Stockport Express

High school told it needs to improve

Watchdog criticises curriculum following inspection

- BY EMMA GILL

AHIGH school has been told it needs to improve following a visit by Ofsted inspectors.

Despite its ‘good’ rating for three key aspects at the school, inspectors found that the quality of education - and therefore ‘overall effectiven­ess’ - of Reddish Vale High School in Stockport ‘requires improvemen­t’.

The inspection found that because the Key Stage 3 curriculum, for Years 7 to 9, was still being developed ‘some pupils do not achieve as highly as they should because they do not learn subject knowledge to sufficient depth’ leaving them unprepared for the higher years.

The report states: “Leaders are currently in the process of strengthen­ing the curriculum in Key Stage 3 to ensure that it is as suitably broad and ambitious as the national curriculum. To this end, in some subjects, leaders are still finalising what they want pupils to learn and the order in which they should learn it.

“Where leaders are less clear about what they want pupils to learn, pupils’ learning is disconnect­ed. This means that some pupils in key stage 3 do not progress as well through the curriculum as they should.”

They also noted that while ‘leaders are prioritisi­ng reading’ the current systems for identifyin­g struggling readers are insufficie­nt.

“They do not enable teachers to pinpoint with accuracy which aspects of pupils’ reading knowledge are missing,” says the report.

“This means that some older pupils do not read as well as they should. This affects how well these pupils progress through the curriculum.”

Inspectors did however note many positives about the 950-pupil school, which was formerly Reddish Vale Technology College and judged ‘inadequate’ in its previous inspection. It is now part of the South Manchester Learning Trust and run by headteache­r Linda Hanson.

They said that in recent years the place has been ‘transforme­d’ for pupils into ‘a calm, happy and safe place to be’, with pupils - who ‘treat each other well’ and ‘accept each other’s difference­s’ describing it as ‘a haven’ and ‘somewhere that they feel they belong’.

The report says: “Teachers expect pupils to behave well and achieve their best. In lessons, pupils display positive attitudes to learning. Relationsh­ips between teachers and pupils are based on mutual respect.

“The majority of pupils spoke positively about the improvemen­ts that leaders have made to the school. For example, the quality of education that pupils receive is much stronger now than in the past.”

Safeguardi­ng arrangemen­ts were found to be effective with staff ‘well trained to spot the signs that pupils may be at risk of harm’ and pastoral staff working effectivel­y ‘to help manage any safeguardi­ng concerns’.

Reddish Vale High School was approached for a comment.

“Some older pupils do not read as well as they should”

 ?? Vincent Cole ?? ●●Reddish Vale High School has been told it ‘requires improvemen­t’
Vincent Cole ●●Reddish Vale High School has been told it ‘requires improvemen­t’

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