    The third stake is the aggregation of the evidence that we collect in doing our work, and the related research work that we carry out, makes us a generator of research evidence for others’ benefit, as well as a user.

    And of course, we are just one part of a wider landscape. Much excellent work has been carried out in universities like this one [the University of Oxford] over many years; the Education Endowment Foundation (EEF) has become part of the national network of What Works centres; and many other institutes and bodies do significant work.

    And that brings me to a fourth strand, which links back to the first. Many bodies act as intermediaries, translating complex maps of academic evidence into reports and summaries that can be more immediately useful to practitioners. And this is not of itself a core Ofsted activity, but we know that it is one of the ways that our products are used.

    Curriculum reviews

    For instance, over the last 2 years, we have drawn up and published a series of curriculum reviews. These offer a researched conception of what we consider to be a high-quality education, by subject and by phase. They help translate our researched framework into subjects and phases. And they provide a platform for inspector training in judging curriculum quality.

    (And of course, if we are to be consistent as an inspectorate, we must have a shared conception of what constitutes quality. If you ask people to judge quality in the absence of a clear corporate statement, they will inevitably bring their own views to bear: and of course, individual views will always vary to some extent.)

    But we also know that schools draw extensively on these reviews to develop their curriculums. They have been downloaded many hundreds of thousand times. I believe this shows a tremendous appetite for engagement with educational research, as well as an understandable desire to gain some insight into Ofsted’s approach.

    But of course, there is no comprehensive and definitive version of educational truth. There is much that is well established, and much that is not. New evidence and insights can cast doubt on or discredit previously accepted wisdom. I’ll come back to the difficulties this creates a bit later.

    But children’s lives cannot be put on hold. So neither schools nor we can down tools, to wait for a pot of fairy gold at the end of an evidential rainbow. We must work with what is available, and what is most relevant to our work, while recognising that we will always have to iterate in the light of new developments.

    How Ofsted works

    I think this is a good moment to explain just a little more about Ofsted.

    In many ways we [Ofsted] operate as you would expect. The principles of good inspection and regulation are straightforward: proportionality, accountability, consistency, transparency and targeting. These are the Hampton principles, and they are deeply embedded in our frameworks and handbooks.

    But how does an inspectorate work?

    I think we operate to a fairly standard model.

    Our frameworks and handbooks are the policy instruments. They are powerful levers on the education sector, and they exert influence long before an inspector comes through the door.

    The inspection process itself is designed around professional dialogue. It is intended to help schools improve – and our post-inspection surveys do find that, in most cases, it does.

    At the end of most inspections, we make judgements, for overall effectiveness and for several component judgements. They give parents, responsible bodies and government a clear statement about the overall performance of the institution.

    We also publish inspection reports, describing what is being done well and what needs to improve.

    We inspect at the level of the individual school and other institutions, but to report only at this level would be a tremendous waste of evidence and insight. So we have a strand that is responsible for drawing out the insights from the aggregation of our evidence, and for additional research where needed to supplement this, and also to run our evaluation programme.

    In fact, there are 3 distinct flows here.

    One is the dissemination programme, that includes the curriculum reviews I just talked about, thematic reviews and other research, such as reports recently commissioned by the DfE on tutoring and on T Levels. These are intended mainly for policymakers and for the education sector.

    One flow is back into our frameworks and handbooks.

    And the final flow is back into our inspection processes, including inspector training and quality assurance.

    And of course, we are informed by the work of institutions in all this – we do not exist in a bubble.

    What inspection is, and is not

    And I want to take a couple of minutes to remind us of a broader question: what are the purposes of inspection?

    I believe there are 3 main purposes for inspection today that are relevant for the area of research. These sit in the context of a long-standing government policy that puts responsibility for diagnosis with Ofsted, but locates responsibility for treatment and support with schools themselves and with the regions group at the Department for Education (DfE). (This policy is often misunderstood by people who would like us to function primarily as a support mechanism.)

    So, what are those purposes?

    First, inspections provide information and assurance to parents. Ofsted was created in the early 90s in the context of the parents charter.

    Secondly, they inform central and local government and other controllers of schools. Given the independence of our judgements, they provide a legitimate basis for action by others when its needed. And they also signal excellence that others can learn from.

    And then, thirdly, they can and should be of value to the people at the receiving end: to teachers and heads. This is true even when inspection is limited to diagnosis. I would be deviating too far from my subject today if I went into the reasons why, but this is a matter of tremendous importance to me.

    Case study: the education inspection framework (EIF)

    So I am going to take as a case study the development of our main education inspection framework, the EIF. It had to meet those purposes: they are largely defined by government. But we do have flexibility in how we go about meeting these purposes.

    And we aim to ground all our work in research evidence and to operate as transparently as possible.

    So we took time and care to develop the framework iteratively over 2 years.

    To prepare, we reviewed a wide range of research, from many universities, from the Education Endowment Foundation, from the Department for Education, and from other sources. We summarised what we drew on in a review that was published to provide transparency, both as to the evidence we used and our interpretation of that evidence. This gave the framework additional credibility showed the thought, attention and range of views that fed into its development.

    And we also did some substantial work on the state of curricula in both primary and secondary schools that, itself, will be informed by research into cognitive psychology. This is an important body of knowledge that wasn’t always being drawn on.

    The first phase of our curriculum research found systemic weaknesses in much of curriculum approach and design.

    In the second phase we studied a sample of schools that had curriculum thinking and development embedded in their approach.

    The third phase, tested a model of inspecting curriculum, based on our findings. This confirmed much of what we found in the first 2 phases and also allowed us to explore some potential curriculum indicators, some evidence collection methods, and also the practical limitations of inspections. And we were also able to test our ability to discern strength from weakness in curriculum development and application.

    All of this evidence gathering, research, consultation, evaluation, iterative development and testing resulted in the most evidenced framework that Ofsted has ever produced. The EIF is built around a strong and well-warranted construct of what good education is. And it is built around the importance of curriculum: the real substance of education.

    And I have talked before about the substance and purpose of education. It does need to prepare young people for life and work, but that is not all. It must also be about broadening their minds and horizons. It should give them the tools to make their communities and the world better places to live in. And it should allow them to contribute to society and the advancement of civilisation, not just the labour market.

    The EIF is broad enough to recognise all of these purposes of education. And it is why it firmly promotes a full and rich conception of knowledge, not a narrow and reductive one.

    The EIF and the sector-specific handbooks now underpin all the education inspections we do. They help us to assess the quality of education a service provides.

    I will add that there has been considerable interest from overseas education ministries and inspectorates in the EIF, and in how we developed it. As far as we know, it really is the first education inspection framework to be developed in this way.

    Area SEND framework development

    To do the EIF, we had a wealth of research and findings to draw on. But that is not always the case. Sometimes, we have to develop iteratively in the light of experience, bringing in such evidence as is available.

    I thought I’d talk briefly about our new framework for special needs inspections for a quick contrast. These inspections review the effectiveness of all the relevant agencies in providing joined up special educational needs and/or disabilities (SEND) services in a local area. There is surprisingly very little research evidence to draw on for this.

    In planning a successor to our first framework, we recognised the important work and lessons from the first set of inspections, but we did also see room for improvement.

    We’d already identified recurring weaknesses, flaws and delays in the identification of children’s needs. We had also often found a lack of clarity about who is responsible for what, between the various organisations involved.

    We also listened to a lot of feedback from children, young people and their families, from people working in all kinds of SEND and related services, and from the many organisations that support children and young people with SEND as well as representative bodies.

    We combined the inspection analysis with the feedback from the various strands of engagement. That enabled us to develop and refine our new proposals. These proposals or aspects of them were then tested through discussions and a set of pilot inspections. (Piloting is a very powerful tool for us.)

    All of this led to a new approach with 9 proposals for improvement, which we consulted on last summer. Happily, we found strong support for all proposals, increasing our confidence in the direction, and also provided valuable comments and suggestions that led to some changes and clarifications in the draft framework and handbook.

    In summary, we have started by building on our existing framework and inspection programme. We incorporated our analysis, feedback and engagement. We tested our new proposals. We consulted on them – and all of this going into the framework. We think we have created an approach that will improve outcomes for pupils with SEND, help families navigate a complex and sometimes adversarial system, and strengthen accountability by clarifying where responsibility for improvement lies.

    I think it’s a good example of how to develop a framework in a less evidence-rich environment.

    Evaluation

    The next thing I want to talk about is evaluation.

    These cases studies illustrate how we draw on established research and generate research to design our models, in the light of both well-developed and under-developed bodies of research.

    But we also need to know whether our frameworks and methodologies are being implemented as intended and having the effects we expect. We therefore have a programme of evaluation work. When we do this, we make a contribution to the body of professional knowledge about inspection. But, significantly for us, the evaluation work completes a positive feedback loop. We harness those findings and then use them in refining our process, our handbooks and our frameworks.

    One important example of how we evaluate is by using research methods to establish how reliable inspections are. Our frameworks and handbooks clearly outline what we focus on in inspection, and what we consider to be of high quality. So inspector judgement is, from the very start, focused on a construct that’s transparent to all through our handbooks. Our inspectors are there to apply the framework, not to apply their own individual ideas of what good looks like.

    Beyond our routine quality assurance activities, we have conducted reliability studies on inspector judgement inter-rater reliability. In other words: do 2 inspectors come to the same judgement? We saw high levels of agreement in the results.

    Taken together, our quality assurance work and reliability studies all feed back into the continuing development of our frameworks and handbooks.

    The limits on consistency

    And I want to talk a bit more, actually, about the concept of consistency of inspection judgements. Those of you here who, like Michelle Meadows and Jo-Anne Baird, are experts in educational assessment will immediately recognise the issue of reliability, with all its counter-intuitive complexities.

    School inspection is of course a process of human judgement. It complements various other measurement processes, including exams and testing and also many other kinds of measurement, such as attendance reporting. Judgements of overall effectiveness are composite judgements reflecting many aspects of performance.

    Now the reliability of human judgement processes has been studied in contexts in and beyond education. Michelle’s 2005 review of the literature on marking reliability was something I read early in my time at Ofqual, and gave me really valuable insight into the strengths and limitations of human judgement.

    For me, there are 2 particularly important lessons that come from that literature. First, that ‘perfect’ reliability is unlikely to be achievable. And secondly, that improving reliability often comes at the price of sacrificing some validity. The narrower the construct you choose to assess, the more precisely you can assess it, at least in theory. But the narrower the construct, the less valuable the assessment is likely to be in practice.

    And as you all know, national expectations of schools and other education institutions are broad. There is a democratic consensus that compulsory education should extend far beyond minimum competence in maths and literacy, that it should encompass wider personal development on many fronts as well as academic study, and that schools should have responsibilities for safeguarding children.

    This means that the ‘overall effectiveness’ that we are required to judge is, and is likely to remain, a broad construct. The corollary of this is that so-called ‘perfect’ reliability is not achievable.

    We accept this in many other areas of life, though perhaps without pausing to think a great deal about it. Driving test examiners; judges passing sentence in courts; judges in an Olympic sporting event; I am sure you can think of other examples where we accept that there will be some level of human variation. (The Eurovision Song Contest is an example of where the divergence between markers is so extreme as to suggest that they may not all be assessing the same construct.)

    And in fact one of the reasons that inspection continues to exist is precisely because we all recognise that data measures alone cannot carry the entire weight of measuring quality. And there can be unintended consequences of putting too much weight on data outcomes alone: there can be unhealthy backwash, for children and adults alike. So looking under the bonnet, at how outcomes are being achieved, has real value.

    There will therefore always be a degree of variability than cannot be engineered out of inspection, and where we could do more harm than good if we tried.

    But of course, we take consistency very seriously. We design the framework with great care, to be clear, structured and unambiguous. We design inspection processes with great care. We put a great deal of effort into recruiting and training our inspectors, when they join, in their early months and throughout their time with us. We have many quality assurance processes, covering all aspects of the process and also our reporting. And we have many sources of feedback: post-inspection surveys, complaints, our evaluation work, as well as regular interaction with sector representative bodies. All of this is used to keep on improving our work.

    Proactive research

    But our research isn’t only about developing and improving Ofsted’s regular work. We publish a lot that faces the outside world.

    Some of this is relatively straightforward aggregated information: we produce official statistics, including inspection outcome data, and publications such as our annual children’s social care survey.

    We also aggregate, analyse and disseminate evidence that we collect through our routine work, to produce our annual report and other publications.

    And we do more than just secondary analysis of inspection and regulatory evidence. We also conduct primary research where we need to supplement what we can learn directly from inspection.

    Our body of work on pandemic recovery was a significant recent contribution. We recognised that we were particularly well-placed to report on the continuing challenges schools and children faced as education gradually returned to normal. We do have unparalleled access to thousands of children and professionals.

    We saw the effects of the pandemic and restrictions on children: on their academic progress but also on their physical, social and emotional development. And for a minority of children, being out of the line of teachers’ sight had harmful consequences.

    We saw the efforts that have and are still being made to accelerate children’s learning and wider development and to address those harms. Collating and aggregating and evaluating what we found gave valuable insights.

    We reported on a live, shifting situation, publishing dozens of rapid reports, briefing notes and commentaries from September 2020 onwards. Our reports and the speed of their publication helped everyone understand what was happening. Our insight was crucial in making sure that policymakers understood the continuing challenges and it helped us highlight the good or innovative practice that others could learn from. We also reported on poorer practice and on how we would expect schools and other providers to improve.

    And professionals in all sectors have told us that our research accurately reflected their experience of the pandemic and post-pandemic periods. We know that we were one of the few bodies doing early research on this. And there was international interest in our work – it was picked up in places like Portugal and South Korea, for example, as well as by other European inspectorates. And I think this showed both its importance and the scarcity of credible research on education during the pandemic.

    This work made us very aware of the difficulties in schools, colleges and nurseries, at every level, from those working directly with children, all the way through to their leaders.

    It also gave us a strong basis for our decision to return to inspection, confident that we had the right level of understanding of the continuing challenges. It helped us to frame the right expectations, suitably high but still realistic. We wanted to see high ambition and support to help children make up for lost time. But our judgements needed to be fair in this context.

    And it is worth noting that the flexibility designed into the EIF allowed us to do this within the existing framework. The previous framework would not have been able to adapt in the same way. We would have needed a new temporary framework – something that professionals in the sector clearly told us that they did not want. The sector had spent time contributing to the development of the EIF, and then in understanding and embedding it. Sector feedback was very clearly in favour of sticking with the framework, suitably applied.

    We’re also examining other trends in education and social care, bringing our unique position and reach to bear for the benefit of children and learners. We have researched, for example, how local authorities plan for sufficient accommodation and services for children in carehow alternative provision for primary-age pupils is being used; and how secondary schools are supporting struggling readers.

    Tutoring

    Much of our research work is commissioned by government. One example is our work on tutoring, the first phase of which was published last year. This was based on visits to 63 schools to explore their tuition strategies and how well they had integrated tuition with their core education programmes, to report on the progress and, to the extent possible, the effectiveness of the National Tutoring Programme, on which the government is spending £1 billion.

    We found some good use of tutoring, but also that quality varied greatly depending on the school and the tutoring provider. And we also found limited understanding of the effectiveness of tutoring. Used well and properly integrated, tutoring can be a huge help to pupils who fall behind, but it is a very expensive intervention. It therefore needs to have a big enough impact to justify its cost.

    There are obvious difficulties with assessing impact. Getting a handle on the effectiveness of tutoring at the level of the individual child or the school is always going to be problematic: how do you attribute progress as between classroom teaching and tutoring? It may be possible where tutoring is very targeted at specific topics or areas of the curriculum. But expectations here do need to be realistic.

    Our reviews are already helping the government develop the tuition programme and helping schools and colleges to implement and integrate tutoring better, and the second phase of our research, which is currently in the field, will explore how schools are adapting and applying the programme after a year’s experience.

    Policy evaluation

    Some of our work is characterised as policy evaluation. One recent example was the exemption of outstanding schools from inspection.

    We have now reported on the first year of inspections of previously exempt schools since the exemption was lifted. Most schools inspected were no longer outstanding, and over a fifth dropped to requires improvement or inadequate. These were typically the schools that had gone longest without inspection, typically around 13 years. And we have also set a somewhat higher bar for the outstanding grade in the EIF, so no-one should over-interpret this data. But nonetheless, we can now see that the policy expectation of continuing improvement in the absence of inspection was not realised.

    We will be publishing a further report on this strand of inspection later this spring, including an analysis of the weaknesses that have been found in formerly outstanding schools that have been judged RI or inadequate.

    Research for practitioners

    Our research doesn’t just provide recommendations or suggest improvements for policymakers though. We also publish research reports and reviews for the education sector: for early years, schools and post-16, from the viewpoint of our inspection framework.

    For example, we recently published our ‘Best start in life’ research review, which examines the factors that contribute to a high-quality early education. The review drew on a range of sources, including academic and policy literature.

    That was the first in a series of reports on early education. We identified some of the features that high-quality early years curriculum and pedagogy may have. What were these features? A curriculum that considers what all children should learn, practitioners who choose activities and experiences after they have determined the curriculum, and adults who think carefully about what children already know, teaching them what they need to know, and broadening their interests.

    It was the latest in the series of research reviews we have published since early 2021 – I mentioned the school curriculum reviews earlier.

    I think this might be a good moment to pick up on the issue of challenge and contest in education research. Some of our work is in areas where there is little that is contested. But much of it, like so many domains of knowledge, is in areas that are highly contested. And this is certainly true of much of the curriculum.

    I can remember a previous Ofqual research director, Michelle’s predecessor, a man with a very long memory, telling me that in successive rounds of qualification reform, the 2 subjects that have always been hardest to finalise have been religious studies and mathematics, where the divergence of views among academic subject experts is especially, and perhaps surprisingly to those who aren’t in the mathematics world, particularly wide. I also remember hearing that in the most recent round of reforms, disagreements between members in another subject expert group were so profound that tears were shed in a group meeting.

    It is therefore entirely unsurprising that our work attracts hostility from some quarters. I think this tends to reflect those wider continuing disputes.

    As we said in the principles paper which we published ahead of the curriculum reviews:

    Educational research is contestable and contested, and so are documents such as these research reviews. Therefore, we are sharing our thinking with subject communities so that we can get input from the broader subject community. We hope that publishing our evidence base for how we have developed our understanding of subject quality will provide insight, both on what evidence we have used and on how we have interpreted that evidence when creating research criteria for our subject reports.

    Each curriculum review collates relevant research evidence, but they are not intended to be all-embracing papers covering the entirety of academic thought on a subject. That is not our job, and it would not be a responsible use of our time and resources. Instead, their primary purpose is to lay out the evidence-base for the kind of subject education that our frameworks reward as high quality. They give a broad foundation for the judgements that we make.

    While it is not their primary purpose, we do also hope that they will help subject leaders in their curriculum planning. The reviews are not narrowly prescriptive but offer what appear to be reliable general principles that schools can then apply intelligently. They are also not overly restrictive: each review lays out only the possible feature of high-quality education, without claiming that these are the only features. The enormous popularity with schools, of both the reports and of the related webinars that we offer, is an encouraging indicator that they are indeed helpful.

    And we have also heard how helpful schools have found having reviews across the set of subjects. Schools are really appreciating the exploration of the nature of a high quality curriculum across subjects, including computing, PE, music and so on. These research reviews fill a vacuum because in some subjects, curriculum (as opposed to pedagogical approaches) has not been a significant focus of other work. Subject and senior leaders regularly share their appreciation of our work, which gives them guidance across a range of subjects.

    And of course, this will in turn contribute to improving the quality of education, raising standards for all children.

    How the sector uses research

    In exploring the place and function of research evidence in educational policy and practice, it is also interesting to reflect on how the sectors we inspect themselves use research.

    On the one hand, there is a very positive picture, with much to be optimistic about. We know that many teachers see being reflective practitioners and researching practice as part of their professional identity. Teachers and other practitioners draw on EEF toolkits and summaries, for example, and apply them in their everyday practice. All this is helping to eliminate some of the perhaps fashionable fads and follies of the past.

    Twinned with our focus on subject education in the EIF, there’s also been a renewed interest in subject-based research. This development, in particular, really helpfully bridges academic departments within universities with classroom subject teaching in different phases of education. And teachers write about these things, blog about them, and exchange their knowledge at practitioner conferences such as ResearchEd.

    And the aroma of that interest has drifted upwards – out of the classroom – to school leaders who, because of their leadership of the curriculum, are developing their subject research knowledge about how best to sustain and develop school subjects. In this way, I think we have contributed to an intellectual resurgence in school leadership. And I think this really is a tremendous thing, to awaken intellectual curiosity at all levels of educational institutions.

    But, on the other hand, this brings complexity. As you all know, navigating research is not without its difficulties. The sheer range of research and evidence in a domain as large as education is daunting: some research is not empirical, other kinds of research are empirical, using qualitative and quantitative methods. Discerning strength, weakness, relevance, and applicability in research requires professional judgement. And without this, cargo cults and lethal mutations can emerge.

    What I do think would be helpful now is a clearer overall architecture that recognises and values all the parts of the system that generate educational research and evidence, including the entities that are translating research into usable products for practitioners, and the tools to navigate it. And it would also be helpful to have a clearer medium-term focus on building consensus through research.

    Conclusion

    Now, this evening, I have concentrated mainly on how Ofsted uses research. What I really wanted to make clear is that research isn’t just one part of what we do, it is a part of everything we do.

    It informs our day-to-day work, our frameworks and handbooks, and our overall approach. It helps us strive to be better, and to inspire improvement in the sectors we work in. And it lets us to share what we know with government and with practitioners so that they can make informed decisions.

    And I hope that you will take this talk and our wider approach as showing how much we value the work that happens in this and in many other universities, here and abroad, as well as in smaller specialist institutions. I believe that you and the whole education sector benefit from this renewed intellectual energy, which is being harnessed so constructively in so many places. I’m fortunate to been in positions over the last 20 years where I have been able to promote this healthy development.

    And with that, I’d be happy to take your questions. I have brought along 2 colleagues today: Alex Jones, who is our Director of Insights and Research, and Richard Kueh, acting Deputy director for Research and Evaluation, who was previously the religious education lead in our curriculum unit and author of our RE curriculum review.

    Thank you.

  • James Cleverly – 2023 Statement on One Year Since Houthi Attacks on United Arab Emirates

    James Cleverly – 2023 Statement on One Year Since Houthi Attacks on United Arab Emirates

    The statement made by James Cleverly, the Foreign Secretary, on 17 January 2023.

    A year ago today the Houthis inflicted a deadly attack on the UAE, killing 3 innocent civilians.

    The UK’s commitment to standing with our Emirati friends in the face of threats to their security is as strong today as it was then.

  • Penny Mordaunt – 2023 Speech to the Institute for Government Annual Conference

    Penny Mordaunt – 2023 Speech to the Institute for Government Annual Conference

    The speech made by Penny Mordaunt, the Leader of the House of Commons, to the Institute for Government annual conference held on 17 January 2023.

    Good afternoon, everyone and thank you for inviting me along today.

    I’m a fan of the institute. The IfG is a very helpful organisation. It produces the performance tracker. Many interesting reports.

    And in advance of events such as this, a round up assessment of the government’s agenda and challenges.

    It was an appropriate coincidence that many of you would have read Hannah’s helpful scene setter on Blue Monday.

    A fair summary would be:

    Urgent recovery and reform required against geo and domestic political complexity and huge post Brexit expectations.

    With not much spare resource, capacity, energy, time or trust.

    I am reminded of Nixon’s 1969 inauguration speech:

    “We are caught in war, wanting peace. We are torn by division, wanting unity. We see around us empty lives, wanting fulfilment. We see tasks that need doing, waiting for hands to do them.”

    Are you suitably depressed?

    Well, let me see if I can cheer you up.

    Today, you will hear some ideas and issues that need attention.

    You may hear some new policy ideas too from panelists.

    But at such times of great challenge, we need to focus on strategy as well as tactics.

    A successful strategy is not just for government.

    It needs to yield opportunities. So we can all make a contribution.

    If you’re here today, or watching online, or reading this speech after the event, it is likely you already have a good sense of the challenges facing us.

    It’s also likely that you are part of the solution.

    Whether you’re a politician, civil servant, or council leader, or exec or trustee or member of the media – it requires all of us.

    Part of the frustration with politics is not that people don’t have solutions.

    It is that people have great solutions and ideas, they desperately want to be able to act on.

    People WANT to take responsibility.

    They want to help. Did you not see what happened during Covid?

    Individuals, business and organisations stepped up.

    There was a huge civic outpouring.

    And a renewed interest in volunteering that we should capitalise on.

    Now they want to be the change. We should let them.

    To unlock potential and create solutions we need to let every part of the UK, every talent, sector and individual to be able to help.

    From us in Government that needs:

    • a clear mission
    • a commitment to excellence and accountability
    • the centre ground to be valued
    • free and empowered citizens
    • and the amplification of hope.

    Since 2010, there is much to be proud of.

    I shan’t take up time here because it is the future that matters. But do tune in on Thursday mornings for further details.

    However, Technological change, geopolitical events and Covid threw the jigsaw pieces of our nation up in the air.

    We are painstakingly putting them back together.

    The picture has changed.

    Many people feel things don’t work any more, at least for them.

    Some are feeling economic shocks for the first time.

    Consumers feel they have less power, sometimes it is harder to change contracts, or even make a complaint.

    We have the rise of new monopolies which escape our usual ways of ensuring choice and opportunity for our citizens. Whether they be what John Penrose calls ‘natural monopolies’ such as energy or water companies or ‘network monopolies’ – online giants which stealthily make their customers stick with them.

    The customer feels they are no longer the boss. They are not turning to the state, politicians or the regulator as their champion. Fair Fuel, Which? and Martin Lewis are their preferred protectors.

    We have a generation gap – especially in financial resilience. Home and share ownership are still out of reach for some.

    Young people are fixated on rewriting or tearing down the past because they don’t believe they have a future.

    Older people feel their world has been “amazonked”, their values trashed and the high street hollowed out.

    And we have a demographic timebomb to contend with. A quarter of the workforce is inactive. Others are still trapped in low pay by the system only part reformed.

    Productivity and stronger wage growth is needed to raise quality of life

    The volume of Data we now have should have empowered us.

    At best it hasn’t.

    At worst, it has made us more vulnerable.

    Nor did it help us to spot the pandemic that hit us.

    For those with the least, the whole system can seem rigged against them.

    They see it in the so-called ‘poverty premium’ as the CSJ has termed it, that some parts of the private sector impose. Higher insurance, prepayment meters, high cost credit and paying to get access to cash.

    They see it in the public sector upon which they depend. They can’t choose a school or a GP.

    Much good has been done under previous administrations in these areas, from raising personal tax thresholds, to school reform resulting in meaningful improvements in standards, to strengthen consumer power – bank portability for example.

    But there is so much more to do.

    Innovative businesses are slowed down by the inability of regulation to keep pace.

    Sometimes Government departments take too long to decide even who should be doing the regulating.

    The absence of security felt by some has fueled the normalisation of conspiracy theories.

    I’ve no wish to depress you. I am saying these things because to meet the peoples priorities, we need to understand them.

    That is why the Prime minister in his New Year speech set them out- what they meant for the economy- halving inflation, growth, debt falling

    And how he will fix access to healthcare and the small boats issue.

    They want a stake, responsibility, security and accountability – put another way- fairness.

    They want power, choice, and control or put another way- freedom.

    Those principles are at the heart of my philosophy.

    I also believe we don’t have a monopoly on them.

    They are the values of our country.

    And they are the lens through which I view our legislative programme.

    We don’t do too badly the freedom index – it rates us 22nd in the world.

    But what would it take to get us to the top spot?

    To be on that podium is a choice.

    As Chancellor, the Prime Minister commissioned work focused on how we get our economy working for all of us. To support competition. To modernise regulation. To raise the quality of life. To empower and unlock human potential.

    It is why he has:

    • Protected R & D.
    • Championed agile regulation and a creative culture.
    • Enhanced access to finance for entrepreneurial and fast growth companies
    • And championed and a culture of creativity.

    We progressed

    • The state of competition report,
    • The competition bill,
    • The procurement bill,
    • The EURL bill [Retained EU Law Bill],
    • The subsidy control act

    All those things which help drive choice and quality. We will continue to do that.

    As we reassemble those jigsaw pieces we need what the PM calls a ‘shift of mindset’.

    He understands the metric at the heart of this is ‘trust’.

    That trust won’t be won when people understand how our legislation or budget will improve their lives.

    That trust will be won when people feel understood.

    When they feel the benefit in their wallets

    In their quality of life.

    In their resilience, security and opportunity.

    Upon that trust hangs more than just happy citizens and election victory.

    Or indeed the progress of the United Kingdom.

    The very continuation and success of capitalism and democracy also hangs in the balance.

    If people stop believing these systems work for them, then like Tinkerbell’s light those systems will fade and die.

    So, between now and the end of the Parliament there is much at stake.

    Have I now added anxiety as well as depression?

    Can we meet the challenge?

    One can’t go far wrong in listening to the advice of the Institute,

    I want to thank them for their important work.

    I spent some time with them, amongst other when writing GREATER which set out why we needed to modernise and how we might do that:

    • the mandate – parliament,
    • the management – Whitehall and Town hall,
    • the mutuality that binds us –
    • and markets.

    In true ‘play your cards right’ fashion I asked 100 movers and shakers what they felt about Britain.

    How we were doing, what was it that held us back.

    What needed to change and why.

    I mapped their views against every international indices.

    I asked people what they had learnt.

    I wanted to know what they identified Britain with.

    How would that help us point the way.

    There are many things that help shape a nation; time zone, the weather, geography, natural resources and its history and human capital,

    But a country’s character is also its destiny.

    The destiny of a country isn’t that chosen by its corporations or its political candidates.

    You can’t take a country where it doesn’t feel comfortable going.

    Yes modernise.

    Yes reform.

    Yes change.

    But the pace and scope of the change must be calibrated.

    Get it wrong and change ceases to become an opportunity and it becomes a threat.

    Frank Gibbons in David Lean’s classic movie This Happy Breed called ‘our way of doing things’ ‘slow and dull’ and that ‘it suits us alright’

    But go too slow, and change becomes an event – that for me is the lesson of Brexit.

    So the UK is a paradox.

    It needs division, to test ideas and make progress. But it needs unity to deliver them.

    It needs both local and national vision and leadership.

    It needs continuity to change.

    It needs diversity and devolution. But consistency in its social fabric and social contract.

    It needs shared values.

    It needs balance.

    At this point in the electoral cycle manifestos start to be shaped.

    At this point in the parliament the glide path to an election that is the 4th session starts to be formed.

    Everyone gets very excited indeed.

    Competitive storytelling goes into overdrive.

    Attention is sought.

    Balance gets forgotten.

    And this is why Parliament is so important.

    Because Parliament, despite its confrontational layout, and penchant for drama, helps create balance.

    So, as Leader of the House of Commons, while I will be focused on getting our legislative agenda through, keeping the building from falling down and I am hoping to get Steve Bray’s PA system permanently confiscated.

    I will be doing something else too.

    I’m also going to focus on making our legislature the best in the world.

    That the services it provides enable MPs to have the most agency and capacity to serve their constituents as possible.

    We will benchmark ourselves, in the first instance, against our equivalents in the G7.

    We will be working with all MPs to rebuild our offer to them, and we are going to do it swiftly.

    To ensure they are ready when they arrive, and that they are supported properly to deliver through their parliamentary career.

    All that you’ll hear today – from every perspective and political hue – will be aided if we strengthen the most direct connectivity from citizen to real power: their MP.

    I want them to be as effective as they possibly can be.

    Their workplace needs to modernise,

    The systems that we built during Covid demonstrate we have all sorts of options we currently choose not to use.

    We need to move at the speed that business and science needs us to.

    To improve our responsiveness and awareness, ‘slow and dull’ will no longer do.

    And we need new partnerships to help us protect and defend democracy.

    At his inauguration Nixon went on to say,

    “To a crisis of the spirit, we need an answer of the spirit.”

    The answer is in all of us.

    And we need to set it free.

  • Chi Onwurah – 2023 Parliamentary Question on the Cost of Living with Students

    Chi Onwurah – 2023 Parliamentary Question on the Cost of Living with Students

    The parliamentary question asked by Chi Onwurah, the Labour MP for Newcastle upon Tyne Central, in the House of Commons on 16 January 2023.

    Chi Onwurah (Newcastle upon Tyne Central) (Lab)

    What steps she is taking to help support students with the cost of living.

    The Minister of State, Department for Education (Robert Halfon)

    My Department has made a one-off reallocation of funding to add £15 million to this year’s student premium, now worth £276 million. Universities can support disadvantaged students by drawing on this student premium and their own hardship funds, and many universities such as Newcastle and Northumbria have allocated funds to support disadvantaged students.

    Chi Onwurah

    Newcastle University student union’s recent cost of living crisis survey revealed that 41% of students had considered dropping out due to financial pressures. They are trying to balance studying with part-time and full-time jobs, and they feel increasingly isolated and exhausted. The student union food bank is restocked daily and is emptied quickly, with the record being within seven minutes. The Minister knows that his additional hardship fund works out at about £10 per student, and students are £1,500 worse off because of the mismanagement of maintenance loans. Why is he punishing students like this?

    Robert Halfon

    Of course I recognise that some students are facing hardship with the cost of living challenges, like many people up and down the country. The £276 million is a lot of money that universities can draw on. As I mentioned, there has been an increase of £15 million. Students in private accommodation can get a £400 rebate on their energy bills. We have frozen tuition fees for the past few years; by 2024-25, they will have been frozen for seven years. We have increased maximum loans and grants by 2.8% and if students’ incomes fall below a certain level, they can reapply to get their loans looked at. I really welcome the fact that Newcastle University has increased the package of support available to students to more than £1.7 million—

    Mr Speaker

    Order. I call Matt Western.

    Matt Western (Warwick and Leamington) (Lab)

    As we hear, the cost of living crisis is serious for everyone, but students in particular are facing real hardship. Independent economists estimate that many students will be up to £1,500 worse off this year. Given the Government’s current focus on maths, can the Minister explain how his Government calculated an increase of just 2.8% in the maintenance loan, following 2.3% this year, when the rolling average inflation rate is running at 9.3%?

    Robert Halfon

    We have to be fair to students, but we have to be fair to the taxpayer as well. We recognise student hardship, which is why we increased the student premium by £15 million to £276 million. Universities have their own hardship funds, and I highlighted the £1.7 million given by Newcastle University. Universities across the country are helping disadvantaged students. Students whose family income falls below a certain level can apply to the Student Loans Company to have their loan reassessed.

  • Ian Lavery – 2023 Parliamentary Question on School Rebuilding Programme Funding in Northumberland

    Ian Lavery – 2023 Parliamentary Question on School Rebuilding Programme Funding in Northumberland

    The parliamentary question asked by Ian Lavery, the Labour MP for Wansbeck, in the House of Commons on 16 January 2023.

    Ian Lavery (Wansbeck) (Lab)

    If she will make an assessment of the adequacy of the level of school rebuilding programme funding allocated to schools in Northumberland.

    The Minister of State, Department for Education (Nick Gibb)

    Two schools in Northumberland are prioritised for the school rebuilding programme, including Ringway Primary School in the hon. Member’s constituency. Schools were nominated by local authorities and trusts, and selected according to the condition of their buildings following a robust assessment process. This is in addition to the £5.8 million of school condition allocation funding for Northumberland County Council in this financial year.

    Ian Lavery

    The Department’s own report now reclassifies the risk of school buildings collapsing as critical and very urgent. Despite the sterling efforts of headteachers and staff to keep school buildings in decent condition, many children in my constituency are taught in buildings far below the standards they should expect. Despite what the Minister has just said, can he tell the House when adequate funding will be made readily available to bring all schools in my constituency up to scratch?

    Nick Gibb

    We have allocated £13 billion since 2015 to school buildings and maintenance. In May 2022, for example, the Government announced the outcome of the condition improvement fund bids for 2022-23. That will provide £500 million for 1,400 projects at 1,100 schools and sixth forms. The CIF is for individual schools and groups of schools. In addition, £1.1 billion of school condition allocations was made to local authorities and large groups of academies. We take this issue very seriously and we want to make sure that all our schools are in the best possible condition for pupils to be able to learn.

  • Tan Dhesi – 2023 Parliamentary Question on Inflation in Education

    Tan Dhesi – 2023 Parliamentary Question on Inflation in Education

    The parliamentary question asked by Tan Dhesi, the Labour MP for Slough, in the House of Commons on 16 January 2023.

    Mr Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi (Slough) (Lab)

    What recent assessment her Department has made of the impact of inflation on (a) school budgets and (b) the costs to parents associated with the school day.

    The Secretary of State for Education (Gillian Keegan)

    Schools, like families and businesses across the world, are facing global inflationary pressures. The Prime Minister has pledged to halve inflation, and school funding will increase by £2 billion next year as well as the year after that. This will be the highest real-terms spending on schools in history, totalling £58.8 billion by 2024-25. In 2010, school funding stood at £35 billion, so we will be delivering a 68% increase in cash terms. The Government have also announced further support for parents worth £26 billion next year.

    Mr Dhesi

    In addition to having grave concerns about recruiting and retaining teachers, schools in Slough and across our country continue to struggle with their budgets, with a quarter of primary school senior leaders reporting that they have had to cut outings and trips due to budgetary constraints. How will the Government ensure that children do not miss out on these vital opportunities?

    Gillian Keegan

    The autumn statement announced significant additional investment in core schools funding. The core schools budget will increase by £2 billion in 2023-24 and 2024-25. That will be paid into schools’ bank accounts in April, and I am sure they will welcome that additional funding.

  • Zarah Sultana – 2023 Parliamentary Question on Free School Meals

    Zarah Sultana – 2023 Parliamentary Question on Free School Meals

    The parliamentary question asked by Zarah Sultana, the Labour MP for Coventry South, in the House of Commons on 16 January 2023.

    Zarah Sultana (Coventry South) (Lab)

    What assessment she has made of the potential merits of extending the eligibility criteria for free school meals.

    The Minister of State, Department for Education (Nick Gibb)

    The Government support the provision of nutritious food in schools, which ensures that children are well-nourished, develop healthy eating habits and can concentrate and learn. Some 1.9 million pupils are eligible for free school meals. That is an increase from 2021, when 1.7 million pupils were eligible. In large part, the increase is due to protections put in place to support families as they move to universal credit. In addition, 1.25 million pupils are eligible under the universal infant free school meal programme.

    Zarah Sultana

    Each month, 4 million children experience food insecurity, go to bed hungry and set off to school on an empty stomach. To tackle this injustice, my free school meals for all Bill would guarantee that every child in England had a hot, healthy meal each day, just as they do in Scotland and Wales. It could be paid for twice over by removing the private schools’ £1.7 billion tax break, a move that the Conservative party on the Government Benches blocked last week. My Bill is due to get its Second Reading on Friday. Will the Minister back my Bill, or does he believe that protecting tax breaks for elite private schools is more important than feeding hungry children?

    Nick Gibb

    The Government have extended free school meals to more groups of children than any Government over the past century, including Labour Governments, increasing numbers from 1.7 million to 1.9 million children. This Government introduced an extension to 85,000 students in further education colleges, new eligibility for some children of families with no recourse to public funds, and a scheme for 1.25 million children in infant schools.

    Mr Speaker

    I call the Scottish National party spokesperson.

    Carol Monaghan (Glasgow North West) (SNP)

    The Levelling Up Secretary said in October that extending free school meal provision would be the most timely, effective and targeted of all public health interventions that this Government could make. The Scottish Government have already committed to universal free school meals for primary children. Does the Minister agree with his colleague? If not, what targeted interventions would he make to tackle child hunger?

    Nick Gibb

    We are spending £1.6 billion a year on free school meals for children. We want to make sure that that funding is targeted at the most needy. That is precisely what is happening. We accept the point, and I agree with the hon. Lady that it is important that free school meals are provided to children from disadvantaged backgrounds and those who cannot afford meals at lunchtime—and we are doing that. As I said, we have increased the number of children eligible for benefit-related free school meals from 1.7 million to 1.9 million pupils.

  • Miriam Cates – 2023 Parliamentary Question on Political Impartiality Guidance for Schools

    Miriam Cates – 2023 Parliamentary Question on Political Impartiality Guidance for Schools

    The parliamentary question asked by Miriam Cates, the Conservative MP for Penistone and Stocksbridge, in the House of Commons on 16 January 2023.

    Miriam Cates (Penistone and Stocksbridge) (Con)

    What assessment she has made of the effectiveness of political impartiality guidance for schools.

    The Minister of State, Department for Education (Nick Gibb)

    The law is clear that schools must prohibit the promotion of partisan political views and take steps to ensure the balanced presentation of opposing views on political issues when they are taught. Guidance to schools on political impartiality was published in February 2022. It summarises the legal position and states that clear and proportionate steps should be taken to ensure that those legal duties are met.

    Miriam Cates

    You do not have to be a historian, Mr Speaker, to understand the dangers of indoctrinating children, yet YouGov polling for Policy Exchange shows that the majority of UK children are being taught political ideology as fact in school. That includes gender ideology that children can be born in the wrong body and men can have babies; critical race theories that race is a social construct; or sex positivity, such as in the document I have here that instructs teachers of children with learning disabilities to simulate sexual arousal on anatomically correct dolls while playing sexy music in class. These are not isolated incidents but are endemic in our schools. The guidance is not working. What does the Minister intend to do about it?

    Nick Gibb

    The guidance on political impartiality makes it very clear that when teaching about sensitive political issues relating to discrimination teachers should be mindful of avoiding the promotion of partisan views or presenting contested theories as fact. Schools need to ensure that any resources used in the classroom, particularly those produced by an external organisation, are age-appropriate, suitable and politically impartial. Schools should consult parents and share lesson materials when parents ask to see them.

  • Daniel Kawczynski – 2023 Parliamentary Question on the Holocaust Memorial Day in Schools

    Daniel Kawczynski – 2023 Parliamentary Question on the Holocaust Memorial Day in Schools

    The parliamentary question asked by Daniel Kawczynski, the Conservative MP for Shrewsbury and Atcham, in the House of Commons on 16 January 2023.

    Daniel Kawczynski (Shrewsbury and Atcham) (Con)

    What steps her Department is taking to commemorate Holocaust Memorial Day in schools.

    The Minister of State, Department for Education (Robert Halfon)

    Many schools and colleges already mark Holocaust Memorial Day—I have attended such a remembrance service at Harlow College—and they work closely with the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust and the Holocaust Educational Trust, two institutions that the Government support. That is all the more important given the 128 incidents of antisemitism in one year in our higher education institutions, and the fact that, sadly, such incidents are now at an all-time high.

    Daniel Kawczynski

    As well as educating children about the horrors of the holocaust and the second world war, can we take the opportunity to educate children about the tremendous courage, bravery and sacrifices of the Righteous Among the Nations? Many people on the continent gave up their lives to protect their Jewish friends and neighbours. One example was a member of my family, Jan Kawczynski, his wife Helena and their 13-year-old daughter Magdalena, who were all shot by the Germans for protecting and hiding their Jewish friends and neighbours on their estate in western Poland. As well as educating children about the misery of the holocaust, we must give them inspiration from the fact that many of our brothers and sisters in occupied Europe made the ultimate sacrifice to protect friends and neighbours of the Jewish faith.

    Robert Halfon

    Hear, hear. It was very moving to hear of the experience of my hon. Friend’s family, and I entirely agree with him: we must teach and remind people that there were many righteous Gentiles who suffered while doing everything possible to save Jews. A famous Polish lady, Irena Sendler, saved 2,000 Jewish children from the Warsaw ghettos, and was remembered in a special exhibition in the House of Commons in 2018, which I was pleased to attend. My hon. Friend has made a powerful point, and I am sure that schools up and down the country will be listening to what he says.