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Education chiefs criticise method for assessing children's services

Posted: 23 June 2005 | Subscribe Online


The new unified assessment system for council-run children's services is unclear and based on questionable data, education chiefs have warned.

The Association of London Chief Education Officers has raised a number of concerns about the annual performance assessment, which comes into force this year, in a letter to Ofsted chief inspector David Bell.

Many of the concerns are believed to be backed by the Association of Directors of Social Services.

Paul Robinson, director of education at Wandsworth Council, said: "Everyone supports the Every Child Matters agenda. It's just that the way in which the architecture has been established for judging how close we perform against the five outcomes does seem to have some fault lines."
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He said some of the information used by Ofsted and the Commission for Social Care Inspection in their assessments was unvalidated and unaudited. The association was also concerned that the way inspectors decided upon the ratings was not transparent.

The annual assessment brings together judgements on education and children's social services in a single rating, though each element will still receive a separate rating.

The letter also says the way the system uses self-assessment is incomplete. Robinson said it focused exclusively on the five outcomes but that much of what councils did in children's services, such as personnel or property management, was outside their scope.
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In a comment that may put them at odds with the ADSS, the education chiefs also claimed that the assessment system was overly focused on vulnerable children.

Robinson said: "It seems that a disproportionate weight has been given to a minority of children rather than trying to get a general picture of how a local authority is doing."

An Ofsted spokesperson said it had received the letter and would respond soon.

The letter has been copied to the Department for Education and Skills.


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