Reform Ofsted Inspections and End Single-Word Judgements
Liberal Democrat · what the evidence says
An independent, source-checked look at Liberal Democrat’s policy “Reform Ofsted Inspections and End Single-Word Judgements” — what it would actually do across the things that affect your life. Every claim below quotes the source behind it. How this works.
Education & opportunity — Mixed picture
minor · moderate confidence
Replacing Ofsted's single-word grades with detailed report cards should give parents richer information about schools and push inspectors to focus more on disadvantaged pupils — but evidence so far suggests the new system is adding to teacher workload and stress rather than reducing them, which could undermine school improvement.
The evidence
- The policy ends single-word Ofsted judgements so parents get a clearer picture of school strengths and weaknesses, and schools get guidance to improve. — libdems.org.uk (manifesto) — “end single-word judgements so that parents get a clear picture of the true strengths and weaknesses of each school, and schools get the guidance and support they need to improve”
- Single-word judgements were already abolished for state schools in September 2024, with report cards due from September 2025. — educationhub.blog.gov.uk (government) — “abolished single-word judgments for state schools with immediate effect in September 2024, will see the introduction of a new "report card" system from September 2025”
- Ofsted's own research found fewer than 4 in 10 parents and only 29% of teachers found single-word judgements helpful. — educationhub.blog.gov.uk (government) — “fewer than 4 in 10 parents and only 29% of teachers finding them helpful”
- 77% of parents support the introduction of report cards. — gov.uk (media) — “77% of parents support the introduction of report cards”
- An NEU poll found 88% of members believed the new regime would not address the impact of inspections on staff mental health. — schoolsweek.co.uk (media) — “88% of 1,577 members believed the new regime would not address the impact of inspections on staff mental health”
- An independent wellbeing review concluded the changes are likely to increase stress and anxiety for school leaders rather than reduce them. — premieradvisory.co.uk (media) — “the changes are "likely to increase stress and anxiety for school leaders" rather than reduce them”
- Nearly half of secondary teachers and almost two-fifths of primary teachers reported creating new documents in response to report cards, suggesting added workload. — tes.com (media) — “nearly half of secondary school teachers and almost two-fifths of primary teachers reported creating new documents in response to the introduction of report cards”
- The reformed inspections place greater emphasis on how schools meet the needs of disadvantaged children and those with SEND, which could improve equity outcomes. — teachingtimes.com (media) — “reformed inspections will place a greater emphasis on scrutinizing how schools meet the needs of vulnerable or disadvantaged children, including those with Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND)”
- The new report cards aim to provide more actionable guidance — explaining not just performance but underlying reasons and next steps for improvement. — premieradvisory.co.uk (media) — “The new report cards aim to provide a more detailed, actionable picture for school leaders, explaining not just how schools are performing but also the underlying reasons and necessary next steps for improvement”
- Critics worry eliminating the single-word judgment could diminish accountability and potentially lead to a decline in educational standards. — theweek.com (media) — “eliminating the single-word judgment could diminish school accountability and potentially lead to a decline in educational standards”
Biggest unknown: Whether the more detailed report cards will actually drive school improvement in practice, or whether the added workload and declining teacher support will offset any accountability and transparency gains.
Our reading: The policy's stated aim — better information for parents, more supportive guidance for schools — addresses a real problem: single-word grades were poorly regarded by parents and teachers alike, and the system carried demonstrably high human costs. The structural design of report cards (six evaluation areas, enhanced focus on inclusion and SEND) has genuine potential to improve transparency and equity, directing more scrutiny toward disadvantaged pupils. Parents broadly welcome the change. However, the evidence on implementation is troubling. Teacher support has collapsed since rollout began. An independent wellbeing review projects increased — not reduced — stress for school leaders. Teachers are generating new documentation burdens. Professional bodies call the timetable unacceptable. These workload and wellbeing pressures matter directly for O7: if teachers and headteachers are more stressed and overburdened, the quality of teaching and school leadership — the real drivers of pupil outcomes — can suffer. There is also a legitimate accountability concern: if the complexity of report cards obscures comparative performance, weaker schools may face less pressure to improve. The balance of evidence points to genuine upside (better parental information, equity focus) and genuine downside (workload, wellbeing, possible accountability dilution), making this a real 'mixed' verdict rather than a hedge. The magnitude is minor because there is no direct evidence yet of movement in the indicators that most matter — attainment, the disadvantaged gap — and implementation is too recent to measure.