红桃影视

Skip to content

Exclusive

Headteachers demand Google delete school reviews

Letter receives 60 signatures from senior leaders over concerns parents see 'distorted' view of schools
4 min read
|

A deputy head has rallied scores of leaders to fight back against Google school reviews after claiming parents face a 鈥渟earch engine lottery鈥 when trying to check school performance.  

The tech giant announced in 2019 that it would no longer let people leave reviews on schools, which were deemed 鈥渃ritical services鈥. Any review could therefore impact their reputation and ability to educate pupils.

But Justin Cowley, a deputy head at Mendell Primary School in Bromborough, Wirral, has to Google demanding old reviews be deleted. 

He claimed some parents would see a 鈥渉istorical and distorted view based on old reviews鈥, while some schools were still being reviewed despite the 2019 ruling.

Cowley鈥檚 letter has received about 60 signatures from senior leaders across the country, representing about 50 schools.

鈥淲hile this is an old decision, it seems to have been implemented sporadically and in some cases not at all,鈥 the letter claims.

鈥淭his has meant there is a search engine lottery about what parents may find about your school. I have written this open letter to Google calling them to delete old reviews, and hope that as many school leaders will join me in adding their signature.鈥

Parents ‘usually only look at the top three ratings’

Mendell has no Google review ratings, which might discourage parents from sending their children to his school, he said.

鈥淚 used to work as a marketer. Our conversion rate is high when parents visit our school when they look on social media. The problem is parents will usually only look at the top three school ratings online. It means my school won鈥檛 be shortlisted and further reduces the funding we get from pupils.鈥

In particular, Cowley said some Google reviews were more than six years old and did not show changes in ratings.

鈥淧arents are googling schools and only seeing a snapshot of a school from years ago,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f was a business trying to sell products based on six-year-old reviews I鈥檇 be furious. You wouldn鈥檛 allow this in any other industry.鈥

Cowley said the meant some parents might 鈥渢rust Google before Ofsted, which informs their shortlisting鈥.

鈥淎ll we want is to see a level playing field. We are asking for either the ability to switch back on reviews so new schools can market themselves to parents, or to turn them off all altogether.鈥 

‘Unfair to have unregulated reviews’

Other heads have wider concerns. Mark Unwin, the chief executive of Create Partnership Trust, which runs four primary schools in Birmingham, signed the petition to 鈥渞eflect the lived experiences of headteachers who have been affected鈥. 

鈥淚 think it is unfair to have unregulated reviews 鈥 an almost libertarian approach 鈥 in a very regulated industry like education,鈥 he said.

鈥淚鈥檝e listened to teachers who, based on two to three negative reviews, have questioned whether they had done a good job.

鈥淭here is no part of the British state more trusted than primary school teachers, and I don鈥檛 think it is fair there is no recourse for them to reply to such reviews.鈥

Unwin said the Google review should be comparable to TripAdvisor, which allows restaurants and hotels to reply to customer feedback.

He claimed while schools were able to take down information that could be considered defamatory or libellous, poor reviews about schools were kept online 鈥 even if a school had drastically improved.

Rob Lewis, an assistant head at Shenstone Lodge School in the West Midlands, added: 鈥淚 know that most parents default to Ofsted reports to gain an insight into schools, but not having the ability to censor the comments with Google poses a huge safeguarding risk.鈥

Lewis said parental questionnaires are already part of Ofsted inspections, and questioned why Google reviews were needed.

鈥淲hat鈥檚 to stop me reviewing similar schools offering similar provision to mine and discrediting their reputation?鈥

Google has been approached for comment. 

Share

1 Comment

  1. wendy smith

    The current state of education

    School leader…. Parents trust Google more than Ofsted

    Could education work on improving the trust of parents in the system not simply censor anything they don’t agree with.

Featured jobs from FE Week jobs / Schools Week jobs

Browse more news