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Chris Zarraga, director of Schools North East

Every August, school leaders in the north of England brace themselves for the inevitable 鈥 yet misguided 鈥 comparisons. News outlets bemoan the 鈥渘orth-south divide鈥 in GCSE results. Former Ofsted chiefs criticise 鈥渕iserable鈥 outcomes. Headteachers prepare to be told they鈥檙e letting children down. But in the north east, those leaders have a powerful friend waiting [鈥

Freddie Whittaker

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I find it really insulting, the assumption north east school leaders aren't as competent as in other areas

Chris Zarraga

Every August, school leaders in the north of England brace themselves for the inevitable 鈥 yet misguided 鈥 comparisons.

News outlets bemoan the 鈥渘orth-south divide鈥 in GCSE results. Former Ofsted chiefs criticise 鈥渕iserable鈥 outcomes. Headteachers prepare to be told they鈥檙e letting children down.

But in the north east, those leaders have a powerful friend waiting to defend them.

is the only organisation of its kind in England, in that it represents all 1,150 of the region鈥檚 schools.

It鈥檚 always been influential, but now it has the ear of education secretary Bridget Phillipson and schools minister Catherine McKinnell, both north east MPs.

As proliferation of academies has sometimes pitted different types of schools against each other, leaders in Newcastle, Sunderland, Darlington, Durham and their surrounding countryside speak with one voice.

‘A tale of two cities’

The mission is important, as demonstrated in a recent Sutton Trust report which chronicled the 鈥渢ale of two cities鈥 threatening Labour鈥檚 opportunity mission.

Poorer pupils in central Newcastle are over three times less likely to have a degree by age 22 than those in London鈥檚 East Ham, despite very similar levels of free school meals eligibility.

Last year, only the north west performed worse than the north east in the proportion of pupils achieving grades 4 or above in English and maths.

But in the pass rate among disadvantaged pupils, the north east came third, only behind London and the West Midlands.

It is this context 鈥 the impact of long-term economic deprivation and geographical factors that affect school performance 鈥 that Schools North East has sought to get politicians to take seriously since its inception in 2007.

鈥業 find it really insulting鈥

Chris Zarraga, the organisation鈥檚 director, tells me the 鈥渂iggest bugbear I have, I find this really insulting, is that there’s an assumption that north east school leaders and schools aren’t as competent as other areas.

鈥淲hen you look at what they’re dealing with, you’re talking about people at the cutting edge of education, who have been practising inclusion a long time before it became an Ofsted buzzword, and who have real skills in what they do.鈥

The problem, he says, is that the 鈥渟ystem hasn鈥檛 adapted to them鈥.

Comparing the north east with London, for example, is 鈥渓ike a premiership team that has no budget鈥 competing with Liverpool or Manchester City.

鈥淲e have the lowest number of subject specialists teaching things like maths and English in our most deprived schools, which, again, the research evidence shows has a huge impact on your exam results,鈥 Zarraga says.

鈥淎nd we’re never going to compete with London in terms of attracting people to come and work in the profession here.鈥

‘Not a lack of ambition’

One example where this penalises north east schools in league tables is the shortage of language teachers, which means take-up of the English Baccalaureate is lower.

鈥淭hat’s nothing to do with a lack of ambition in north east schools. That’s just a structural issue that, again, there’s been no real effort to address.鈥

Schools North East was the brainchild of Les Walton, a former head, council education lead and government adviser.

He formed the group in the late 2000s after heads realised they had 鈥渧irtually no voice in education whatsoever, in the policy debate鈥, Zarraga says.

Since then, he believes there鈥檚 been 鈥渢remendous progress鈥 in persuading politicians to recognise the unique challenges the region faces.

鈥楥ontext isn鈥檛 an excuse, it鈥檚 a reality鈥

鈥淲e are literally light-years ahead of where we were 10 years ago in understanding school performance and the support that schools need,鈥 he tells me, as we meet in the charity鈥檚 offices, the former Lord Mayor鈥檚 residence in Newcastle.

Phillipson, who represents Houghton and Sunderland South, and McKinnell, the MP for Newcastle North, have engaged 鈥渞eally strongly鈥 with efforts to help politicians understand 鈥渘uances鈥 around league tables since they were elected in 2010.

But he adds: 鈥淚 think there’s still some way to go to convince the very top echelons of the DfE that what we’re talking about, about context, isn’t an excuse, it’s a reality that has a massive impact on the performance of our schools.鈥

He believes the DfE still needs to 鈥渓et go a little bit in terms of that centralising impulse that it has, and be less control freaky about it, and respond to the context of areas better鈥.

The son of a well-known Gateshead headteacher father and a teacher mother, Zarraga attended what he calls a 鈥渂og-standard comp鈥 in Newcastle.

All schools face same ‘fundamental issues’

His career was initially in finance, at Ernst and Young. But on a career break taking a master鈥檚 degree in business administration in Durham, he realised he didn鈥檛 want to return to the private sector.

After working on a Treasury-funded project on enterprise education, he applied for a job at the newly-founded Schools North East in 2008. He became its director in 2019.

The organisation started with a 鈥渧ery small鈥 amount of funding from the then North East Regional Development Agency, with the expectation it would become self-sufficient, and fast.

Ironically, the RDA was subsequently culled in the coalition government鈥檚 bonfire of the quangos. But Schools North East survived, and found its voice as the academies programme drew more divisions in the schools community.

Zarraga said regardless of school type, 鈥渢he fundamental issues that you’re struggling with around the development of policy and the impact on the north east, the way that policy often misses the mark in terms of the key issues that schools want addressed, those didn’t change at all.

鈥淓ducation got sidetracked. [It] went down a cul-de-sac with kind of a systemic debate, 鈥榮hould you be an academy?鈥 When really that school improvement agenda and the key issues facing schools were more important. There鈥檚 more uniting schools than pulling them apart.鈥

鈥極ne-size-fits-all policy鈥

Schools North East works hard to draw attention to the greater challenges its schools face.

鈥淭here’s been a massive shift over the last 10 or 15 years in the understanding of what school performance is and why,鈥 he adds.

鈥淏ut the problem is we still have a one-size-fits-all policy approach that doesn’t really suit areas like the north east.

鈥淎nd it’s not just the north east. It’s just that in the north east we have the greatest number of the most serious issues concentrated into the same area.鈥

Zarraga brings up the National Tutoring Programme as an example. Schools North East raised capacity issues from the start.

鈥淭here isn’t the infrastructure of tutors,鈥 he says. 鈥淰irtually no capacity compared to London.鈥

As a result, take-up was inevitably lower, and noted in the national press, including this publication.

Concerns over Ofsted reform

Zarraga is worried this is happening again with Ofsted reform.

In the early years of Schools North East, chief inspector Sir Michael Wilshaw strengthened the link between outcome data and inspection grades. The north east was 鈥渉eavily penalised鈥.

鈥淵ou鈥檇 look at the data and you鈥檇 have a pretty good idea of what was going to happen.鈥

The region fared better under Amanda Spielman鈥檚 new framework in 2019, focused more on the curriculum schools taught, not their results.

But under proposals put forward by Sir Martyn Oliver 鈥 which include giving schools a grade for achievement 鈥 there’s a 鈥渞eal worry that we go back to a more data-led system than we’ve had鈥.

Leaders also fear the proposals are a foregone conclusion, despite a recent consultation, and are concerned about how you get consistency across inspections with even more grades.

The Sutton Trust鈥檚 recent report showed the 鈥渕assive鈥 barrier facing the Labour government in its mission to break down barriers to opportunity, Zarraga says.

London poverty ‘very different’ to the north east

He points out the Conservatives also had the levelling-up agenda, which finally acknowledged that 鈥淟ondon, and certain areas of the south have massive advantages just by dint of location and the structure of industry, society, businesses, etc鈥.

But even then, the north east was shunned in the original 鈥渙pportunity areas鈥 programme. Zarraga says the DfE acknowledged it hadn鈥檛 factored-in long-term disadvantage when selecting the original areas.

A special side-project, Opportunity North East, was formed, but it launched just before the pandemic, and was short-lived.

Zarraga acknowledges there are some 鈥渞eally deprived areas鈥 in London, but the structure of poverty is 鈥渧ery different to the north east鈥.

鈥淔amilies tend to be in poverty for a much shorter period of time than they are in the north east because they have greater labour opportunities around them. Transport infrastructure is much, much better, enabling them to seek work further afield.鈥

鈥楰icking the can鈥

Zarraga also acknowledges a 鈥渟ense of disappointment across the sector鈥 that after such a long period in opposition, Labour didn鈥檛 have 鈥渕ore, bolder and fully formed ideas.

鈥淲e’ve gone straight into three major reviews, SEND, Ofsted and the curriculum, which is a little bit like kicking the can further down the road for another year or two.

鈥淚 think the sector had expected more fully fleshed out ideas. We’ll have to see what comes from the various reviews. [But] it has increased uncertainty in the sector鈥 I don’t think it’s been ideal.鈥

Bridget Phillipson
Bridget Phillipson

Much of the criticism has been levelled at Phillipson, with reports she could be demoted in an upcoming reshuffle. Zarraga says: 鈥淚t鈥檚 always been seen as a junior role, as a temporary position for very ambitious ministers.

鈥淵ou march boldly up the hill, and then you stop halfway, and then you march back down. It’s been the 鈥楪rand Old Duke of York鈥, lived out in schools, which is not fair on school leaders. It’s not fair on teachers, staff, and particularly on children and families.鈥

He hopes for a 鈥減eriod of stability where someone like Bridget, who does understand those underlying issues has an opportunity to bring some coherence and some actual strategic planning to education, which has been lacking for as long as I’ve been involved鈥.

Policy unit needed

The government has ambitious goals for education, particularly the early years. Prime minister Sir Keir Starmer recently announced he wanted 75 per cent of pupils 鈥渟chool-ready鈥 by 2028.

But Zarraga says he 鈥渨ould be very surprised, without very significant investment鈥, if that target was met. He cites three-year waiting lists for assessment for autism as an example.

鈥淭he services around schools have been so horrifically strained that in some places, they just don’t exist.鈥

Schools North East will soon celebrate its 20th birthday. What does he want to see in the next 20 years?

He wants to have 鈥渟ome kind of policy unit of the DfE based in the north east鈥.

The regional director and Darlington office regularly interact with schools.

But he adds: 鈥淚 think it goes up the chain, and it hits a ceiling, and then you go to a much smaller group of people who are predominantly south east-based and south east-experienced, and they’re not as receptive.

鈥淚 would like to see that devolution, a greater DfE manpower in the region, and a greater devolution of decision-making around funding and the policies that support [schools]. I think that would make a huge difference.鈥

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