How to Ace Ofsted is a practical guide to the inspection process... but it is so much more than this.
It is a repost to the snake oil salesmen who'll tell you what to do to impress inspectors. Don't be fooled by the title - the subtitle is doing the heavy-lifting. It's a book about doing what's right for your pupils every day, not what's right for inspectors during their two-day visit. Yes, it unpacks the new framework in a way that makes sense to busy school leaders and teachers, and yes, it offers loads of practical tools that will help you evidence what you do, but it is about the long-haul of genuine and sustainable school improvement, not quick fixes.
It offers practical tips to ensure a visit by Ofsted is as pain-free as possible ? and ends in success. Not by doing anything solely for the purposes of inspection, nor by producing documents only for inspectors' eyes. But by ensuring that what you do every day is in the best interests of your children and communities.
This book is packed with tangible tips and tools ? all of which constitute perennial good practice advice about how to make school improvement your routine not your rescue plan.
In short, this is a book, not about faking inspection-readiness, but about making inspection-readiness your everyday reality.
The author is clear: As educators, we don't do it for Ofsted; we do it for the children and communities we serve. And if we do what's in their best interests and act with integrity at all times, then we should have nothing to fear from Ofsted. And this book is about that: doing what's right for our children and communities and making that work within the inspection process.
It covers: The logistics of inspection under the 2025 framework; how to define disadvantage and embed equity; how to design an ambitious curriculum and deliver inclusive teaching; how to improve attendance and behaviour, and cater for pupils' personal development and wellbeing; how to protect pupils from harm and educate them about staying safe; and how to support staff and develop their expertise.
This book also explores: ways of creating a positive school culture, underpinned by a shared vision and values; how to communicate and consult with stakeholders, promoting collaboration not competition; how to stay calm and handle conflict; how to lead the school improvement process and manage change; how to lead ethically and develop a strong leadership team; and how to ensure good governance.
It comes complete with downloadable resources including checklists, action plans, and audits.
It is, as one early reviewer said, "All killer, no filler."
Autorentext
Matt Bromley is a newspaper columnist, education journalist, and author of numerous bestselling books on education. He writes a monthly op-ed column for The Yorkshire Post newspaper, is SecEd Magazine's most prolific and popular writer, and has written more than fifteen books on teaching and educational leadership. He co-hosts an award-winning podcast.
He is CEO of bee and Chair of the Building Equity in Education Campaign. He has over twenty-five years' experience in teaching and leadership including as a secondary school headteacher and academy principal, further education college vice principal, and multi-academy trust director.
Having started as a local newspaper journalist then worked at senior levels in the telecoms industry, he has spent most of his career in education as an English teacher and school leader, and is now a public speaker, teacher trainer, and school improvement advisor.