One or two-word Ofsted inspection grades for England’s schools are being scrapped immediately.
Overall grade categories of Outstanding, Good, Requires Improvement and Inadequate will no longer be issued.
The government said the change, which follows the suicide of headteacher Ruth Perry in 2023, was needed to reduce the high stakes for schools and give parents a better picture.
Ofsted apologised after an inquest found that an inspection contributed to the death of Mrs Perry and, after a separate inquiry, an all-party group of MPs called for the single word grades to be scrapped.
Mrs Perry’s sister, Prof Julia Waters, who has been campaigning for the one or two-word judgements to go, told the BBC the entire family were “delighted”.
In a BBC interview, she said Mrs Perry’s two teenage daughters in particular had said “well done” to her for helping to bring about the change.
Prof Waters described how the single word judgement had affected her sister’s mental health.
“It was the main thing that preyed on her mind. She had a really bruising inspection that left her very fragile, and that word ‘Inadequate’, she went over and over it, writing it down,” Prof Waters said of her sister.
“She’d just had the trauma of an unexpectedly bad Ofsted but she was still anticipating the public humiliation that would come with that.”
Ofsted will still inspect schools against the same standards, and reports will continue to give details on specific aspects of how a school is performing, as they do now.
Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson said the need for reform to drive high standards was “overwhelmingly clear”.
Early next year, school improvement teams will be set up in every area, and the government said it would continue to intervene in struggling schools.
By September 2025, parents will be able to view a new “report card” describing what inspectors have found at a school.
For inspections this academic year, parents will see grades across the existing sub-categories: quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and leadership and management.
The Department for Education said single-phrase grades “fail to provide a fair and accurate assessment of overall school performance across a range of areas and are supported by a minority of parents and teachers”.
The government added that the change, which comes in the week that children return for a new school year, “delivers on the government’s mission to break down barriers to opportunity”.
Leader of the House of Commons Lucy Powell told BBC Radio 4’s Westminster Hour on Sunday that Ofsted plays an important part in raising standards and helping parents decide which schools to send their children to.
But she added that her party had “said for a long time we want to move towards a report card system that gives that overview around some of the key areas of performance of a school”.
The move was welcomed by the charity Parentkind, which represents Parent Teacher Associations.
Its chief executive, Jason Elsom, said it was important to make sure the report card gave parents “greater clarity” about the performance of schools.
Paul Whiteman, general secretary of the National Association of Headteachers, said “simplistic one-word judgments are harmful and we are pleased the Government has taken swift action to remove them”.
The National Education Union leader Daniel Kebede said: “the idea you could give a verdict on a whole school in one or two words was always ridiculous” and repeated his union’s call for Ofsted to be scrapped completely.
But shadow education secretary Damian Hinds said the headline inspection outcome was “a vital indicator for parents” and scrapping it is “not in the best interest of pupils or parents”.
Mrs Perry, the headteacher of Caversham Primary School, took her own life in January 2023.
She was waiting for the publication of an Ofsted report she had already been told would grade the school “Inadequate”, after inspectors raised concerns about systems and training for keeping children safe.
An inquest later heard that no child had come to any harm and, despite this, Mrs Perry had been tormented by concerns she had let the local community down.
Under the current system, concerns about safeguarding lead to an automatic bottom grade, and often the headteacher losing their job.
The inquest found the Ofsted inspection had contributed to Mrs Perry’s suicide, and raised wider questions about the pressures of inspection on headteachers.
The senior coroner for Berkshire, Heidi Connor, issued a formal Prevention of Future Deaths report, setting out the concerns that needed to be addressed to avoid a similar suicide.
In it she questioned how the same one-word judgement could be used to sum up both a school with issues that could be fixed quickly and a school “dreadful in every respect”.
A separate inquiry by MPs into Ofsted’s work with schools heard the inspectorate had lost the trust of the teaching profession, and parents wanted change too.
It led to the Education Select Committee calling in its report for single-word judgements to be replaced, while still keeping a mechanism for the government to step in when a school was truly failing.
At the start of 2024, a new chief inspector took over and Sir Martyn Oliver promised Ofsted would learn the lessons from Mrs Perry’s death, announcing mental health training for inspectors.
Ofsted now revisits a school graded Inadequate over safeguarding within three months and an inspection can be be paused if a headteacher is in severe mental distress.
An independent review of Ofsted’s response to Ruth Perry’s death is expected to be published on 3 September alongside further details of how inspections might change.
Prof Waters said the organisation needed to show it had the capacity to change its culture.
“It really shouldn’t have been like this – it shouldn’t take a bereaved family member to push for change for such a long time but yes it’s a relief that no other headteacher will have to go through what Ruth went through.”
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