Coronavirus: Teachers warn every school could be affected and plead with government to halt inspections

Coronavirus: Teachers warn every school could be affected and plead with government to halt inspections

A teachers’ union has warned that all schools in England have already been affected by the coronavirus outbreak and called for Ofsted inspections to cease.

The National Education Union (NEU), the largest teaching union in Europe, has written to the watchdog warning that schools are having to manage «parental and student anxiety».

They are also making special arrangements for vulnerable pupils and staff, and planning work in the event of closures, the letter from the NEU says.

It comes after the Association of School and College Leaders (ASCL) called on the government to immediately halt all Ofsted inspections on Saturday.

The watchdog has said it will defer visits to any school or college affected by the virus.

But the letter, from the NEU’s general secretaries, said: «We are very concerned, given the serious challenges that Covid-19 poses for schools, that Ofsted is still planning to conduct inspections.

“We fail to understand that, in light of the government’s decision to move to the ‘delay’ phase, Ofsted has revised its deferral policy to defer inspections on providers that are ‘affected’.

“We have to ask the question – can you name any school in England which has not been affected by Covid-19?”

It adds: “Even if there are no reported cases in schools, all leaders and staff are highly alert and responding to a range of pressing concerns and issues about the management of Covid-19, all of which involve changes to school routines and an intensification of already excessive workloads.”

Addressing hundreds of headteachers at its annual conference in Birmingham, Geoff Barton, general secretary of ASCL, said it was not a time for “business as usual” but a time of “national emergency”.

Mr Barton also called on Ofsted to show it understands the “extraordinary pressures” on schools. One school leader, he said, currently has 15 members of staff off because of coronavirus.

“It simply cannot be right that schools and colleges are judged in a high-stakes manner in these extraordinary circumstances,” he said.

Education secretary Gavin Williamson was due to meet with headteachers’ unions on Monday to discuss the variety of concerns that school leaders have over coronavirus.

Addressing the ASCL conference, Sean Harford, Ofsted’s national director of education, said: “We will be proactive in asking schools and colleges if they want to request deferral because of coronavirus and clearly we will look very favourably on all such requests.”

The chief inspector has asked to be “personally involved” in any decision not to defer, Mr Harford said.

Speaking to the media, Mr Harford added Ofsted was «not able to say that we’re ceasing inspections, that’s something for the government to decide» and would need «legislative change» to do so.

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Nuccio Ordine

Italiano. Profesor, filósofo. En los últimos años se ha dedicado a promover una nueva visión sobre el conocimiento humanista. En la actualidad se desempeña como profesor de literatura de la Universidad de Calabria. Ha sido profesor visitante de centros universitarios como Yale, París IV-Sorbonne y de la Sociedad Max Planck de Berlín entre otros y es miembro de honor del Instituto de Filosofía de la Academia Rusa de Ciencias