More than one in 20 Doncaster pupils attend top-rated state schools

More than one in 20 Doncaster children attended top-rated state schools in 2021-22, new figures show.
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The figures come as the Association of School and College Leaders criticised the Ofsted system, warning schools deemed to be failing are destined to lose out on much-needed funds.

Department for Education data shows 8.37 per cent of the 48,126 children in Doncaster attended schools rated 'outstanding' by Ofsted in 2021-22.

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There were 280 pupils (0.58 per cent) in Doncaster attending schools rated 'inadequate', Ofsted's lowest score.

Schools deemed to be failing are destined to lose out on much-needed fundsSchools deemed to be failing are destined to lose out on much-needed funds
Schools deemed to be failing are destined to lose out on much-needed funds

When a school is judged to be inadequate it is placed in a 'category of concern', and will be required to become a sponsored academy, with another local school trust.

A further 62.1 per cent of children attended good schools, while 28.01 per cent were at schools deemed to require improvement.

There were 0.94 per cent of children who attended schools that had not been rated by Ofsted. This may be because newly-opened schools, have not yet been inspected.

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Ofsted inspectors visit every primary and secondary school about every four years for an inspection, and will give it one of four possible ratings – outstanding, good, requires improvement or inadequate.

Across England, 18 per cent of pupils attended outstanding schools in the 2021-22 academic year, the most recent year data is available for.

Meanwhile, 69 per cent were at good schools, 10 per cent at ones that require improvement, and two per cent at inadequate schools. One per cent% of children attended schools that had not yet been rated by Ofsted.

Some schools may have been inspected by Ofsted or re-evaluated since this data was collected.

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Geoff Barton, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, said the current Ofsted system led to the "ridiculous" situation where property prices are affected by a school's result, making it harder for poorer families to live near the best schools.

Mr Barton said: “We all want great schools for our children. The question is how we achieve that objective and the problem with the current system is that Ofsted ratings are simply counter-productive.

"Once you are deemed ‘requires improvement’ or ‘inadequate’ it’s the devil’s own job to escape that category because it’s harder to recruit staff and your pupil roll – and hence funding – falls."

"The system has to change so that inspection outcomes are more nuanced, supportive and genuinely aid improvement where it is needed," he added.

A Department for Education spokesperson said the Government has invested £14 billion to help local authorities create 1.2 million new school places since 2010.

They said: “Parents rightly want to know how their child’s school is doing and I fully support our approach to providing a clear one-word rating to inform their decisions.

"Ofsted has been central to our success in driving up school standards, with 88% of our schools now rated good or outstanding - up from 68% when this Government came into office.”

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