The Sentinel

ONCE ‘OUTSTANDIN­G’ SCHOOL TOLD IT NEEDS TO IMPROVE

Academy praised by Ofsted for ‘family feel’

- Gary Porter gary.porter@reachplc.com

A PREVIOUSLY ‘outstandin­g’ primary school has been told it needs to improve by inspectors.

Bursley Academy in Bradwell fell short when it came to the quality of education on offer, resulting in an overall Ofsted rating of ‘requires improvemen­t’.

The Bursley Way school, part of the Collective Vision Trust with almost 400 pupils, had been given the top rating when it was last inspected back in May 2012. This was the education watchdog’s first inspection at the school since it converted to academy status in August of the same year.

This latest inspection took place over two days in February. Much of the recently-published Ofsted report praised the ‘family feel’ of the school and its ‘friendly, cheerful and well mannered’ children.

Four of the five areas under scrutiny – behaviour and attitudes, personal developmen­t, leadership and management, and early years provision – were all deemed to be ‘good’. But crucially, the quality of education was judged as ‘requires improvemen­t’ by inspectors, leading that to be the overall rating.

The Ofsted report states: “The family feel of Bursley Academy is tangible the minute you walk through the doors. Caring relationsh­ips between staff and pupils are built into the foundation­s of the school. Pupils trust the staff to look after them, they describe the staff as their ‘guardians’. Pupils are friendly, cheerful and well mannered. They embody the welcoming nature of the school.

“Leaders at all levels, including governors and the multi-academy trust (MAT), are always looking for ways to improve the school. They know that more work needs to be done to further improve the quality of education, so that pupils achieve well across the curriculum. There is a relaxed atmosphere around the school. Pupils enjoy coming to school and are rarely absent. Pupils enjoy learning alongside their friends, and they play cooperativ­ely on the playground. In lessons, pupils listen well and focus on completing their work most of the time.

“However, if the work set for pupils is not matched to their needs, they become distracted and lose interest. Parents and carers are overwhelmi­ngly positive about the school. In particular, they value the fact that staff go above and beyond what is expected of them to help their children.”

Bursley Academy has been approached for comment.

 ?? ?? OFSTED VISIT: Bursley Academy, Bradwell.
OFSTED VISIT: Bursley Academy, Bradwell.

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