Three in four headteachers don鈥檛 believe that rating schools on how well their school supports SEND pupils in league tables would improve provision, a survey suggests. It follows a report by the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR), which is influential in Labour circles, calling for performance tables to give 鈥済reater weight鈥 to how well schools work alone and in partnership to support pupils with additional needs. Researchers said inclusion should be measured 鈥渁s rigorously as other aspects of schooling and use wider measures of success that give a fair reflection of what a school does鈥. However, 57 per cent of nearly 5,000 respondents to a poll said this would 鈥減robably not鈥 or 鈥渄efinitely not鈥 improve special educational needs and disabilities provision in their school. This rose to 75 per cent for headteachers. Just nine per cent of heads said 鈥渄efinitely鈥, and 11 per cent said 鈥減ossibly鈥. Special educational needs coordinators and classroom teachers were more positive about the proposal, with a third saying definitely or possibly. But more than half were opposed to the idea. Pepe Di鈥橧asio, general secretary of the ASCL school leaders鈥 union, said the adverse reaction was 鈥渓ikely to be a result of educators facing major resourcing issues in delivering SEND provision and feeling that dealing with this should be the priority鈥. He said: 鈥淭he government鈥檚 SEND reforms cannot rely on accountability measures in order to be successful, and must be supported with sufficient investment, training, and access to specialist staff.鈥 The previous government shelved plans to use performance league tables to reveal how inclusive mainstream schools were. The proposal followed concerns that some schools were not doing enough for these children. The Department for Education said the proposal had 鈥渕ixed feedback,鈥 with concerns it could 鈥渞isk generating perverse incentives鈥.
Joanna 8 November 2025 Just keep weighing that pig… Resources, training and funding are what’s needed not yardsticks to beat schools, headteachers and classroom teachers with. When will the powers that be ever learn? And while I’m at it, look at the National Curriculum and strip out 50% of it to focus on core skills. There’s far too much content – it’s one size fits no one.
Teresa Knight 8 November 2025 I am a retired secondary teacher and when I read about all these new initiatives it makes me feel so relieved I am. I don’t think anyone who hasn’t actually taught understands how exhausting and demoralising it is to be effectively told you’re doing it wrong ‘we’ll’ tell you what she need to do. League tables OFSTED cintinuslly measuring ‘results’ where else is there that level of negative scrutiny. I loved teaching in the end it waspoor SMT and parents that forced me out both incited by media portrayal and govt attitudes.