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Ruth Perry death: School judgement culture criticised

By Joe CampbellBBC News

Caroline Gratrix A smiling Ruth Perry looking at the camera. She has dark hair in a bob parted to one sideCaroline Gratrix
Ruth Perry worked at Caversham Primary School in Reading for 13 years

A review prompted by the death of a head teacher has criticised a culture of “high-stakes accountability” that has led to the public condemnation of individuals.

Ruth Perry took her own life in January 2023 after an Ofsted inspection downgraded her school in Reading from “outstanding” to “inadequate”.

A new independent review, commissioned by Reading Borough Council, recommended the authority support calls for Ofsted to scrap its one-word verdicts.

But it has been branded a “missed opportunity” by Mrs Perry’s sister who said the findings “went lightly” on the council’s failings.

The review said the UK had a history of public reports “which by accident or design have led to the public excoriation of individuals”.

“If Ruth’s death tells us anything, it is that that practice must stop,” it said.

Steve Crocker and Brian Pope holding a copy of the review they co-authored
The review was written by former senior officers at Hampshire County Council Steve Crocker (left) and Brian Pope

The report was co-written by Steve Crocker, former director of children’s services at Hampshire County Council, and Brian Pope, who was assistant director of education.

They spoke to Mrs Perry’s colleagues and governors at Caversham Primary School, as well as other head teachers in Reading and council officers. The two also had several meetings with Mrs Perry’s family.

The review concluded what had happened to Mrs Perry showed “the folly of the macho culture of high-stakes accountability”.

Other issues raised included school governance, with volunteers on governing boards being responsible for line managing staff while their employer was the local authority.

Mr Pope described the arrangements as “a mess”, with questions about who was responsible for what.

Ruth Perry's sister, Professor Julia Waters, reading the review
The review was “a missed opportunity”, according to Mrs Perry’s sister, Prof Julia Waters

Ruth Perry’s sister, Prof Julia Waters, welcomed the call for the council to campaign for the end of single-word judgements, but remained critical of much of the review.

“It goes very lightly on the local authority’s part and their failings and the missed opportunities for things to have gone very differently,” she said.

The family has questioned why there was no formal appeal against the Ofsted findings before they were made public.

Council officials told the review team that shortcomings with safeguarding and record checks meant any objections would probably have been dismissed.

Ofsted has described Mrs Perry’s death as “a tragedy” and said, as a result, it had launched a “Big Listen consultation to help us build an Ofsted that is trusted by the professionals we inspect and regulate”.

The results of that and an independent learning review are due to be made public in the autumn.

Entrance to the Department for Education
“Change is coming”, according to Labour’s new ministerial team

Prof Waters has received an invitation to meet the new Secretary of State for Education, Bridget Phillipson, who has insisted Labour would keep its pre-election promise to revise the inspection system.

“Change is needed – and it’s coming,” Ms Phillipson said.

“We will reform Ofsted, replacing single-headline grades with a new report card system.”

For too long, the welfare of staff had been an afterthought, she added.

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