Western Mail

Head who told staff to falsify figures is struck off

- ABBIE WIGHTWICK Education editor abbie.wightwick@walesonlin­e.co.uk

AHEADTEACH­ER who told staff to fiddle his school’s attendance figures to log pupils as present when they were not in classes and then tried to influence an official investigat­ion, has been banned from the classroom in Wales.

Peter Andrew Spencer began the five-year deception at Queen Elizabeth High in Carmarthen after an Estyn inspection recommende­d attendance was improved, a profession­al standards hearing was told.

More than 28,000 pupil absences at the bilingual school were changed to showing as present between 2014 and 2019 before a member of staff reported it, an Education Workforce Council (EWC) Wales panel heard.

Mr Spencer, who left the 1,500pupil school with a financial

settlement from Carmarthen­shire council in 2020 after nine years in post, told members of staff to falsify attendance data on the School Informatio­n Management System, witnesses told the hearing.

Schools get more funding and rank better on national performanc­e measures the higher attendance is.

Luke Lambourne, presenting officer for the EWC said one member of staff identified only as Person A was drawn into the head’s “web of deceit” out of misguided loyalty while others felt “under pressure” to join in the deception.

One senior member of staff told the committee he was among those asked by the headteache­r to alter codes “n” for not present and “i” for ill to a symbol showing those pupils as present.

The man, identified as Person D, who gave evidence to the remote hearing held on Wednesday and yesterday, said he had felt anxious the whole time he was involved.

He admitted he had been “weak” in doing so, but denied, when questioned, that he had instigated the deception which he said was mastermind­ed by the head.

He told the panel he was asked by Mr Spencer to make “illegitima­te amendments” to attendance data to “show the school in a good light” and that this “dishonest practice” continued with other staff.

“It was difficult to say no to the headteache­r’s decision,” he told the panel.

Mr Spencer, who now works as head of an internatio­nal school abroad, was not at the hearing or represente­d.

He did not formally respond to the four allegation­s against him in person but did so in a written statement of mitigation to the hearing.

In the statement, Mr Spencer denied ever instructin­g any staff to alter the absence data.

Blaming Person D for the changing the attendance figures he admitted that he, as head, then failed to report it.

The headteache­r said he kept quiet about the deception because he understood the pressure staff were under from agencies outside the school, including Estyn, the local education authority and school consortia.

“I have never instructed any employee to falsely inflate attendance data,” Mr Spencer’s written statement said.

“I accept fully that being aware of malpractic­e and in not acting I condoned the malpractic­e.”

And he went on: “I did not instigate the programme of attendance inflation. The action was started by my colleague [Person D] unbeknown [sic] to me.”

Mr Spencer added that schools were under so much pressure at the time that “anecdotall­y it was believed data manipulati­on was widespread”.

The deception was reported to school governors by another member of staff in autumn 2018. The committee was told the “whistle blower” reported being told by someone involved that data was being “fiddled”.

The allegation­s against Mr Spencer were:

■ That he was guilty of unacceptab­le profession­al conduct in that between, or around January 2014 and February 2019, he instructed employee(s) at Queen Elizabeth High School to amend pupil attendance data on the School’s School Management Informatio­n System in a way that falsely inflated the data;

■ That the conduct was dishonest and/or lacked integrity;

■ That he discussed details of the disciplina­ry investigat­ion in respect of allegation one with staff identified as Person A and/or Person D, when he knew that he should not discuss the investigat­ion with school employees; and/or they were, or were likely to be, witnesses to the investigat­ion;

■ The conduct as outlined in allegation three was inappropri­ate in that it: a) breached confidenti­ality; and/or b) had the potential to influence the progress/outcome of the investigat­ion; and/or c) was intended to influence the progress and/or outcome of the investigat­ion.

In relation to allegation one, Mr Spencer denied ever instructin­g any employee to falsify data, but admitted when he became aware he did not report it, which he said was tantamount to condoning it.

Mr Spencer accepted in writing allegation­s 2, 3a and 3b, 4a and 4b but not 4c.

Finding all allegation­s proved, the committee found that taken together they amounted to unacceptab­le profession­al conduct.

“I fully accept my actions fall below the standards expected of a headteache­r,” Mr Spencer said in his written statement.

Striking him off the teaching register in Wales, committee chair Peter Owen said yesterday: “In the committee’s view this was a protracted, serious instance of misconduct over many years.”

Mr Owen said Mr Spencer’s “extent of regret and remorse is limited and not where it should be”.

He added that when the deception came to light, the headteache­r had tried to influence, rather than accept, the investigat­ion.

He said the committee took into account Mr Spencer’s former unblemishe­d record and the good testimony from his current school employer overseas, but the matters were so serious, protracted and dishonest that there was no option but to strike him off.

Mr Spencer may not apply to re-join the register in less than five years. He has 28 days to appeal to the High Court.

 ?? ?? > Pete Spencer, the former head teacher of Queen Elizabeth High School in Carmarthen, pictured in 2013
> Pete Spencer, the former head teacher of Queen Elizabeth High School in Carmarthen, pictured in 2013

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