School leaders concerned about the current pressures on the education system have issued an Open Letter to Nadhim Zahawi Secretary of State for Education. They do not mince their words.
Dear Secretary of State
As the trade unions and professional associations
representing the vast majority of school and college leaders across the UK, we are deeply concerned about your government’s
apparent lack of concern and support for the pupils and staff in our schools and colleges as we move
into the next phase of the pandemic.
Our members tell us that Covid-related disruption has been greater in many schools and colleges over the last few weeks than at any previous point during the pandemic. The latest government figures on attendance in education settings showed that Covid-related pupil absence on 17 March was 2.5% (up from 0.7% the previous fortnight), and teacher and leader absence was 9.1% (up from 5.8%). Almost a quarter of schools had more than 15% of their teachers and leaders absent. Anecdotally, our members tell us that the situation has worsened further in the intervening period.
In the face of this extensive and ongoing disruption, the government’s
decision to remove free access to symptomatic and asymptomatic testing
for almost all pupils and staff feels reckless in the extreme. The government has also provided no evidence for its suggestion that
children who do manage to obtain tests should only isolate for three
days, rather than the five days recommended for adults. Together with a large number of other education organisations, we wrote to you on 9 March
asking for tests to remain available to those working in our schools and
colleges with possible symptoms of Covid, in order to reduce disruption to education. We have not received a response to that letter.
This ongoing disruption also makes the government’s
decision to publish Key Stage 4 and 5 performance tables this
year, and to share the results of Key Stage 2 tests with Ofsted, even more
inappropriate. As we have pointed out on many occasions, this plan seemed misguided when it
was first announced; given the current situation in our schools
and colleges it now feels frankly absurd.
These decisions have consequences. Failing to control the transmission of Covid in schools and colleges is making it increasingly difficult for leaders to keep their settings open, and to ensure pupils receive a high- quality education when they are there. This is compounding the educational disruption children and young people have already suffered over the last two years, which will affect their future opportunities.
Allowing large numbers of staff and pupils to contract Covid, often multiple times, also has implications for their long-term health.
Refusing to recognise the impact on leaders, teachers, schools and
communities of publishing inaccurate and meaningless data on school
performance adds to the extreme stress under which education staff have been operating for more than two years now, and will exacerbate the
recruitment and retention crisis that has been building for
several years. Many members are telling us that this is the final straw which
is leading them to step down from school or college leadership. We
simply cannot afford, as a society, to treat leaders and teachers in this way.
If the government wants to gain the support of school and college leaders as it starts to take forward the policies in its recently published schools white paper and SEND green paper, it needs to do much more to support them with the current situation they face. It must reconsider its premature decision to end free access to Covid tests for symptomatic staff and pupils in schools and colleges, and it must commit to not publishing performance tables, or using this year’s Key Stage 2, GCSE, A level or vocational exam results for any form of accountability, this year.
We have consistently made representations to you on these issues during
our meetings with you, your Permanent Secretary and your
senior officials. You will have noticed that these representations have become stronger and more frequent as a result of your continued failure to
respond to the genuine and increasingly acute experience of our members.
Given the strength of feeling from our members on these issues, we are
therefore taking the unusual step of making this an open letter. We
look forward to hearing from you.
Yours sincerely,
Geoff Barton, General Secretary, ASCL
Paul Whiteman, General Secretary, NAHT
The pandemic is UK over, yet Shanghai is in lockdown- Is there a middle way between total business and total public health?
ReplyDeleteTaxpayers major investing in safer school working environments is also an option;
In pandemic year three, only 114 schools in London so far have air purifiers fitted to protect against Covid 19, other respiratory diseases and reduce air pollution health risks. Schools must take room carbon dioxide readings (above 1500 parts per million in each classroom) and then Department for Education apply. With 202,000 pupils off school because of Covid, air quality in schools clearly remains an important public health issue.