Zack Polanski tells NEU teachers’ union that Greens would abolish ‘toxic’ Ofsted – UK politics live

Zack Polanski tells NEU teachers’ union that Greens would abolish ‘toxic’ Ofsted – UK politics live


Zack Polanski tells NEU teachers’ union Greens oppose academisation and would abolish ‘toxic, failed’ Ofsted

The Green party would abolish Ofsted because they view it as a “failed institution”, Zack Polanski, its leader, has told a teaching union conference.

Polanski also said that the Greens were opposed to the academisation of schools and that they believe that Labour is not fixing the “failings” in the system by the Tories, but embedding them.

In a speech to the National Education Union’s annual conference, Polanski said:

double quotation markOfsted is a toxic, failed institution which is harming teachers and children – and it’s time to end it.

Talking about school structures more generally, he said:

double quotation markThis government’s reforms are simply tinkering around the edges.

We need to end the Ofsted era entirely and move towards a genuinely collaborative model. One that connects teachers on the frontline with local experts – specialists in pedagogy, child development and social care – we must make sure teachers have the support and guidance they need to meet the needs of their pupils.

And then we need to talk about academies. Another failed model pushed on to teachers and children by previous governments’ ideological drive to marketise our children’s education. And the results have been stark: a fragmented system with poor accountability, allowing academy CEOs to be paid enormous salaries while pay and conditions for their staff worsen.

Research into the impact of academisation on learning has found no positive impact on the attainment and progress of pupils in multi-academy trusts, compared to other schools. And in fact, in larger multi-academy trusts, particularly secondary schools, the results were worse.

Polanski may have been talking about research papers like this one, which has been cited by the NEU.

Referring to Labour, Polanski said:

double quotation markThis government came in promising to fix the failings in the system – but the new schools white paper would entrench them. Forcing every school to join a multi-academy trust when we know that this model weakens accountability to local authorities, parents and the local community.

Polanski also said education needed a “serious cash injection”.

double quotation markThe UK currently invests approximately just 4.1% of GDP in education, below the OECD average of just under 5%. That puts us significantly behind top-performing countries like Iceland, investing 5.6%, and Norway at 6.2%.

He said the Greens could fund higher educational spending by taxing extreme wealth, saying that “the average wealth of a billionaire in the UK grew by more than £230m last year”.

Zack Polanski speaking at the NEU conference in Brighton.
Zack Polanski speaking at the NEU conference in Brighton. Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA
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Scottish Tory leader Russell Findlay refuses to rule out backing Anas Sarwar to be first minister, to keep out Swinney

Russell Findlay, the Scottish Conservative leader, has refused to rule out backing Anas Sarwar to be first minister.

As the Press Association (PA) reports, Findlay was asked outright if he would instruct his MSPs in the new parliament to back the Scottish Labour leader for Bute House during a visit to Aberdeen with UK leader Kemi Badenoch.

While he refused to be drawn on supporting Sarwar, the Tory leader said he could never back John Swinney to return to the job.

He said:

double quotation markFirst and foremost, I’m fighting for every single Scottish Conservative vote and as many Scottish Conservative MSPs as possible.

I’m just not going to get into post-election speculation about numbers, which none of us in this room or further afield know anything about.

But what I will say, categorically, is I will not support and will never support an SNP first minister or SNP government.

His comments come following a story in The Scotsman which quotes a senior Labour source, who says the party winning about a dozen constituencies in Scotland’s central belt could put them in a position to lead the government, but they would need the votes of other unionist parties, including Reform UK. PA says a deal between Labour and Reform would come as a surprise to many given the fractious relationship between the two parties, including a row in a byelection last year where social media ads produced by Nigel Farage’s party about Sarwar were described as “racist” by critics.

The spectre of a deal between the two parties was raised by SNP first minister John Swinney at his party’s campaign launch, where he denied the idea was a “scare story”, PA says.

Russell Findlay (right), with Kemi Badenoch, the Conservative leader, and Andrew Bowie, the shadow Scottish secretary, on a visit to the Well-Safe Protector Oil Rig at the Port of Aberdeen today. Photograph: Murdo MacLeod/The Guardian


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