Ofsted has set out a raft of changes today following the biggest consultation in its history.
These include notifying leaders of forthcoming inspections on a Monday, reforming its inspection framework ahead of the rollout of report cards and new safeguarding letters.
It comes after ministers yesterday axed single-phrase overall grades for schools with immediate effect.

The āBig Listenā consultation sought the views of school staff, education organisations and parents on schools, safeguarding, SEND, teacher training, social care and further education.
Some 16,033 people responded to the consultation, including feedback from 10,000 teachers, leaders and other professionals who work in schools.
Sir Martyn Oliver, Ofstedās chief inspector, said: āYou have spoken, we have listened, and now it is time to act.ā
Here is what you need to knowā¦
1. āThe callā will come on Monday
A key change will see Ofsted give leaders notice of all routine, graded and ungraded, inspections on a Monday, in new a approach set to be piloted over Autumn term.
So, heads will know by Monday afternoon if an inspection is planned for that week.
Inspectors will then visit schools on a Tuesday and Wednesday and write reports on Thursdays.
On Fridays, Ofsted bosses will ālead a rigorous consistency review of inspection findingā and activities such as lead inspector training will also take place.
2. New framework and report cardsā¦
Ofsted has pledged to consult ālater this academic yearā on creating a reformed education inspection framework (EIF) for schools, early years and FE and skills.
This will heed lessons from the Big Listen and be necessary to accommodate the governmentās pledge to rollout report cards from September 2025.
Ofsted said it wanted to āintroduce rubrics that offer clear criteria for inspections and can support leaders to self-evaluate their practiceā as part of the EIF reform.
The inspectorate also wants to make inspection more collaborative and supportive, a key issue flagged through the consultation, by using these ārubricsā to guide chats between inspectors and leaders about a schoolās strengths and areas for improvement.
Ofsted said it will make it clearer what schools should improve, but not tell them how to improve, in a nod to leadersā āindependence and expertiseā.
It will also make sure the inspection process is appropriate to the school phase and type, take contexts into account, Ofsted said.
3. ā¦but āexcellentā curriculum focus to stay
However, Oliver wants to avoid āchange for changeās sakeā and intends for āexcellentā aspects of the EIF, such as focus on the curriculum and early reading, to be kept.
Oliver said Ofsted will start informally consulting on report cards from today, working on this through autumn to develop a model.
He hopes to formally consult between January and Easter and for Ofsted to do piloting and training of its workforce after Easter.
4. Reports will show āarea insightsāā¦
The new report cards will include āarea insightsā. The service will āvisualise local area dataā across all areas Ofsted inspects and regulates, to give parents more information and to help inspectors understand local context.
Ofsted wants the service to set out what it is like to be a child in any area, from childminder provision and both school phases, all the way up to a post-16 provider or a training provider.
āThis will transform the way parents and carers can find out about schools, including the experiences that all children have in their local area, particularly vulnerable and disadvantaged children,ā Ofsted said.
It hopes the service will identify places that need extra help from the government to support vulnerable children.
5. ā¦and new inclusion ācriterionā
Ofsted will consult on introducing a ācriterionā, understood to be Ofstedās new word for sub judgments, for inclusion within the report card.
This will āevaluate whether schools are providing high-quality support for disadvantaged and vulnerable childrenā.
And Oliver said Ofsted āwant to look at an evidenced based review of the pupil premiumā as part of this work.
The tricky issue of how inclusivity will me measured will be consulted on.
But Oliver said he is āstarting from the position of local schools for local childrenā, with settings risking being graded down if they turn SEND children away.
He also told Schools Week he believed attendance was āworthy of highlighting on itās ownā, suggesting that may become a criterion too.
6. Grace period for safeguarding fixes
From this month, Ofsted will pilot a new approach to safeguarding reporting in graded inspections.
If a school is āgoodā or better in all other areas but fails in safeguarding, and inspectors think the leadership has the capacity to fix this, they can call the inspection incomplete and return within three months to complete it, withholding judgment in the meantime.
This wonāt involve āreopening and rejudging the areas that we have found to be good or outstanding elsewhere,ā Oliver said.
But Ofsted will only allow this if school leaders agree to send a letter, which Ofsted will produce, to parents, explaining the situation.
The report cards will also include āa separate safeguarding criterionā, distinct from leadership and management.
And Ofsted will make it clearer what inspectors are looking for when they review a schoolās central record.
7. Ofsted Academy to train staff
As previously revealed by Schools Week, the inspectorate plans to launch a service called āOfsted Academyā this Autumn.
It said this would collate all its induction, training, learning, development and āgood practice workā in a single place and ātransformā how it recruits and trains staff.
The resource will also include face-to-face training and development and will develop an āinsights libraryā to share exemplary practice in the sectors it inspects and regulates.
āAs part of the Academy, we will introduce secondments for inspectors to spend time working in providers. This will make sure their practice remains current, especially focusing on working across groups of providers,ā Ofsted said.
8. New national hubs and reference groups
Ofsted said its current regional model had ācreated inconsistencyā in how it carries out some of its work.
So, it is setting up six national hubs, led by regional directors, each specialising in a specific area of its work.
For instance, one hub will centralise all complaints about Ofsted, which will be investigated independently of their region of origin.
Other hubs will focus on areas such as inspection welfare, support and guidance and quality assurance and professional standards and āprovider intelligence and area insightsā.
Ofsted said it had also set up seven external reference groups, across areas such as curriculum, teaching and assessment, behaviour and attendance and inclusion.
These will provide independent advice and challenge and share ideas and feedback, including on its frameworks.
9. Sharing the evidence base
In a bid to increase transparency, Ofsted said it will do user research to look at recording and transcribing the final feedback meetings and sharing these with leaders.
Ofsted has also signalled a willingness to ābetter share the evidence that underpins our reports directly with leadersā, to help heads understand how it reaches its conclusions.
10. Complaint changes made permanent
In response to allegations that its complaints process often felt like it was marking its own homework, Ofsted has piloted complaints panels for the schools and early years sectors.
These include external sector representatives who review whether it has handled a sample of complaints fairly and in line with its policy.
Ofsted said it will make this a permanent feature of its complaints processes across all areas.
11. MAT and LA inspections, but not quite yet
Ofsted said it will work with ministers on upcoming legislation to allow it to inspect multi-academy trusts, but has not put a timescale on the reform.
The inspectorate also āstronglyā believes the reform should be expanded to cover all school groups
It said this would help to improve standards across the system and āmake sure accountability reflects decision-making, separating schools from the trusts in which they sitā.
Oliver believes trust-level inspections will be a medium to longer term project.
He said he thinks āthere is a way of providing both an individual report to a school and looking at the group responsibleā.
12. Culture change needed
The inspectorate said its āmost challengingā Big Listen feedback was about its culture.
A NatCen survey, commissioned by Ofsted, of 4,349 parents and carers, found a quarter disagreed that the inspectorate could be trusted. Just 49 per cent said it could be.
Schools were much less likely to say Ofsted āachieved its ambition of being trustedā compared to other providers, according to findings by IFF Research.
Just 29 per cent of schools agreed with the statement compared to 47 per cent for teacher development providers, and up to 72 per cent for social care.





