‘Ineffective’ council fail to support schools
Concerned inspectors moved in after noting that standards in primary schools were consistently falling.
And their report shows that inequality between poor students and those from better off backgrounds is higher than the national average.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide AdOn Tuesday (September 16) members of East Sussex County Council (ESCC) cabinet moved £370,000 into a new pot of money set up to remedy the criticisms.
That £370,000 joins a further £500,000 that ESCC have set aside. The authority now has a total budget of £870,000 to improve its education support.
ESCC Cllr Nick Bennett, lead member for and school effectiveness, said that Ofsted had recognised the value of the council’s current strategy for improving schools (“Excellence for All”), but acknowledged problems.
“They felt the programme needed to be accelerated to ensure targets are met as quickly as possible,” said Cllr Bennett.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide Ad“Work is well underway on the strategy and results have already shown that we are on track to achieve our aim of providing the best education possible for children in East Sussex. The additional investment will ensure that the improvements will have greater impact.”
The Ofsted report, published on August 4, noted strengths in the quality of county secondary and special needs education, but also listed a catalogue of failures:
+ A “much higher than average” number of inadequate primary schools.
+ Significantly lower than average literacy abilities at Key Stages 1 and 2.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide Ad+ Too many 18-year-olds not going on into jobs, training, or education.
+ Wide inequality between the progress of free school meals pupils and their peers.
ESCC’s strategy for improving leadership was found to have failed. The authority is preparing an action plan to better support local schools.