Author Archives: philipedmundson

Birmingham School Attendance Strategy 2026–2029:

Key Headlines

The overarching theme of the strategy is that “attendance is everyone’s business”. It marks a significant shift away from a purely punitive model, instead championing a collaborative, multi-agency approach designed to ensure every child in Birmingham has the support they need to thrive within the education system. Released this week, I offer an overview and some views on this change of tack within the city.

1. Strategic Priorities

The strategy is built upon three central pillars designed to transform the city’s approach to pupil presence:

  • A Relational, Values-Led Approach: This priority focuses on the “lived experience” of families. By moving away from an immediate “compliance” mindset, the aim is to build trusting, long-term relationships. This involves investigating the root causes of absence—such as family trauma, housing instability, or health issues—rather than jumping straight to legal measures like penalty notices or prosecutions.
  • A Coordinated Multi-Agency Support Offer: The strategy recognises that schools cannot solve attendance issues in isolation. It commits to providing “the right support at the right time in the right place” by seamlessly integrating education, health, and social care services. This ensures that if a child is absent due to a medical condition or a social care need, the relevant professionals are triggered to support the family holistically.
  • High-Priority Communication: To change the culture around attendance, the city will raise its profile through high-visibility awareness campaigns and annual city-wide conferences. These platforms, along with local forums, allow schools and partners to share best practices, ensuring a consistent message that every day in school counts toward a child’s future.

2. Defining Attendance Thresholds

The document establishes clear, standardised expectations to help parents and professionals identify when a child’s education is at risk:

CategoryThresholdImpact & Implication
Good AttendanceTypically, 97% or aboveMinimises gaps in learning and supports strong social development.
Satisfactory Attendance95%The minimum level expected to maintain steady academic progress.
Persistent AbsenceMissing 10% or moreEquivalent to missing one afternoon every week; requires targeted intervention.
Severe AbsenceMissing 50% or moreIndicates a child is missing half of their education; triggers intensive support.

3. Addressing Barriers to Attendance

The strategy identifies complex drivers of absence that require an empathetic and nuanced response rather than a one-size-fits-all disciplinary approach:

  • Emotionally Based School Non-Attendance (EBSNA): There is an explicit recognition that for many children, absence is not a “choice” but a result of severe emotional distress and anxiety. By framing this as school avoidance rather than truancy, the strategy encourages schools to implement supportive reintegration plans that focus on mental wellbeing.
  • The Impact of Disadvantage: The document acknowledges a clear correlation between socio-economic challenges and lower attendance rates. Pupils eligible for Pupil Premium or Free School Meals (FSM) often face additional barriers—such as the cost of uniforms or transport—and the strategy directs resources to mitigate these financial and social pressures.
  • Safeguarding as a Priority: Absence is treated as a “red flag” for potential harm. The strategy reinforces the “children out of sight” principle, where unexplained or chronic absence is viewed as a potential indicator of neglect, domestic abuse, or criminal exploitation, requiring immediate and coordinated safeguarding checks.

4. Governance and Accountability

  • Collective Responsibility: The strategy moves the burden of responsibility from schools alone to a shared model involving pupils, parents, and the Local Authority. Each stakeholder has a defined role in removing barriers to learning.
  • Strategic Oversight: A newly formed Attendance Board will provide rigorous oversight, reporting directly to the Birmingham Education Board and the City Council’s Scrutiny Committee to ensure the strategy’s goals are being met.
  • Live Data Monitoring: By using real-time attendance dashboards, the council can move from reactive to proactive support. This technology allows the city to identify emerging trends early—such as a specific rise in illness or a drop in attendance within a certain ward—and deploy resources to the specific schools or demographics that need urgent help.

Closing thoughts:

The Death of Truancy as a Term

One of the most striking elements is the linguistic shift. By prioritising Emotionally Based School Non-Attendance (EBSNA), the strategy acknowledges that for many, staying home is a coping mechanism for anxiety or trauma rather than an act of rebellion. Reframing truancy as “school avoidance” fundamentally changes how a teacher or social worker approaches a family—replacing an accusatory tone with a supportive one.

Radical Transparency through Data

The move toward live data monitoring and real-time dashboards is a double-edged sword that leans toward proactive care.

  • The Benefit: It allows the city to spot micro-trends—for example, if a specific ward sees a dip in attendance, the council can investigate environmental factors (like transport issues or local health spikes) before it becomes a chronic problem.
  • The Challenge: The success of these hinges on the relational pillar. Data can tell you who is missing, but it takes the human element to understand why without making families feel like they are being overseen by an algorithm.

Everyone’s Business means Shared Accountability

By involving health and social care directly, the strategy removes the silo effect where schools were expected to be social workers, therapists, and educators all at once.

  • Holistic Support: If a child is missing school due to housing instability, the strategy suggests a housing solution is an attendance solution.
  • The Resource Hurdle: This multi-agency approach is gold-standard in theory, but its success will depend entirely on the funding and capacity of those partner agencies (health and social care) to respond as quickly as the live data demands.

High-Stakes Thresholds

The strategy provides a very clear danger zone map. Defining Severe Absence as 50% is a sobering metric; it identifies children who are effectively ghosting the system. By categorising this separately from Persistent Absence (10%), the city can tier its resources—using light touch relationship building for the 10% and intensive, multi-agency wraparound care for the 50%.

Final Reflection

This strategy is an ambitious attempt to treat the cause rather than the symptom. It recognises that a child in a classroom is the result of a stable home, good mental health, and financial security. If Birmingham can successfully bridge the gap between identifying the problem via data and solving the problem via multi-agency funding, it could serve as a national blueprint for urban education.

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Hold the Line – The Leader’s Imperative

I cannot tell you how many times I happened across the film ‘Zulu’ on TV during the 70s and 80s. In my mind, the phrase “hold the line” functions as a crucial cultural constant within the history of human endeavour. While its origins are found in the literal musket-smoke of 19th-century linear warfare, its true resonance today lies in the demonstrable, everyday expression of professional purpose. To “hold the line” is to move beyond abstract definitions of vision and to engage in the robust, resilient work of maintaining one’s “True North” against the pressures of accountability and the often-turbulent winds of institutional change. It is an act of professional defiance—a refusal to allow the quality of our mission to be diluted by the convenience of the status quo.

The Tactical Genesis: The Line as Professional Expression

The etymology of the phrase is rooted in the foundations of rigour and discipline. In the 18th and 19th centuries, infantrymen stood in rigid, shoulder-to-shoulder “lines” to maximise the effectiveness of their limited-range muskets. This was not merely a physical formation; it was a professional attribute that extended beyond academic competence into the realm of survival. The integrity of the line was a shared contract; each soldier’s safety depended entirely on the steadfastness of the colleague to their left and right.

If a line broke, the defensive formation collapsed into chaos, rendering the unit vulnerable to a total rout. Thus, “holding the line” was the primary function of leadership—assisting colleagues in elevating their practice from simple survival to the clear articulation of a collective mission. The most enduring historical image, the “Thin Red Line” at the Battle of Balaclava (1854), proved that a disciplined, unwavering formation represents the professional expression of institutional care. It demonstrated that a numerically inferior force could repulse a superior one, provided their commitment to the formation remained absolute and their “methods” remained consistent under fire.

The Cinematic Crucible: Zulu and the Mechanical Moral Purpose

The 1964 film Zulu, which is a classic of British, boys’ own stuff, provides a definitive visual dictionary for this concept, offering a masterclass in how institutional resilience is built through standardisation and grit. Depicting the Battle of Rorke’s Drift (1879), the film dramatises how a “line” is not a static script, but a rhythmic, iterative process that must be maintained with almost mechanical precision. Yet again, I am looking; where’s the love? 

The Love for Subject (Rank Fire):

The British defenders utilised “rank fire”—a sophisticated system where rows of soldiers cycled through firing and reloading to ensure a continuous stream of firepower. In an educational context, this mirrors the transition from “content delivery” to a “moral purpose.” Without the “love for the subject” and a deep belief in its transformative power, pedagogical activity risks becoming procedural. The soldiers held the line because they were committed to the analytical rigour of their formation; similarly, educators hold the line when they are committed to the rigorous implementation of a curriculum that empowers their pupils.

The Perimeter of Mealie Bags: When the outer “line” was threatened by overwhelming odds, the defenders did not scatter in individual panic. Instead, they “shortened the line,” redrawing their perimeter using whatever materials were available—mealie bags and biscuit boxes. This represents Strategic Adaptability. It shows that while the mission is non-negotiable, the methodology of the defence must be responsive. They utilised the tools at hand to ensure the structural clarity of their defence remained intact, spanning from the initial, terrifying assault through to the exhaustion of the final stand.

The Inherent Blockage: Navigating the Messiness of Change

Every meaningful evolution—whether on the battlefield or within the faculty—inevitably hits a blockage. This is the point where change is no longer a theoretical, inspiring ascent but a difficult descent into the inherent complexity of reality. It is the messy middle of any transformation where initial enthusiasm wanes and the weight of entrenched habits begins to pull the team back toward the path of least resistance.

In Zulu, the blockage was the overwhelming physical pressure of the opposition and the sheer fatigue of the defenders; in leadership, the blockage is often the frozen state of habit, the transactional nature of daily tasks, or the mental exhaustion of the academic cycle. This period of stagnation is where the Love for the Journey is most tested. The resilient leader acknowledges that progress is non-linear and often attained incrementally, through a series of “unfreezing” and “refreezing” moments. When the line hits a blockage, the mandate is not to abandon the vision in frustration, but to engage in honest scrutiny, derive lessons from the friction, and adjust strategies dynamically to keep the momentum alive.

Where is the Love? The Moral Imperative of Consistency

To hold the line during these blockages requires more than technical competence or administrative oversight; it requires what we might call the Love for the People and Love for the Journey. It is an emotional and ethical commitment to the collective success of the institution.

  1. Love as Robust Consistency: Authentic professional development is not a superficial or isolated event. It is the deep, sustained commitment to ensuring that pedagogical expectations—the “non-negotiables”—are followed with 100% intentionality in every classroom. This consistency is the highest form of love because it protects colleagues from the isolation of individual failure and protects students from the inequity of a variable experience. It ensures that excellence is not a lottery, but a guaranteed standard.
  1. The Jacob’s Ladder of Leadership: Leadership requires the constant navigation of a professional “Jacob’s Ladder.” This necessitates managing the descent—the necessary engagement with complex compliance, budgetary constraints, and the messiness of institutional change—without ever losing sight of the ascent—the moral purpose of upholding standards and fostering human flourishing. The resilient leader refuses to let the technicalities of the descent overshadow the educational imperative of the ascent.
  1. Empowerment through Shared Responsibility: Just as the defence of Rorke’s Drift relied on the distributed leadership of every man behind a mealie bag, educational resilience depends on collective efficacy. We hold the line not because we are told to by a central authority, but because we are empowered to take ownership of our professional domain. Empowerment is the practical manifestation of institutional trust; it acknowledges that every member of the team is a vital link in the chain, capable of exercising professional judgement to sustain the integrity of the whole.

Reaffirming the Trajectory

As we navigate the demanding trajectory of the academic year, holding the line remains our most evocative shorthand for professional integrity. It is the refusal to permit the technicalities of the descent to overshadow the human and educational imperative of our mission. It is an understanding that while the what of our work may change in response to new regulations or frameworks, the why—our commitment to pupil success—must remain immovable.

Whether we are redrawing a perimeter, refining a curriculum, or navigating a period of fiscal uncertainty, the goal remains the same: to ensure that excellence is not an exception, but a unified standard. By intentionally working to elevate intentionality, combat complacency, and champion the growth of our peers, we ensure that our love for the journey sustains the enduring health and efficacy of the institution long into the future.

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Beyond Buckets: Schools Without the Squeeze

Academic Breadth: Because Children Aren’t Pancakes

The education white paper “Every Child Achieving and Thriving,” published this past Monday, 23rd February 2026, marks a definitive pivot from the performance table era of the last decade toward a more holistic, inclusive model. Every Child Achieving and Thriving proposes a generational £4 billion overhaul of the SEND system, transitioning away from a one-size-fits-all model towards a tiered, inclusive by design framework. At its core is the introduction of digital Individual Support Plans (ISPs) for every child with additional needs, intended to provide legally enforceable, day-to-day support without the need for a lengthy EHCP battle or a formal diagnosis. This is backed by a £1.8 billion Experts at Hand service, giving schools direct access to specialists like speech therapists and educational psychologists, and a £1.6 billion Inclusive Mainstream Fund for early interventions.

Furthermore, every mainstream school will be required to establish an inclusion base—supported by £3.7 billion in capital investment—to ensure specialist help is available locally, while National Inclusion Standards will be introduced to eliminate the postcode lottery and ensure consistent accountability across the country.

But it is not solely about SEND. A hundred others better qualified and more nuanced will write about the SEND aspects. There are other aspects I would like to share for us to consider.

This paper is less about hitting targets and more about fixing the foundations. However, the success of the Progress 8 reform and the Disadvantage Funding model will depend entirely on whether the Treasury treats this as a genuine investment or just a re-shuffling of the deck chairs.

By scrapping the EBacc and reworking Progress 8, the government is effectively admitting that a “one-size-fits-all” academic jacket was becoming a bit too tight for many pupils. Here is a breakdown of the specific aspects you highlighted:

1. The Progress 8 & Attainment 8 Reset

The decision to scrap the English Baccalaureate as a performance measure is a watershed moment. For years, the “EBacc bucket” was criticised for squeezing out the arts and vocational subjects.

  • The Transition: The DfE proposes replacing the EBacc constraint with an Academic Breadth measure. This is expected to give equal weighting to creative subjects and the humanities, finally letting the arts out of the performance penalty box.
  • A Tailored Measure: The new measure for children who start secondary school significantly behind is perhaps the most empathetic part of the reform. It acknowledges that a child’s progress shouldn’t just be a high-stakes race from a baseline they never reached; it allows schools to be recognised for the massive value they add to pupils following non-standard or supported curricula.
  • Deadline: As you noted, the consultation on these metrics is live until 4 May 2026. This is a critical window for school leaders to ensure the new Academic Breadth doesn’t just become another version of the same old buckets.

2. The Enrichment Framework: From Extra to Essential

Moving enrichment from the periphery into the Ofsted inspection toolkit is a bold move. It changes the status of school plays, sports, and civic projects from nice-to-haves to accountability-haves.

  • The Benchmark: The framework will set national standards for what a good offer looks like (covering arts, culture, nature, sport, and life skills).
  • The Challenge: While this is a win for the whole child, it places a new burden on school budgets. To help, the government has announced a £22.5 million Enrichment Entitlement fund to support the 400 most disadvantaged schools in meeting these new benchmarks.

3. Disadvantage Funding: The Winners and Losers Risk

The shift away from binary Free School Meal (FSM) eligibility toward a more nuanced household income-based model is an attempt to catch the “hidden poor”—families who are just above the threshold but still struggling in the current economic climate.

  • The Caution: I share the ASCL’s caution regarding the new funding model. Better targeting for our most vulnerable pupils is the right goal, but I agree with Pepe Di’Iasio that this shouldn’t be a ‘zero-sum game’. If the DfE isn’t putting new money on the table, they are effectively creating winners and losers, which will inevitably lead to financial instability for many schools. We need to see an increase in the total spend, not just a redistribution of the same budget
  • The Policy Gap: The white paper commits to halving the disadvantage gap within a generation, but without a massive injection of fresh core funding beyond the specific SEND and teacher training pots, the redistributive model remains a point of high anxiety for the sector.

Other Big Picture Hits from the Paper

  • Workforce Boost: A plan to recruit 6,500 additional expert teachers and a doubling of maternity pay (to 8 weeks full pay) to stem the retention crisis.
  • SEND Experts at Hand: A £1.8 billion service providing schools with direct access to specialists (speech therapists, psychologists) without the need to fight for an EHCP first.
  • Inclusion Bases: Every secondary school will be expected to host a dedicated inclusion base to support the Every Child Included mission.

Ultimately, this white paper marks a bold shift from a rigid, data‑driven culture to a more human, inclusive system. It replaces the old academic straitjacket with a tailored approach that treats the arts, enrichment, and specialist support as essentials rather than luxuries. But for this to be a true watershed moment — not just a reshuffling of deck chairs — the vision must be matched by sustainable new funding, ensuring that better targeting for our most vulnerable pupils does not destabilise the schools that serve them.

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The Architecture of the Spark: Leading through Paradox and Territory


I’ve been a bit quiet lately, but that’s usually because things have been pretty noisy elsewhere!…

I’ll have plenty to catch you up on in a few weeks.

Right now, triads are at the top of my mind. I’ve realised that to keep growing myself, I’ve got to do it with others. And as luck would have it, I’ve been placed right in the middle of a triad myself. So, is three really a magic number? (I’m thinking yes.)

To this end, I have started working with two other deputy head teachers on a project and as we approach our second session this week, these reflections I offer to you.

After our first meeting, a few thoughts popped up during my commute. I’m sharing them here just as they came to me—no hidden agendas, just a genuine desire to help everyone get better. That includes my peers, my team, and definitely myself. Reminder to self and reminder to others. The grit in the oyster creates the pearl.

The Big Idea: The Spark of Paradox

In the high-pressure world of schools, it feels like we’re always being told to choose one side or the other. But really, great leadership lives right in the middle, where two totally opposite ideas can both be true. The magic happens in the spark between those two points.

  1. Discipline is Freedom: When our systems are solid, we actually have more room to be creative and spontaneous.
  2. Strength is Vulnerability: Being honest about what we don’t know is actually the quickest way to build real trust.
  3. Tradition is Innovation: Honouring our roots gives us the steady ground we need to take a leap into the future.

Pillar 1: Get Intentional

The Big Swap: From looking busy to making a difference. The Friction: Let’s be real—middle leaders , all leaders, often use busyness as a bit of a shield. If they’re always swamped, they feel like they’re safe from being blamed if things don’t go perfectly.

  • The Struggle: It’s hard to let go of those boring admin tasks because they’re easy to measure and make us feel like we’re in control.
  • The Paradox: Sometimes you have to slow down to actually get somewhere faster.
  • The Strategy: Try a Purpose Audit.
    • In Practice: Encourage your middle leaders to take a hard look at their meetings. If a task doesn’t clearly help the kids or make life better for teachers, give them the OK to just scrap it.
    • The Goal: Show them that it’s about the impact they make, not just how many hours they put in.

Pillar 2: Shake Off Complacency

The Big Swap: From “this is how we do it” to “how can we do it better?” The Friction: We all love our territory. It feels safe. Middle leaders might stick to the old ways because changing things feels like admitting they weren’t doing it right before.

  • The Struggle: It’s easy to get defensive! “We’ve always done it this way” is usually just code for “I’m scared to fail in front of my team.”
  • The Paradox: Things are going great, but we’re still not even close to as good as we could be!
  • The Strategy: Celebrate Smart Mistakes.
    • In Practice: Use data as a flashlight, not a hammer. When a leader tries something new and it doesn’t quite work, celebrate the fact that they tried and look at what you learned.
    • The Goal: Move from protecting the win to hunting for the next upgrade.

Pillar 3: Be a Growth Champion

The Big Swap: From checking up to cheering on. The Friction: Middle leaders often feel like they have to be the “Expert-in-Chief.” But if they’re the only ones who know anything, nobody else gets a chance to grow.

  • The Struggle: There’s a real fear of being overshadowed by a rising star on the team.
  • The Paradox: If you want more time for yourself, you have to give your time away to others.
  • The Strategy: Stop being a Judge and start being a Coach.
    • In Practice: Forget those scary big reviews. Just keep the feedback moving. Mentor them on micro-skills—just one tiny improvement every week.
    • The Goal: Turn every leader into a talent scout who loves seeing their team get better than they are.

Pillar 4: Create Real Connections

The Big Swap: From my department to our community. The Friction: It’s human nature to be a bit tribal. Leaders naturally want to protect their own “patch” rather than looking at the big picture.

  • The Struggle: People tend to guard their resources. Sharing ideas can feel like losing your edge.
  • The Paradox: Hiding away feels safe, but you can’t keep it up forever without help.
  • The Strategy: Use Radical Empathy.
    • In Practice: Try Story Circles. Stop talking about schedules for a minute and ask: “Why do you still do this job?” or “What was your biggest struggle this week?”
    • The Goal: Use honesty and vulnerability as the glue that brings everyone together. If the three of you lead the way, the rest will follow.

Your Job: Holding the Space

As the senior triad, our main job is to keep that tension alive. When a middle leader comes to you with a problem or a territory dispute, don’t just jump in and fix it for them.

Instead, point out the friction! Remind them that the heat they’re feeling is just the spark of growth. Your job is to make sure that heat doesn’t get out of control but instead lights up the way for everyone else.

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Escape from the Planet of the Pudding Brains.

To survive on the Planet of the Pudding Brains, you cannot rely on the environment to provide structure. When your situation is “liquified,” you must become your own source of gravity.

Here is a survival guide designed to keep your feet on the ground while everyone else is drifting into the fog; and when yours does too.

The Universal Condition

Before we look outward, we must look inward: We are all pudding brains at times. It isn’t a unique condition belonging only to “the others”; it is a fundamental part of being human. Under enough stress, exhaustion, or uncertainty, our own thoughts can lose their shape and become gelatinous. Acknowledging our own capacity for “soft logic” is the first step toward reclaiming our solid ground.

When situations at the start of a new term seem to go wrong and spin beyond your control, you cannot rely on the environment to provide structure. You must become your own source of gravity.

The Interstellar Survival Guide

Subject: Maintaining Sanity Amidst Structural Liquefaction

Mission: Transitioning from “Lost in Space” to “Commander of Self.”

1. Elevate Intentionality: Find Your North Star

On a planet where decisions shift like dessert, your greatest tool is a fixed point. When leadership is reactive and chaotic, you must be the opposite.

• The Survival Tactic: Do not let the “pudding” dictate your schedule. Start every morning by defining one non-negotiable objective.

• The Mantra: “The environment is chaotic, but my moves are calculated.” Even if the ship is spinning, you can choose which button to press.

2. Combat Complacency: Resist the Quicksand

Pudding-brain leadership is contagious; it’s easy to stop trying when it feels like nothing matters. Complacency is the “atmospheric pressure” of this planet that tries to flatten your ambition.

• The Survival Tactic: Audit your “auto-pilot” moments. If you find yourself saying “it doesn’t matter anyway,” you are sinking. Set a “micro-standard” for excellence that is independent of leadership’s approval.

• The Mantra: “I work for my own standards, not for their chaos.”

3. Champion Growth: Terraform Your Own Space

If the new term feels like a setback, view it instead as a “stress test” for your skills. In sci-fi, the best protagonists grow the most when the life-support systems fail.

• The Survival Tactic: Identify one skill you can sharpen specifically because of the current mess (e.g., crisis management, patience, or lateral thinking).

• The Mantra: “I am not just surviving this term; I am using it as fuel for my next evolution.”

4. Inspire Deeper Connections: Form the Resistance

You aren’t the only one looking for solid ground. The best way to survive a “pudding brain” environment is to find the other “solid-brained” people and link up.

• The Survival Tactic: Move past surface-level venting. Ask your colleagues: “How are you actually holding up, and how can we support each other’s goals?” Authentic vulnerability creates a “gravity well” that keeps you all from drifting away.

• The Mantra: “Connection is our oxygen; we breathe better when we stay linked.”

The Survival Manifesto

• When facing Ambiguity:

Instead of falling into the pudding brain trap of drifting without purpose, choose to Elevate Intentionality. Define your own direction when the map is missing.

• When facing Stagnation:

Instead of falling into the pudding brain trap of checking out or giving up, choose to Combat Complacency. Hold yourself to your own high standards, regardless of the surrounding slump.

• When facing Chaos:

Instead of falling into the pudding brain trap of blaming the environment, choose to Champion Growth. Use the friction of the situation to sharpen your skills and evolve.

• When facing Isolation:

Instead of falling into the pudding brain trap of “every person for themselves,” choose to Inspire Deeper Connections. Build a community of “solid-brained” peers to sustain each other.

Note from Command: On the Planet of the Pudding Brains, the goal isn’t just to wait for the term to end. The goal is to remain “solid” in a world that has gone soft.

Here’s to a better second week.

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Where is the Love? The Moral Imperative in Educational Leadership

My favourite inquiry, “Where is the love?”, functions as a crucial cultural constant for any educational institution. This question moves beyond abstract definitions of vision and values to challenge leaders, educators, and subject specialists concerning the demonstrable, everyday expression of their core professional purpose. It seeks to ascertain how the profound dedication which drew professionals into education—specifically, the devotion to one’s academic discipline and the conviction regarding the empowerment of others—can be maintained visibly, systemically, and with resilience against the pressures of accountability and institutional change.

Given the forthcoming conclusion of the calendar year, the current juncture offers a significant opportunity for professional recalibration. This period traditionally encourages reflection, renewal, and the strengthening of community cohesion. Professionally, this orientation mirrors the precise requirements of effective educational governance: engaging in honest scrutiny of the inherent complexity of change, systematically enhancing both personal and collective capacity, and solidifying the relational bonds fundamental to the operation of educational institutions. The fundamental driver of institutional action, the moral purpose—the “love” that is sought—is the essential component that sustains the demanding trajectory of the academic cycle.

1. The Love for Subject: Transition from Content Delivery to Moral Purpose

The pedagogical foundation rests upon the teacher’s subject specialism. This professional attribute extends beyond mere academic competence; it constitutes the catalyst for the foundational rationale—the compelling imperative that drives professional engagement with curriculum design and methodological adoption. Absent this essential emotional connection, pedagogical activity risks becoming procedural, thereby reducing the curriculum to a perfunctory checklist of required topics.

Articulation and Coherence

A primary function of educational leadership involves assisting colleagues in elevating their practice from simple content delivery to the clear articulation of their moral purpose. This necessitates the establishment of a direct link between the intrinsic merit and utility of their academic discipline (be it the analytical rigour of Mathematics, the creative expression of Art, or the socio-historical context provided by History) and the demonstrable enhancement of pupil outcomes, cultural capital, and subsequent life opportunities. When a leader successfully aligns a teacher’s scholarly passion with this broader objective, a powerful and sustainable internal motivator is generated.

Within an environment governed by the new regulatory expectations of the Ofsted framework, which critically prioritises Curriculum Design and Implementation, the “love for subject” must translate into clear, high-quality coherence making. The professional commitment to enabling every pupil to access and thrive within that discipline is demonstrated by the clarity of the curriculum structure—specifically, what is taught, the rationale for its inclusion, and the methodology of its assessment. This structural clarity, spanning from Key Stage 3 sequencing through to Key Stage 5 mastery, represents the professional expression of institutional care. Compliance with the new statutory Relationships, Sex and Health Education (RSHE) guidance, for example, demands that leaders integrate sensitive material not as a matter of obligatory compliance, but as a genuine expansion of the curriculum’s commitment to pupil welfare and personal growth, equipping them with vital knowledge for adulthood. Consequently, the subject leader’s profound commitment must be evident in strategic, long-term planning, rather than being confined merely to the delivery of individual lessons.

2. The Love for People: Capacity Building, Recognition, and Empowerment

The second component of “love” is directed externally: towards the systematic empowerment of pupils and professional colleagues. This objective directly mandates the cultivation of a Culture of Collaboration and Shared Leadership, a framework which successfully elevates collective efficacy above individualistic endeavour. This communal strength assumes heightened significance during the demanding winter academic term.

Capacity Building and Recognition as Investment

The demonstration of regard for colleagues is synonymous with robust investment in their Capacity Building. In the context of substantial policy shifts—such as the new statutory linkage between Attendance and Safeguarding (as reinforced by KCSIE 2025 updates) or the heightened focus upon online risks such as disinformation and radicalisation—professional competence assumes an ethical dimension. A practitioner lacking the requisite preparation to address a complex safeguarding concern or to implement demanding sections of the statutory RSHE curriculum may find their professional motivation significantly undermined by the fear of procedural failure.

  • Love is Robust CPD: Authentic professional development does not constitute a superficial, isolated event. It aligns with the ‘Changing’ Stage in models of transformation, necessitating the sustained support, coaching, and resources required for educators to master new skills and embed new practices effectively. For leadership, this commitment is demonstrated by ensuring that training provision is comprehensive, appropriately differentiated by career stage and need, and focused specifically on practical implementation (the ‘how’), rather than merely initial theoretical awareness (the ‘what’). This provision must encompass protected time for collaborative planning and subject-specific peer review, thereby facilitating the sharing of expertise and the refinement of practice within a professionally secure environment.
  • Love is Praise: An integral facet of capacity building involves genuine praise and targeted recognition. This extends beyond generic commendation; it constitutes specific, constructive feedback that acknowledges the effort expended and the process of improvement, particularly when staff have successfully navigated the inherent complexity of a change initiative. By celebrating iterative professional progression—such as a successful curriculum modification, the judicious management of a pastoral challenge, or transparent communication delivered professionally—leaders affirm that they observe, value, and trust the professional judgement of their personnel. This focused recognition effectively fuels subsequent commitment.
  • Love is Transparency: When navigating the complex financial landscape—where the funding increase often obscures the challenge posed by grant consolidation into the core budget—Continuous and Transparent Communication is paramount. It represents a proactive act of trust that mitigates anxiety and counters unsubstantiated internal conjecture. Leaders must address staff concerns regarding resources and budget allocation in a forward-looking manner, thereby managing expectations and sustaining engagement despite the uncertainty inherent in the “messiness” of change. This requires communicating why specific budgetary decisions are executed and how they align demonstrably with the shared moral purpose, thereby ensuring personnel do not perceive decisions as arbitrary or concealed.

The Empowerment of Shared Responsibility

Shared leadership, which cultivates a collective sense of responsibility for both improvement and innovation, stands as the paramount expression of professional regard for colleagues. It acknowledges that expertise and problem-solving capabilities are distributed throughout departments and faculties, rather than being concentrated solely within the senior leadership echelon.

  • Love is Empowerment: Empowerment serves as the practical manifestation of institutional trust. It mandates the distribution of ownership for key improvement priorities, thereby granting subject leaders and teachers’ agency within their professional domain and affording them the voice required to influence strategic decision-making. This contrasts fundamentally with a management structure that merely delegates tasks. When a leader empowers a faculty head to pilot a novel pedagogical approach, they are unequivocally demonstrating faith in that individual’s professional acumen and their profound commitment to driving effective, distributed improvement across the entire organisation. This model supports a culture where initiative is rewarded and where professional setbacks are accurately reclassified as learning opportunities, thereby securing the systemic resilience of the institution.

3. The Love for the Journey: Commitment, Resilience, and the Relentless Cycle

The professional scope of the school leader, symbolically represented by the cyclical, demanding progression of Jacob’s Ladder, ( see Authentic Leader passim) necessitates the consistent demonstration of unreserved Commitment and Strategic Adaptability. The “love for the journey” is the resolute determination to maintain the trajectory, even when challenges appear daunting, and understanding that progress is often attained incrementally.

Commitment and Professional Integrity

Commitment functions as the internal driver of professional integrity. It represents the unwavering determination to honour the school’s moral purpose, particularly when external pressures threaten to divert critical resources or managerial attention.

  • Love is Sustained Commitment: Leaders demonstrate this commitment through their own sustained adherence to the strategic vision, ensuring that every policy decision and financial manoeuvre serves the central objective of pupil success. This involves managing the “descent”—the necessary engagement with complex compliance and financial realities (such as the detailed application of the new National Funding Formula (NFF) parameters, the management of Minimum Funding Guarantee (MFG) complexities, or the meticulous tracking required to avoid financial deductions)—without ever losing sight of the “ascent”—the moral purpose of upholding educational standards and fostering well-being. The resilient leader does not permit the technicalities of the descent to overshadow the human and educational imperative of the ascent.

The planned transition to a new, multi-dimensional Ofsted “report card” system exemplifies this resilience. By moving away from a high-stakes, single-word judgement, the framework actively encourages leaders to adopt a more nuanced, iterative approach to improvement. It requires the professional courage to undertake honest evaluation across potentially eleven areas and to continuously adjust strategy based upon rich, contextualised data, rather than being immobilised by the apprehension of a singular negative classification. This commitment to continuous, honest self-evaluation constitutes a fundamental expression of leadership integrity.

Iteration as Professional Integrity

To demonstrate adaptability and resilience is to formally acknowledge that change is frequently non-linear, as evidenced by the unforeseen variables encountered in practical change management models. The “love for the journey” necessitates the embrace of iteration: a willingness to derive lessons from experience, adjust strategies dynamically, and avoid rigid adherence to an initial plan when confronted by unexpected obstacles or policy fluctuations. This flexible, forward-thinking approach ensures that the primary focus remains fixed on the desired outcome—enhanced pupil attainment and professional flourishing—rather than on the institutional comfort of maintaining the status quo. Iteration, in this specific context, is the ongoing demonstration of professional integrity, confirming that the most effective leaders are those perpetually willing to refine their methodology based on real-world feedback and empirical data.

The Christmas Parallel: Reflection, Renewal, and Reaffirmation

The Christmas period represents a welcome procedural break, a communal occasion for rest and institutional re-centring. This recess should be conceptualised not merely as a pause, but as a defined moment to consciously exercise the Love for the Journey and the Love for People.

  • Reflection (The Descent): Parallel to personal reflection upon the preceding year, this is the designated time for professional leaders to undertake genuine, unpressured consideration of the process of change, extending beyond simple outcomes. Which unforeseen variables presented the greatest challenge? In which areas did collective capacity prove most susceptible to strain?
  • Renewal (Capacity Building): The essential benefit of the holiday period is the renewal of personal reserves—mental, emotional, and physical. Leaders who demonstrate regard for their staff ensure that this period is genuinely restorative, thereby cultivating the refreshed professional purpose necessary for navigating the challenges inherent in the spring term. This renewal constitutes the ultimate practice of professional sustainability and self-care.
  • Reaffirmation (Moral Purpose): Finally, the seasonal focus on goodwill and community provides an unparalleled opportunity for the formal reaffirmation of the moral purpose guiding the institution. It is a chance to articulate institutional gratitude and communicate the term’s successes, irrespective of their scale, reinforcing the communal bonds and reminding every colleague—from the newest practitioner to the most senior leader—of the profound significance of their sustained professional dedication.

Reflective Planning Framework for Aspiring Leaders

Integrating Professional Commitment and Ethos

This framework offers aspiring leaders a structured tool for personal and professional development, focusing on the active application of the moral imperative—the “love” in leadership—across four critical domains. It is designed to bridge the gap between aspirational ethos and demonstrable professional behaviour.

Leadership DomainDefinition & Link to “The Love”Reflection Questions (Current Practice)Development Action (Moving Forward)
1. Elevate IntentionalityRelates to: The Love for Subject (Moral Purpose and Coherence). Intentionality ensures that every action, decision, and communication directly serves the articulated moral purpose, preventing professional activity from becoming merely procedural compliance. It is the commitment to Clarity and Strategic Planning.How often are strategic decisions (e.g., resource allocation, timetable adjustments) explicitly linked back to the core moral purpose or the strategic vision? In my current role, how effectively do I communicate the rationale behind a change initiative, rather than simply the instruction for its implementation?A. Develop a “Purpose-Driven Decision Protocol”: Before initiating any project, formally document the anticipated impact on pupil outcomes and staff capacity.

B. Practice “Visible Thinking”: In meetings, articulate the ‘Why’ before the ‘What’ to demonstrate purposeful leadership and subject coherence.
2. Combat ComplacencyRelates to: The Love for the Journey (Resilience and Iteration). Complacency is the antithesis of professional integrity. Combatting it requires embracing the “messiness” of change, seeking continuous feedback, and maintaining the intellectual honesty needed for self-evaluation.In which areas of my current responsibility have I resisted feedback, or where is practice maintained purely because “that is how it has always been done”? How frequently do I solicit critical feedback on my own leadership style and decision-making process (managing the “descent”)?A. Implement a 360-Degree Feedback Cycle specifically on “Adaptability to Change” and “Transparency of Communication.”

B. Dedicate 30 minutes weekly to review a failed or challenging professional episode, documenting the lessons learned and identifying the necessary strategic iteration.
3. Champion GrowthRelates to: The Love for People (Capacity Building and Empowerment). Championing growth moves beyond providing mandatory training (CPD) to actively seeking out and facilitating opportunities for colleagues to develop agency and expand their professional scope.Who, beyond my immediate team, have I proactively identified and mentored to take on new responsibilities (Empowerment)? How specific and constructive is the Praise and Recognition I provide? Is it tied to observed professional growth or merely to final successful outcomes?A. Institute a “Distributed Leadership Project”: Identify one colleague per term to lead a minor improvement project entirely autonomously, providing resources but not micro-managing.

B. Adopt “Evidence-Based Recognition”: Ensure all commendations explicitly reference the effort, skill acquisition, or specific behavioural change demonstrated, thereby reinforcing the value of the growth process.
4. Inspire Deeper ConnectionsRelates to: The Love for People (Shared Leadership and Transparency). This domain focuses on building the social and relational capital necessary for collective efficacy and institutional resilience, particularly through open, trusting communication.When addressing complexity (e.g., budget constraints or high-stakes accountability), do I foster anxiety or confidence? How well do I utilise formal and informal opportunities to communicate gratitude and reinforce the value of shared purpose (Reaffirmation)?A. Develop a “Communication Charter”: Commit to communicating critical strategic updates proactively, even when full details are unavailable, to sustain Transparency and mitigate conjecture.

B. Lead a “Moral Purpose Dialogue” session within the team in the new year, requiring all members to articulate how their individual passion contributes to the collective mission.

The successful transition to senior leadership is not predicated solely on technical competence, but upon the demonstrable and consistent application of the moral purpose. By intentionally working to Elevate Intentionality, Combat Complacency, Champion Growth, and Inspire Deeper Connections, aspiring leaders actively embody the professional love that is essential for navigating complexity and ensuring the enduring health and efficacy of the educational institution.

So, before the many mince pies, carols sang off key and the usual end of the term shenanigans, this is me signing off until 2026. Thank you for reading, commenting, liking and suggesting – via blog, message or in person. It is all appreciated. And so are you. May your Christmas dreams come true.

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The Authentic Leader’s Playbook: Learning from The Devil in the Details

If you were to hire a consultant to design the perfect villain for humanity, they would eventually invent Satan. His journey from a minor celestial bureaucrat to the Prince of Darkness is history’s most successful case study in what Steven Pinker calls “Common Knowledge.”

Pinker argues that social coordination requires a recursive state of awareness: I know X, you know X, and we both know that the other knows X. This public certainty is the “lubricant” for collective action. By viewing the history of Satan through this lens, we can extract profound and practical lessons on influence, communication, and the mechanics of social organisation that are essential for any authentic leader.

I. Strategic Lessons for the Authentic Leader

The evolution of the Devil is a masterclass in how to manage narrative, drive coordination, and ethically frame challenges. An authentic leader should apply these four principles:

1. Differentiate Shared Knowledge from Common Knowledge

The distinction between the Devil’s original version (ha-Satan) and his iconic rebrand (Lucifer) is Pinker’s critical lever.

• Shared Knowledge (Private Belief): Everyone knows the organisational values (they read the memo), but they do not know if their peers actually buy in. This leads to private scepticism and low engagement.

• Common Knowledge (Public Certainty): The leader must create situations where “everyone knows that everyone knows” the values and goals are real and non-negotiable. This is achieved through public signals (visible recognition, transparent decision-making, and consistent enforcement), which creates the binding awareness necessary for collective, coordinated action.

2. Frame Your Narrative Simply

The original ha-Satan was too nuanced—a cosmic judge and jury in the cupboard. This is the risk of an overly complex, internal-facing mission statement.

• Simplicity Scales: The successful Lucifer was simple: Prideful Rebel = Source of All Evil. Authentic leaders must distil their complex vision into a clear, concrete, and sticky message that can be effortlessly repeated and understood across all levels of the organisation. An authentic leader’s personal values are only as powerful as the shared, simple story the team tells about them.

3. Ethically Externalise the “Enemy”

The Devil’s success was as an externalised scapegoat that unified humanity. A leader must engage with the ethics of this strategy.

• Unify Against Problems, Not People: The leader’s equivalent of “Satan” should not be an internal department, a rival team member, or even a competitor. It must be an abstract, concrete, and shared problem—things like inefficiency, market stagnation, or lack of innovation. By unifying the team against a specific, externalised process or problem, the leader provides a powerful rallying point that fosters internal cohesion and reduces the risk of destructive in-fighting.

4. Understand the Endurance of Symbols

The modern use of Satan by non-theistic groups demonstrates the durability of a powerful symbol, even when the original belief is gone.

• Symbols Outlive Facts: The authentic leader must recognise that their actions, symbols, and core principles will resonate long after they are gone. A genuine commitment to principles like rebellion against arbitrary authority (the Miltonian Lucifer) can be leveraged by future generations. Authenticity—the consistent alignment of stated values and public actions—is the only way to ensure the legacy of the symbol remains positive.

II. The Core Mechanism: From Bureaucrat to Brand

To understand these lessons, we must first look at the theological necessity that drove the Devil’s rebranding.

The Bureaucrat vs. The Brand: The Existential Rebranding

In the Hebrew Bible, the entity known as ha-Satan (the Bureaucrat) was too nuanced to spark a mass movement. In Pinker’s terms, this version of Satan created “Shared Knowledge” (people privately knew suffering existed) but failed to establish “Common Knowledge.”

This created an Existential Problem for the emerging Christian Monotheism: If God is all-powerful and all-good, and ha-Satan is his employee, then God is directly responsible for all evil and testing. This is difficult to market to a population facing famine and plague. The Church needed an escape clause for divine responsibility.

The Great Rebranding: A Cognitive Cascade

The solution was the transition to Lucifer, the Fallen Angel. The Hebrew helel (shining one)—a poetic jab at the pompous King of Babylon in Isaiah 14:12—was translated into the Latin Lucifer. This “cosmic typo” became the spark.

This narrative was sticky. It moved the concept of evil from the abstract (a philosophical problem) to the concrete (a specific guy named Lucifer who hates you). This created the necessary Common Knowledge for a dualistic worldview: everyone knew that everyone else knew that the Devil was real and the sole source of temptation, suffering, and disorder. This externalisation preserved God’s goodness while providing a tangible enemy.

III. The Cognitive Lever of Hell: Standardising the Enemy

With the “Lucifer” archetype established, the machinery of Common Knowledge kicked into high gear during the Middle Ages.

• Visual Lexicon: By standardising the image of Satan—horns, hooves, eternal fire, often borrowing from pagan gods—the Church created a universal signal. This visual language, reinforced across cathedral art and morality plays, meant a peasant in France saw the same monster as a theologian in Rome.

• Aural Enforcement: Public rituals like the Exorcism Rite and the Sermon transformed private fear (Shared Knowledge) into public, undeniable fact (Common Knowledge).

This shared certainty coordinated social behaviour with terrifying efficiency. The use of the Devil as a scapegoat provided the “plausible deniability” Pinker describes, but it also became a Common Knowledge multiplier: the accusation that a rival was “in league with the Devil” was instantly plausible because everyone knew that everyone knew the Devil was actively seeking agents. This justified and accelerated witch trials and inquisitions, turning a theological concept into a machine for social compliance and political purges.

The Devil, it turns out, is in the recursive details. We built a hell of our own design, not necessarily out of fire and brimstone, but out of the powerful, binding belief that everyone else sees the same monster we do.

For the authentic leader, the ultimate takeaway is that effective influence is not just about sharing a vision; it is about creating a self-reinforcing, public reality where the team’s goals, and the problems standing in their way, are the unquestioned Common Knowledge.

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The Authentic School Leader’s Communication Conundrum: “Shaka, When the Walls Fell”

The modern school leader’s kryptonite isn’t budget strategy or curriculum mapping—it’s the calendar. Specifically, knowing when to hit “Send” and when to call an “All-Staff Meeting.” For authentic leaders, this is less about simple task management and more about an act of curation—an intentional choice rooted in respect, transparency, and intentionality. The authentic leader understands that every communication channel choice sends a message about how they value their team’s time and talent.

The core challenge is this: how do you foster the kind of deep, exceptional connection that emerges in synchronous conversation, while ruthlessly protecting the finite attention of your team from unnecessary interruptions? The answer lies in understanding the decoded metaphor of the leader’s door.

Tangent Alley

Arguments about what is the best Star Trek episode can get heated and go on late into the night – I should know, I’ve been there. Moreover, I can be easily swayed. “The City on the Edge of Forever?” “The Inner Light?” “Mirror Mirror?” “Yesterday’s Enterprise?” Yes, yes, yes! They’re all the best episode. But when it comes time to discuss what is the most profound episode, I think I have a clear pick.

Darmok,” from The Next Generation‘s fifth season, edges out some of the competition (like TOS’ fiercely pacifist “Day of the Dove” or “A Taste of Armageddon”) with its odd specificity. In other words, a message about the futility of war isn’t something you’ll only get from Trek. But “Darmok”’s story about a group or an individual so determined to communicate with others that they are willing to sacrifice themselves to make that contact – that’s something more unusual, even if it isn’t any less universal.

“Darmok,” of course, is the episode where a Tamarian (also known as the Children of Tama) named Dathon realises that great risks must be taken if his people are ever going to reach outside their own clan. Because of their unique fashion of speech which used metaphoric descriptions based on their own mythology, the universal translator is unable to make the usual connections. We’ll eventually realize that “Shaka, when the walls fell” means “failure,” but with no reference to Shaka (or his wall-falling misfortune) the UT program is unable to do so.

 It is a metaphor, referencing a story from the Tamarian culture where a hero named Shaka fails to save his people from a disaster. The phrase is used to express a situation of disappointment, defeat, or a complete breakdown. 

Same as it ever was. Disappointing communication is key; deciding what is actually important, almost impossible at times, and coaching those around us into understanding this is sometimes the hardest road we travel as leaders.

I often recognise that there is a vital difference between an email and a meeting. So, here, I make an attempt to define and explain both, although, if you are short on time, a meeting should have biscuits.

I. The Cost of Synchronicity: Respect for Time

Authentic leaders recognise that a colleague’s attention is the single most valuable, finite asset they control. Wasting it is a breach of trust. This dictates the core difference between the choices:

The Email Choice (Low Cost: Information Ledger)

  • Purpose: Information transmission, formal decisions, final agreements, or critical instructions. Email is the foundation of institutional memory and operational compliance.
  • Value: It demonstrates profound respect for individual productivity, allowing staff to absorb information asynchronously—when it fits their deep-focus work. Crucially, it creates a permanent, searchable ledger that prevents future confusion or “misremembering” and underpins accountability.
  • The School Leader’s Dilemma (The Failure): Despite its utility for clarity, the email choice can often be bypassed or ignored by overwhelmed staff, leading to compliance risks or, in the micro-sense, staff hearing vital information second-hand—like OFSTED changes on Radio 2—or the embarrassing question, “Could I remind them of an email I sent two days ago, because they had forgotten?” It’s a failure of information absorption and procedural compliance, a tragedy where clarity and accountability are missed: “Shaka, when the walls fell” (signifying failure or great defeat). The lesson here is that effective leadership requires both sending and ensuring the receipt and retention of critical information.

The Meeting Choice (High Cost, High Value: Collective Cognition)

  • Purpose: When simultaneous, immediate, and iterative input is required. Calling a meeting is an implicit contract: the value gained from synchronous discussion must outweigh the cost of everyone’s time. It’s essential for high-value tasks like brainstorming, rapid ideation, or complex problem-solving where non-linear discussion is beneficial.
  • The School Leader’s Value (The Triumph): As experienced in the last two weeks—13 meetings about KS3 data and Y11 mock results that could not have been an email—the synchronous discussion fosters shared ownership and reveals the outstanding, unique, or exceptional qualities of a colleague. The real value is the serendipity of spontaneous contribution; the quick, essential debate that occurs in the moment and moves the entire group forward in ways a static email thread never could.

II. Trust, Tone, and the Non-Verbal Code

When the subject is sensitive, potentially emotional, or nuanced—like strategic shifts, conflict resolution, or delivering bad news—email is a terrible vessel for tone. It strips away context, allowing the reader’s mood to dictate interpretation. A face-to-face setting allows a leader to convey empathy, read non-verbal cues (the slumped shoulder, the furrowed brow), and ensure the message is received authentically—not misinterpreted through cold text.

This is where the Tamarian idioms perfectly explain the decoded metaphor of the school leader’s door, which is often a portal to either genuine collaboration or tragic distraction:

The choice of communication channel aligns directly with the value being sought:

  1. The Official Invite (Meeting) signifies a High-Value, High-Cost conversation. This is the forum for genuine input, immediate feedback, and emotional nuance—a requirement for collective problem-solving where a joint effort overcomes an obstacle. The successful execution of such a meeting is captured by the idiom “Darmok and Jalad at Tanagra,” meaning Cooperation through a shared challenge. These intentional conversations are the source of shared stories, building the relational capital required for true connection and future trust.
  2. The Pop-in (Unintentional Asynchronicity) represents a Low-Value Interruption and is the unfortunate symptom of a lack of process or the failure to utilize the low-cost, documenting power of email for clear communication. It forces an interruption for information that should have been self-serve, ultimately showing a lack of operational discipline and respect for the leader’s focused time. The result is the tragedy of missed information and collapsed attention: “Shaka, when the walls fell,” signifying Failure, tragedy, or great defeat. This is the moment a system—or an individual’s attention—is confirmed to have collapsed due to preventable miscommunication.

For authentic school leaders, the choice isn’t transactional; it’s an act of curation of both attention and culture. By intentionally choosing the right channel, the leader moves beyond simply communicating to actively enabling their team to work together effectively, with mutual respect, and focused on tasks that truly matter.

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The Dawn of a Nuanced Accountability

The policy landscape, often a dense thicket of regulatory minutiae, has recently presented us with a vision of genuine clarity and strategic purpose in the form of the proposed Progress 8 reforms. For too long, the accountability metric, like an over-zealous accountant, valued the EBacc structure with an exclusionary zeal, subtly relegating the Arts to the sidelines of the academic pageant. Now, with the intended scrapping of the EBacc’s restrictive mandate  and the subsequent restructuring of P8, a necessary correction to the academic compass is at hand. This is not mere policy tinkering; it is a profound philosophical shift. It is the long-overdue assurance that our curriculum can be both robustly academic and truly reflective of the breadth of human endeavour.

The change to the subject slots, especially the guaranteed prominence given to Creative subjects on an equal footing with Languages and Humanities, finally dismantles the tyranny of the ‘EBacc core’. The fact that students’ subject choices will now be based on genuine interest and future opportunity rather than on the desperate calculus of historical league table drivers is a liberation for the soul of Key Stage 4. This proposed structure allows a student to weave a far richer tapestry of knowledge. The mandate for school leaders to proactively design options that promote true breadth in Arts, Languages, and Music  is a welcome pressure to ensure that a holistic education is the rule, not the exception.

Furthermore, the new accountability framework is a profound opportunity to tackle the systemic issue of complacency. The fact sheet wisely guides us to abandon long-established attainment patterns and instead focus on fluid accountability measures. By structurally guaranteeing the value of subjects like Art and Music within the new performance measure , the reforms necessitate a re-evaluation of resource allocation, staffing, and professional development. This is the necessary friction that sparks growth—a deliberate design for school leaders to move beyond mere compliance and into a period of strategic, intentional planning.

This bold restructuring, with its clear expectation for a “cutting-edge” curriculum and the championing of new enrichment benchmarks on civic engagement, life skills, and the arts, is the intellectual equivalent of reaching the summit of Jacob’s Ladder. It connects the academic enterprise directly to the external world and future opportunities. By aligning curriculum with high-value technical pathways like a post-16 Data Science and AI qualification, and formalising community partnerships, these changes ensure our schools are not simply factories for grades, but essential engines for relevant, tangible learning.

Authentic Leader Fact Sheet: Proposed Changes to Progress 8 Measures

Progress 8 is a key performance indicator used in secondary schools in England to measure the academic progress students make between Key Stage 2 (KS2 SATs) and their GCSE results. It compares a student’s progress in a set of eight subjects against that of other students nationwide with similar prior attainment.

A positive score means students at a school made more progress than expected; a negative score means they made less progress.


Current Progress 8 Structure

The current measure is based on a student’s performance across eight subjects, organised into three buckets:

  1. English (highest score from English Language and Literature): Double Weighted
  2. Mathematics: Double Weighted
  3. EBacc Subjects (three of the following: sciences, computer science, geography, history, or languages)
  4. Open Group (three subjects from the EBacc group or other approved arts, academic, or vocational qualifications)

Proposed Changes to Progress 8 Structure

The government is proposing a restructuring of the subject buckets to better balance a “strong academic core with breadth and student choice,” particularly aiming to boost the arts.

The total number of subjects remains eight, but the buckets are changing:

Slot NumberProposed Subject SlotWeightingNotes
1 & 2EnglishDoubleHighest score from English Language or Literature.
3 & 4MathematicsDoubleMaths is still double-weighted.
5 & 6Dedicated ScienceSingleTwo highest scores from: Combined Science (double award), Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Computer Science/Computing.
7 & 8Breadth SlotsSingleFour slots with specific requirements to ensure breadth.

How the Dedicated Science Slots (5 & 6) Work

These slots take the two highest scores from a selection of science subjects.

  • If a student takes Combined Science (a double award), the two-subject grade is averaged (e.g., a grade 5 and 6 averages to two scores of 5.5) and can fill one or both slots.
  • The options are: Combined Science, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Computer Science, or Computing.

How the Breadth Slots (7, 8, 9, 10) Work

These slots are designed to ensure students study a wide range of subjects.

Breadth Slot NumberRequirementCategories to Choose From
7 & 8Must be filled by subjects from two of these three categories:1. Humanities: Geography, History, Religious Studies.
9 & 10Takes the two highest scores in any approved subjects.Any subject not already counted (including English language/literature if not used in slot 1 & 2), or other eligible subjects/technical awards.
2. Creative: Art and Design, Music, Drama, Dance, Design and Technology.
3. Languages: Modern Foreign Languages and Ancient Languages.

Key Technicalities

  • More than 8 Subjects: Only the highest grades relevant to the eight slots are counted.
  • Fewer than 8 Subjects: Students receive a zero score for any slots that are not filled, which negatively impacts the overall Progress 8 score.
  • Reasoning: The changes are intended to address criticism that the current system sidelined the arts and to put Creative subjects on an equal footing with Humanities and Languages.

When Will This Happen?

  • The government will hold a consultation on these proposals.
  • The final response is expected in the summer term of 2026.
  • The new structure is intended to be in place for schools to use when students make subject choices for the 2027-28 academic year.

Considerations for Future Curriculum and Assessment Planning

The proposed curriculum and assessment reforms, driven by the scrapping of the EBacc and the significant restructuring of Progress 8 (P8), demand immediate and intentional planning from school leaders. This involves moving beyond mere compliance to strategically integrating new subject priorities and adapting to revised accountability mechanics well before the 2028 implementation date.

Leaders must urgently audit the curriculum for new literacies, specifically mapping where topics like financial literacy and digital/AI misinformation can be woven into existing subjects like Maths, Computing, and PSHE. Furthermore, the removal of the EBacc’s restrictive structure offers a profound opportunity: Key Stage 4 (GCSE) subject options must be intentionally designed to promote true breadth in Arts, Languages, and Music, basing subject uptake on genuine student interest and future opportunity rather than historical league table drivers.

This intentionality must also address the logistical commitment of planning for a three-science pathway for all students, requiring proactive resource allocation, laboratory scheduling, and science staffing reviews.


A major risk during this transition period is complacency, especially concerning long-established attainment patterns and metrics. Leaders must actively anticipate and combat this by focusing intensely on diagnostic data and fluid accountability measures. The introduction of the statutory Year 8 reading test must be treated as a critical diagnostic tool, not just an assessment hurdle. Data from this test should immediately inform rapid intervention programs to tackle the known problem of widening attainment gaps during the first years of secondary school. Additionally, leaders must scrutinise the evolving accountability landscape; the promise to “reform” P8 means the goalposts are not static.

To combat complacency, a small working group should be tasked with tracking DfE announcements on the new P8 methodology, ensuring all subject leaders—particularly those in the Arts—understand that the value of their contribution is now structurally guaranteed to be viewed more equitably within the new performance measure.


Curriculum reform must be partnered with a commitment to championing growth in people and professional skills, ensuring staff are equipped to teach a “cutting-edge” curriculum. To effectively educate students on issues like spotting AI-generated content and misinformation, an immediate investment in digital CPD for all teaching staff is essential, focusing on the responsible use of AI in learning and assessment.

Another key area for growth is oracy and communication, which is being pushed to have the same status as reading and writing. This is not a departmental initiative; it requires embedding explicit instruction in speaking, listening, and debate across all subjects to build the critical communication skills valued by employers and universities.

This period of change also serves as an opportune moment to model reflective practice, prompting departments to review and better represent diversity and global contributions within their subject content while maintaining foundational knowledge.


Finally, the reforms require school leaders to inspire deeper connections between the curriculum and the external world, focusing on community and future opportunities. The new enrichment benchmarks on civic engagement, life skills, and the arts are now part of the accountability framework, making formal partnerships essential. Leaders should collaborate with local businesses, civic groups, and arts organisations to deliver these benchmarks meaningfully. For instance, lessons on financial skills like budgeting should be framed as a direct connection to financial wellbeing within the student’s community, making the learning relevant and tangible.

Furthermore, to ensure seamless progression, leaders must engage early with feeder colleges and sixth-form providers to discuss the proposed exploration of a post-16 qualification in data science and AI. By fostering these connections, the school’s curriculum is directly linked to the high-value technical and academic pathways that their students will ultimately progress to, giving the reforms maximum positive impact.

Authentic Checklist: Preparing for Progress 8 Reform

Immediate Actions (Next 6–12 Months)

  • Audit Curriculum
    • Map current KS4 subject offer against proposed Progress 8 buckets.
    • Identify gaps in Arts, Languages, and Humanities provision.
  • Form a Working Group
    • Assign responsibility for tracking DfE announcements and consultation outcomes.
    • Include subject leaders from Arts, Science, and Languages.
  • Plan for Science Pathways
    • Review feasibility of offering three separate sciences for all students.
    • Assess lab capacity, timetable implications, and staffing needs.

Medium-Term Actions (2026–2027)

  • Embed New Literacies
    • Integrate financial literacy and digital/AI misinformation into Maths, Computing, and PSHE.
  • Invest in CPD
    • Launch digital CPD for staff on AI use and misinformation detection.
    • Develop oracy training across all subjects.
  • Review Subject Diversity
    • Ensure curriculum reflects global contributions and diversity.

Long-Term Actions (2027–2028)

  • Redesign KS4 Options Process
    • Promote genuine breadth and student choice in Arts, Languages, and Music.
  • Strengthen Community Partnerships
    • Formalise links with local businesses, arts organisations, and civic groups for enrichment benchmarks.
  • Engage with Post-16 Providers
    • Discuss alignment with emerging qualifications (e.g., Data Science and AI).

Ongoing

  • Monitor Accountability Changes
    • Regularly update staff on evolving Progress 8 methodology.
  • Use Year 8 Reading Test Data
    • Implement rapid interventions for literacy gaps.
  • Champion Growth
    • Embed reflective practice and professional development across departments.

I said in my post yesterday it had just got interesting; and here we are. More interesting still.

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A Green and Pleasant Curriculum: initial thoughts on the Francis Review outcomes.

Key Reforms in England’s National Curriculum:

The government has confirmed the most significant overhaul of the National Curriculum in over a decade, largely adopting recommendations from Professor Becky Francis’s Curriculum and Assessment Review. The reforms are aimed at equipping pupils with “skills for life and work” for the 21st century.

Implementation Timeline

  • Final Revised Curriculum Publication: Spring 2027.
  • Full Implementation (First Teaching): September 2028.
    New Compulsory Subject Content
    The changes focus on introducing essential life and digital skills:
  • Financial Literacy: Teaching on budgeting and concepts like mortgages, to be integrated into Maths or compulsory Primary Citizenship lessons.
  • Media and AI Literacy: Greater focus on identifying misinformation, disinformation, and AI-generated content.
  • Compulsory Primary Citizenship: Citizenship will become mandatory in primary schools, covering financial literacy, media literacy, law, and democracy.
  • Climate Change and Diversity: The curriculum will include more content on climate change and feature better representation of diversity.
    Major GCSE and Accountability Changes
    Substantial shifts are planned for secondary school examinations and performance measures:
  • Scrapping the EBacc: The English Baccalaureate (EBacc) accountability measure will be scrapped, with the aim of encouraging a greater breadth of GCSE study, particularly in the arts and creative subjects.
  • Guaranteeing Triple Science: Schools will be required to work towards offering the three separate science GCSEs (Biology, Chemistry, Physics) as standard.
  • Reducing Exam Time: The Department for Education (DfE) plans to cut overall GCSE exam time by up to three hours for each student on average.
  • Progress 8 (P8): The measure will be reformed, though specific details on its final structure are pending.
  • New Statutory Year 8 Reading Test: A new mandatory reading test for Year 8 pupils will be introduced, intended to identify and address reading difficulties.
    Wider School Experience
  • Oracy: Oracy (speaking, listening, and communication) is to be given the same status as reading and writing in the curriculum, supported by a new oracy framework.
  • Enrichment Benchmarks: Schools must offer and advertise to parents a new set of core enrichment activities, covering:
  • Civic engagement, Arts and culture, Nature and adventure, Sport and Life skills.

Progress 8 (P8) Accountability Reforms

The government has confirmed it will reform the Progress 8 (P8) school performance measure, although the specific details of the final structure are still pending.

• DfE Stance vs. Review Recommendation: This is a point of divergence from the Curriculum and Assessment Review, which recommended retaining Progress 8 largely unchanged (other than renaming the EBacc section). The DfE’s decision to reform it is explicitly linked to the scrapping of the EBacc measure.

• The Aim of Reform: The goal of the P8 reform is to ensure the accountability measure now encourages students to study a greater breadth of GCSE subjects, specifically aiming to give equal status to the arts alongside humanities and languages.

• Progress 8 currently divides a student’s best 8 grades into three ‘buckets’: English & Maths (double-weighted), three EBacc subjects, and three ‘Open Group’ subjects.

• What is Expected: Given the removal of the EBacc as a measure, the P8 reform is highly likely to involve changes to the ‘EBacc bucket’ to reflect the new priority of a broader curriculum. However, the exact mechanism—such as how many non-EBacc subjects will be allowed to count or whether the points structure will change—has not yet been finalised by the DfE.

The government is aiming to publish the final revised National Curriculum, including the full details of these assessment changes, by Spring 2027

GCSE Triple Science Entitlement

The government has confirmed it will introduce a statutory entitlement for all GCSE pupils to be able to study Triple Science (separate GCSEs in Biology, Chemistry, and Physics).

Goal: The primary aim is to address the socioeconomic gap in Triple Science uptake, ensuring that access to this STEM pathway is not curtailed by a student’s background or the school they attend. Currently, a significantly lower proportion of disadvantaged pupils take Triple Science.

Mechanism (Access, Not Compulsion): The reform is about access, not mandatory uptake. The change requires all secondary schools to offer the three separate science GCSEs as standard, meaning every child will have the option to choose them. This is a significant change, as many schools currently only offer ‘Combined Science’ (a double GCSE).

Implementation: The Department for Education (DfE) has stated that schools will be expected to work towards offering Triple Science as standard, ahead of the full statutory entitlement. This staggered approach acknowledges the practical challenge of recruiting or retraining specialist science teachers—a key concern raised by school leaders.

So what now?

Elevate Intentionality: Strategic Focus on the New Curriculum

The new curriculum, slated for first teaching in September 2028, requires immediate, high-level planning. Intentionality means moving beyond mere compliance to strategic integration.

• Audit for New Literacies: Do not wait until 2028. Elevate intentionality by immediately mapping where financial literacy and digital/AI misinformation can be woven into existing subjects (Maths, Computing, Citizenship, PSHE). Design a whole-school strategy now, rather than rushing a few isolated lessons later.

• Design for Breadth (Post-EBacc): The scrapping of the EBacc and the reform of Progress 8 creates an opportunity. Intentionally design your Key Stage 4 (GCSE) curriculum to reflect true value, not just accountability measures. Ensure your staffing and options structure genuinely promote uptake in Arts, Music, and Languages based on student interest and economic opportunity, not just league table mechanics.

• Plan the Three Sciences Pathway: The commitment to ensuring all students can take three science GCSEs as standard is a significant logistical change. Be intentional about resource allocation, laboratory time, and science staffing needs, particularly for students who might have previously been guided towards Combined Science.

Combat Complacency: Accountability and Attainment Gaps

Complacency—particularly around established attainment patterns—is a risk during any transition. Leaders must actively target areas of underperformance.

• Tackle Year 8 Head-On: The introduction of the statutory Year 8 reading test is a direct government action to combat complacency regarding secondary-level literacy. School leaders must treat the results of this test as a major diagnostic tool, not just an assessment.

• Advice: Develop rapid intervention programs for pupils who do not meet the expected standard, using the data to address the “problem pupils experience during the first years of secondary school”—a known factor in widening attainment gaps.

• Scrutinise Accountability Metrics: Do not assume the goalposts are static. The DfE has promised to “reform” Progress 8 and scrap the EBacc.

• Advice: Combat complacency by forming a small working group to track DfE announcements on the new P8 methodology. Ensure subject leaders understand that the value of their subject (e.g., Arts) is now guaranteed to be viewed more equitably in the new system.

Champion Growth: People, Skills, and Curriculum

Growth is not just about student attainment; it’s about the professional development required to teach a “cutting-edge” curriculum.

• Invest in Digital CPD: To teach students how to spot AI-generated content and misinformation, staff themselves must be experts. Champion growth by commissioning immediate, practical CPD for all teachers on digital literacy and the responsible use of AI in learning and assessment.

• Prioritise Oracy and Communication: The push for oracy to have the same status as reading and writing is a profound call for growth in classroom practice.

• Advice: Embed explicit instruction in speaking, listening, and debate across all subjects. This is not just an English department initiative; it’s a whole-school effort to build the communication skills valued by employers and university pathways.

• Model Reflective Practice: Use the new curriculum as a moment for all departments to ask: “How can we better represent diversity and global contributions in our subject content, while maintaining our core foundational knowledge?”

Inspire Deeper Connections: Community and Opportunity

The reforms emphasize moving beyond the exam hall to prepare children for society and the world of work. Inspiring deeper connections is essential to this mission.

• Integrate Enrichment and Community: The new enrichment benchmarks on civic engagement, life skills, and arts are now part of the accountability framework.

• Advice: Inspire deeper connections by formally partnering with local businesses, civic groups, and arts organisations to deliver these benchmarks. Frame lessons on budgeting and mortgages not as abstract concepts, but as direct connections to financial wellbeing in their community.

• Connect Post-16 Pathways: Ensure the proposed exploration of a post-16 qualification in data science and AI is discussed early with your feeder colleges and sixth-form providers.

• Advice: This fosters a deeper connection between your school’s curriculum and the high-value technical and academic pathways your students will progress to.

By using this framework, school leaders can view the curriculum review not as a burden of change, but as a clear mandate to create a relevant, robust, and modern education system for their students.

It just got a little more interesting, didn’t it?

Good luck and I hope this is of some use to you and what you do next.

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