The Jewish Chronicle

Ofsted downgrades IJDS to ‘requires improvemen­t’

- BY SIMON ROCKER

THE INDEPENDEN­T Jewish Day School in Hendon is the latest Jewish school to lose its outstandin­g crown after its first full inspection from Ofsted in 16 years.

The Orthodox primary was demoted to “requires improvemen­t” after inspectors found weaknesses in some subjects.

Michael Paluch, chairman of IJDS governors, said, “We are of course disappoint­ed in the overall grade and we are fully committed to addressing the areas of concern raised in the report. We are confident we can make the required improvemen­ts.”

But he noted “many positives that we are proud of, not least the most important aspect, that children are happy and safe.” In addition, he said, “the report noted that the school works hard to support pupils’ emotional wellbeing and staff and governors have high expectatio­ns and want students to achieve.”

Outstandin­g schools had been exempt from full inspection­s for several years until 2020. But a new inspection framework has also made it harder to achieve the top grade, with over 80 per cent of outstandin­g schools inspected last year failing to retain their ranking.

IJDS pupils “very much enjoy being part of this friendly and welcoming school”, “feel valued and well cared for” and “want to do well”. They showed kindness to each other and “playground buddies” looked out “for those who might need cheering up,” Ofsted said.

Pupils achieved well in reading and developed “secure and detailed mathematic­al knowledge”, Ofsted reported.

But weaknesses in planning some other subjects led to “inconsiste­ncies in how things are done. For example, sometimes, pupils are introduced to too many concepts at once”. Lack of clarity “sometimes leads to pupils doing work which does not build on their previous learning”.

We are confident we can make th required improvemen­ts

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom