EDUCATION chiefs in Fife have assured councillors that standards have not been allowed to slip despite a dearth of formal school inspections.

No new Education Scotland inspections have taken place across the region in the last two years due to COVID-19 restrictions, while only a handful were carried out by the Care Inspectorate for the same reason.

From the middle of next month, HMIE says it will carry out “recovery” visits to support the education sector but will not report on specific quality indicators or give grades as part of those visits.

Jackie Funnell, education manager, said: “Although prior to COVID inspection, activity in schools and centres was increasing, some schools will not have been inspected for a considerable period of time. 

“But we cannot, and do not, wait on inspection activity alone to help secure continuous improvement.

“Working with professionals across Fife, the directorate is seeking to ensure that schools and practitioners take increasing ownership for improving practice and, of course, improving outcomes for our children and young people. 

“This is entirely consistent with the national direction of travel in terms of emphasising the importance of schools and headteachers leading the improvement process through the empowerment agenda.”

While the external scrutiny may have been lacking, councillors on the education and children’s services sub-committee heard that Education Scotland has worked collaboratively with the council, school clusters and individual schools to build capacity in the system and support improvement throughout the pandemic. 

A report to committee confirmed that Beath High School was able to receive a return visit from HMIE in November 2021, following an inspection that took place in 2019, and received a very favourable report with no follow-up visit required.

In Dunfermline, Queen Anne High School, Beanstalk Family Nurture Centre and Calaiswood Special School also participated in a national thematic inspection focused on approaches to supporting children and young people’s wellbeing – the results of which are due later this year.

Ms Funnell added that Education Scotland had arranged a number of opportunities for “high-quality, professional dialogue” for school leaders which were designed to support recovery and improvement work in individual schools, across clusters and across the local authority.