St Anne’s and St Joseph’s RC Primary School, A Voluntary Academy

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About St Anne’s and St Joseph’s RC Primary School, A Voluntary Academy


Name St Anne’s and St Joseph’s RC Primary School, A Voluntary Academy
Inspections
Ofsted Inspections
This inspection rating relates to a predecessor school. When a school converts to an academy, is taken over or closes and reopens as a new school a formal link is created between the new school and the old school, by the Department for Education. Where the new school has not yet been inspected, we show the inspection history of the predecessor school, as we believe it still has significance.
Mrs Sinead Colbeck
Address Sandy Lane, Accrington, BB5 2AN
Phone Number 01254233019
Phase Academy
Type Academy sponsor led
Age Range 4-11
Religious Character Roman Catholic
Gender Mixed
Number of Pupils Unknown
Local Authority Lancashire
Highlights from Latest Inspection
This inspection rating relates to a predecessor school. When a school converts to an academy, is taken over or closes and reopens as a new school a formal link is created between the new school and the old school, by the Department for Education. Where the new school has not yet been inspected, we show the inspection history of the predecessor school, as we believe it still has significance.

What is it like to attend this school?

Leaders at this school do not provide pupils with an acceptable standard of education. The continued instability in leadership and the teaching workforce has had a negative impact on pupils' learning and their experience of school life.

Pupils have suffered excessive disruptions to their learning and experienced a number of disjointed curriculums. As a result, pupils have significant gaps in their knowledge. They do not achieve well and they are not prepared for the next stage of their education.

Pupils with special educational needs and/or disabilities (SEND) have suffered the most. Leaders' expectations of these pupils have been too low. Leaders and governors have f...ailed to ensure that these pupils have their needs accurately identified, assessed or met.

Interim leaders have raised their expectations of how pupils should behave. Most pupils behave well during lessons. However, pupils' behaviour at social times is more variable.

Some pupils run through corridors and barge past others without due regard for the feelings or safety of others. Some staff do not have the necessary strategies that they need to deal with these issues effectively. This means that such behaviours go unchecked.

Although many pupils said that they feel safe and happy at school, some older pupils experience bullying and name-calling. These pupils are reluctant to tell their teachers about such incidents because they are fearful of any repercussions. However, leaders are aware of these issues.

They are starting to take appropriate action to deal with bullying.

Pupils have access to extra-curricular opportunities such as choir and sports clubs. They also take on leadership roles when they are older.

Pupils are blessed with their very own natural waterfall which runs through part of the school's extensive grounds. They enjoy seeing wild deer and squirrels roam alongside the playground.

What does the school do well and what does it need to do better?

For many years, pupils have been blighted by the relentless turmoil in leadership and staffing.

Even during this inspection, senior leaders were serving in an interim capacity through fixed-term external support arrangements. The school is currently too dependent on external support. It lacks the capacity from within to improve the weaknesses that it has.

Over time, pupils have suffered a series of poorly thought-through curriculums. This has caused pupils to develop significant gaps in their knowledge. The interim executive headteacher has quickly taken effective steps to address these curriculum issues.

She has recently redesigned an overarching curriculum structure for pupils in Years 1 to 6. Subject leaders, with external support, have also started to set out clearer guidance for teachers on what knowledge to teach and how to deliver the more ambitious subject content. However, these improvements are a work in progress.

Teachers are still getting to grips with the new curriculum expectations. It is far too soon to see the impact of interim leaders' actions on pupils' achievement.

While work on the school's curriculum is still underway, teachers' understanding of what they should do to check pupils' learning or to establish gaps in pupils' knowledge is weak.

In addition, teachers lack the information and expertise to adapt their lessons to account for the significant knowledge gaps in pupils' knowledge. Thus, teachers deliver more complex subject content when pupils do not have the underlying knowledge to learn it. This means that, despite the higher expectations set for their learning, pupils continue to achieve poorly.

Leaders and governors have not taken sufficient measures to reduce the impact of staff turbulence on pupils with SEND. Information on pupils' needs has not been used well over time or has fallen through the cracks whenever staffing changes. This has led to excessive delays and failures in identifying, assessing or meeting pupils' additional needs.

Leaders' efforts to improve the systems to support pupils with SEND are still in their infancy. Teachers do not have sufficient expertise to adapt the delivery of the curriculum for pupils with SEND. Curriculum guidance is also lacking in this area.

As a result, pupils with SEND do not achieve well.

Leaders have not ensured that there is an appropriate curriculum in place in the early years. This leaves teachers unclear on what they should teach children or when to teach new knowledge.

Additionally, leaders have not given due consideration to how children in the Reception Year will be taught as part of a mixed-age class. Therefore, teachers are ill-equipped to deliver the early years curriculum effectively. Consequently, children experience a jumbled series of lessons that do not provide the necessary foundations for the rest of their schooling.

Leaders have introduced a structured phonics programme. However, teachers move through this programme too quickly and before pupils are ready for new content. They also teach pupils too many new sounds at the same time which overwhelms pupils and prevents them from building their knowledge steadily.

Pupils read books that are not well matched to the sounds that they know. Although pupils who struggle to read receive extra help, this does not always have the intended impact. This is because teachers have not received sufficient guidance and training on how to provide effective additional support to pupils.

This means that pupils who need more support to close the gaps in their phonic knowledge do not catch up in their learning of sounds quickly enough.

Leaders have recently improved standards of pupils' behaviour. Classrooms are generally calm places to learn.

However, behaviour during social times is less positive. This is because behaviour expectations at these times are not well established. It is also because some staff do not have the strategies and training that they need to address behaviour issues well.

Due to the shortcomings in the curriculum, pupils have not developed a secure understanding of fundamental British values. However, interim leaders have taken positive steps to improve the curriculum that underpins pupils' broader development. For example, in recent weeks, leaders have introduced a mental well-being programme to develop pupils' resilience.

However, leaders' recent improvements are only at the start of making up for historic shortfalls in promoting pupils' readiness for life in a diverse society.

Interim leaders engage well with staff and have boosted staff's morale. They have brought about an improved sense of well-being that is appreciated by staff.

There has also been turbulence in the membership of the governing body. This has had a detrimental impact on the work of governors. Nonetheless, they have ultimately failed to take purposeful action to improve the school since the last inspection.

Many of the previously recommended areas for improvement from the last inspection remain issues for the school. Governors do not gather the information that they need to evaluate the impact of senior leaders' work objectively. They are not aware of the true extent of the weaknesses that are impacting pupils' achievement, particularly those with SEND.

This limits their ability to respond to any weaknesses and provide well-informed strategic direction.

Safeguarding

The arrangements for safeguarding are effective.

Leaders ensure that staff know how to identify a concern about a pupil's welfare.

Staff report their concerns swiftly. Leaders are diligent in their responses to any safeguarding concerns. They maintain detailed records of the actions that they take.

Where necessary, leaders engage well with external agencies to secure the extra support that pupils and their families might need.

Pupils are taught how to keep themselves safe, including when they are using the internet.

What does the school need to do to improve?

(Information for the school and appropriate authority)

• The school is over-reliant on various forms of external support and the current interim leadership arrangements are temporary.

This means that there is a lack of capacity from within to tackle the weaknesses that are impacting pupils' ability to achieve well. Governors must ensure that they take urgent action to secure stable leadership capacity throughout the school. ? Leaders have not ensured that pupils with SEND have had their needs identified or met quickly enough.

They have not equipped staff with the skills that they need to adapt the curriculum for pupils with SEND. This means that pupils with SEND receive a poor quality of education. Leaders must ensure that staff are well trained to adapt the delivery of the curriculum.

They must also ensure that pupils have their needs identified and met within a reasonable timeframe. In some subjects, leaders have not developed sufficient curriculum guidance. This sometimes means that teachers are not clear on the specific knowledge that pupils need to learn and how best to deliver it.

As a result, pupils do not develop their knowledge securely over time. Leaders must identify the specific knowledge that they want pupils to learn. They must also ensure that teachers are given sufficient curriculum guidance on how best to deliver learning in these subjects.

• Teachers do not know what assessment strategies to use to establish the gaps that pupils have in their learning nor do they know how to adapt their teaching to overcome these deficits in learning. This means that pupils are too often taught new knowledge that they do not have the fundamental building blocks to learn. Leaders should ensure that teachers have the skills to identify and remedy gaps in pupils' learning.

• Teachers do not deliver phonics lessons and catch-up support well. This means that pupils do not acquire a secure knowledge of sounds as quickly and easily as they should. Leaders must ensure that teachers receive the training and guidance that they need to help pupils learn to read fluently as quickly as they can.

• Leaders have not ensured that children in the early years learn a suitable curriculum. Additionally, leaders have not given enough consideration to how these children will learn as part of a mixed-age class. As a result, children do not build the necessary foundations of knowledge that they need to be ready for key stage 1.

Leaders must urgently review the curriculum to ensure that children in the early years gain the knowledge that they need for future learning. ? Leaders have not ensured that there are well-established routines and expectations of behaviour in place during social times. As a result, pupils' behaviour is sometimes boisterous.

Some pupils show a lack of regard for others. Leaders should ensure that they establish clear expectations of behaviour during social times and equip all staff with the strategies that they need to uphold these expectations consistently well. ? Governors do not appropriately evaluate the impact of leaders' work on pupils' achievement.

This means that governors are not aware of the extent of the weaknesses in the school. Governors must ensure that they improve their oversight of the school so that they can provide well-informed strategic direction and hold leaders to account for their actions. ? Leaders and those responsible for governance may not appoint early career teachers before the next monitoring inspection.


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