This article by Natalie Bennett, leader of the Green Party, was first published yesterday by the Huffington Post, LINK  under the title:
Education Reform - Why It's Time to Abolish Dictatorial, Oppressive Ofsted
     
When I talk to people in the schools system, there's a huge and 
growing concern that we are on entirely the wrong path in terms of 
institutional structures, teaching practice and direction. These were 
all issues addressed when we updated the Green Party education policy at
 our Spring Conference in Liverpool.
The policy calls for the abolition of Ofsted, which has become unduly
 dictatorial, oppressive and rigid in its views, while also being 
subject to political meddling.
It calls for its replacement with continuous collaborative assessment
 and for national council educational excellence working closely with 
local authorities. To further encourage local accountability and 
reaction to local needs, the policy calls for education authorities to 
encourage schools to set up parent councils or forums, providing a 
mechanism for direct local input, and also for representatives of older 
students to be able to attend governing body meetings and have input 
into their decisions.
This all reflects the fact that a general revolt against Ofsted is 
growing, with schools around the country (and their communities) saying 
that its processes are not fair or reasonable, its criteria arbitrary, 
and its inspections incredibly stressful and destructive.
From 
Hogarth Primary in London, to a range of Stoke-on-Trent schools; from 
Oldfield School in Bath to 
Sandy Lane Primary
 in Reading, and many more, there's grave dissatisfaction at Ofsted's 
behaviour and a failure of transparency and apparent fairness in its 
decisions.
Schools that serve disadvantaged communities, and community schools 
that the government wants to convert to free status, often despite the 
wishes of parents, seem particularly vulnerable to negative Ofsted 
inspections, despite the views of parents and their communities.
That's in part a function of the increasing pressure on all schools 
to produce test results at the expense of any broader quality of 
education, and to follow narrowly prescriptive recipes for teaching, of 
which perhaps the worst example is the phonics test.
The ideological attachment of our current education secretary to this
 single method, based on an extraordinarily narrow evidence base, is 
possibly the worst single example of 'goveism' - the attempts to decide 
the nature and content of what our children are taught according to the 
whims, prejudices and preferences of a single man.
It's telling that when I talk to sixth formers and university 
students around the country, one comment that invariably gets 
enthusiastic support is my call for pupils to no longer be treated like 
the material in a sausage machine, shoved through a series of gauges to 
force them into a uniform shape and size, with 'failure' penalised by 
them being thrown aside into the 'waste' bin.  That's why we're calling 
for an end to the current testing regime and rigid age-related 
benchmarking.
Our new policy also highlights the way in which free schools, like 
academies, lack local democratic accountability and oversight, and calls
 for them to be incorporated back into the state system, with oversight 
from local authorities.
That reflects growing signs of collapse in the free and academies school systems, with disasters ranging from the 
E-Act education charity, which is to have nearly a third of its 34 schools taken off it, to the frankly incredible disaster of the 
Al-Madinah school in Derby.
There are huge numbers of empty places in free schools, and the lack 
of planning for future pupil numbers is having disruptive impacts around
 the country. The government certainly won't admit it, but this is an 
utterly failed policy. It was always clear that the free school 
programme was an attempt to open the way for private companies to make 
profits from teaching our students - threatening the same kind of 
destruction and chaos that companies like G4S, A4E and Atos have brought
 to so many other public services. But there's increasing hope now that 
the whole system will fall apart before getting to that point - which is
 great for the long-term future of our school system, but dreadful for 
the many thousands of pupils and parents caught up in this Govian mess.
There is an even broader problem with the nature of our education 
system that needs to be tackled. We're increasingly being told that its 
purpose is narrowly instrumental - to prepare pupils for jobs - despite 
the fact that many of the states we're now trying to copy - from 
Singapore to China - have released the limitations and problems of that 
approach and are frantically seeking to improve their students' 
creativity and general skills development.
Training pupils for jobs that often don't exist now, or may well not 
exist in the future, is an obvious, enormous waste. We're in a 
fast-moving world, and young people need to develop their ability and 
desire to learn throughout their life, to have flexible skills, whether 
intellectual or hands-on, to deal with what is going to be a rapidly 
changing economy and society. To prepare pupils for the narrow 
conditions of our failed economic model is a massive error that betrays 
our young people.
For more details on Green Party education policy and reforms follow https://twitter.com/GreenEdPolicy