Five things inspectors say about Wales' schools
It will take more than a decade to get back to pre-pandemic levels of attendance in secondary schools in Wales if the current rate of progress carries on, according to inspection body Estyn.
Estyn's annual report also said problems recruiting qualified staff were having an impact on the quality of education and posed a "risk" to the system.
Chief inspector Owen Evans said "strong leaders" were needed to drive improvement, although headteachers have reported facing obstacles including a lack of finances and poor pupil behaviour.
The Welsh government said it had already begun to tackle areas where improvement is needed, backed by an additional £230.5m in funding over the next two years.
There has been a slight improvement in pupil attendance but in secondary schools it remains "stubbornly low".
In 2023-24 attendance increased by only 0.5 percentage points from 87.5% to 88% and remained 5.7 percentage points below 2018-19 levels.
According to headteachers, there are two main reasons for low rates:
a substantial increase in the number of pupils who are absent frequently or refuse to attend school, some due to mental health problems
a changing culture among parents, who now place less importance on their children attending regularly.
Attendance rates vary more than before the pandemic, with one school seeing a drop of just 1.3 percentage points while others fell back 10 percentage points.
The gap between the attendance of children eligible for free school meals and their classmates has also grown.
In secondary schools, pupils eligible for free school meals are still, on average, missing one day of school per week.
A decline in recruitment is "a significant concern", said the report.
After a temporary spike during the pandemic it has fallen back, and Estyn is particularly worried about some key areas such as maths, science and Welsh.
Headteachers said the quality of candidates was "too often not up to the required standard".
The report said concern about pupil behaviour might be one reason for the lack of interest in teaching in secondary schools, along with the appeal of other graduate professions.
Estyn has suggested introducing possible incentives such as abolishing fees for teacher training.
It said conditions for teachers needed to be more attractive - some headteachers have made it possible for staff to work from home one day a week or come in to school slightly later, but budget pressures make that increasingly difficult.
In Wales, the Cynllun Pontio scheme is again accepting applications to support Welsh-speaking primary school teachers to work in secondary schools.
The Welsh government scheme also wants to attract teachers in schools outside Wales, and teachers who have been out of the profession for five years or more.
Angharad Pari-Williams now teaches humanities at Ysgol David Hughes on Anglesey after completing the scheme.
Ms Pari-Williams, who used to be a primary school teacher, said: "With the new Curriculum for Wales being so cross-curricular I found my experience in primary teaching to be really useful in my new role.
"I wanted a new challenge and wanted to see if my skills in primary school could be transferred with me to secondary."
She said the pace of teaching in secondary school was "something that I had to work on to begin with," but it was not as much of a challenge as she had expected.
Meinir Davies, deputy headteacher at Ysgol David Hughes, said the school was "very much aware of the difficulties recruiting people" in subjects including science and maths.
She said: "This year, we have three teachers who specialise in primary teaching, and they have the opportunity to get a taste of life teaching in secondary schools."
Over many years, there has been a pattern of secondary schools struggling more than primary.
"High-quality teaching was seen consistently in only a very few schools," said inspectors.
While developing basic numeracy and literacy skills has strengthened, provision is weaker when it comes to more advanced literacy, numeracy, Welsh, and digital skills.
The report refers to Wales' poor performance in international Pisa tests.
The pandemic has hit many aspects of education and this report mentions handwriting as one, while "a significant minority of pupils frequently made spelling, grammar, and punctuation errors".
At all levels, the report said schools needed to get better at evaluating their strengths and weaknesses.
"We need strong leaders to drive this improvement as the failure to do so is holding back progress for too many learners," said the chief inspector.
Inspectors said there was too much variation in schools' understanding of the new curriculum.
Primary schools have been teaching it since September 2022, while secondary schools are still rolling it out.
The curriculum is structured around broad areas of learning but inspectors said it had often led to a "lack of depth" and meant "pupils moving from topic to topic too quickly without developing a required depth of understanding".
Another problem is a lack of clarity about how to measure pupils' progress.
Safeguarding and well-being support is strong across most schools, Estyn said.
In most primary schools attendance has bounced back to pre-pandemic levels and a majority are getting on well with the new curriculum.
A Welsh government spokesperson said: "Estyn is clear there are significant strengths to celebrate but there are also challenges.
"We have already begun to tackle areas where we need to see improvement backed by an additional £230.5m in funding over the next two years to help improve education outcomes."
Exclusion for knives 'too simple', says Estyn chief
Schools to count thousands more children as absent
Schools urge Welsh-speaking teachers to come home
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Royal Welsh bans English livestock amid bluetongue
The Royal Welsh Show is to ban livestock from England from this year's event following the spread of the bluetongue virus. In a statement, organisers said they "recognised the growing concern" around the recent outbreak. Royal Welsh Agricultural Society (RWAS) said livestock entries of animals susceptible to the virus - particularly cattle, sheep and goats - will not be accepted from exhibitors located within a bluetongue virus restricted zone. The zone is to be extended to cover the whole of England from 1 July before the annual show in Llanelwedd, near Builth Wells in Powys, on 21-24 July. Bluetongue serotype 3 (BTV-3), mainly spread by midge bites, does not affect humans or risk food safety. Warning of 'massive impact' of farm virus in Wales Bluetongue virus 'causing farmers stress and anxiety' Latest Welsh Government advice RWAS said it was committed to working with and supporting exhibitors amid the outbreak and is working closely with the Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA) and the Welsh government veterinary team. "Our goal is to ensure that appropriate policies and procedures are in place, in line with the most up-to-date guidance," the statement read. "That said, we are taking steps to provide clarity based on current guidance, while being transparent that circumstances may evolve before the Royal Welsh Show in July. "This policy has been introduced to safeguard the health of livestock exhibited at this year's Royal Welsh Show and to help reduce the risk of bluetongue spreading." The RWAS said: Entries will not be accepted from exhibitors located within a bluetongue restricted zone. Exhibitors who are required to travel through a restricted zone to attend the show will also not be permitted to attend. If an exhibitor enters the show but subsequently moves into a restricted zone, they will no longer be eligible to attend. Exhibitors unaffected by bluetongue restrictions will remain subject to the society's general rules and regulations. The RWAS said the policy could change according to any updates in government policy before the show. Current pre-movement testing exemptions apply in England, Scotland and Wales until 12 June when the Welsh government is due to announce an update. Last summer, the Royal Welsh Show celebrated 120 years since the annual agricultural show first began. Bluetongue does not affect humans and poses no risk to public health or food safety In rare instances, however, dogs and other carnivores can contract it if they consume infected substances such as aborted material and afterbirth. It affects cattle, goats, sheep, goats, deer and camelids such as llamas and alpacas. The impacts on susceptible animals can vary greatly – but in most cases seen since September 2024 clinical signs have been mild and animals have recovered. Bluetongue is classed as a "notifiable" disease, meaning it is an offence not to report it to the authorities. Signs of bluetongue in cattle include lethargy, crusty erosions around the nostrils and muzzle, and redness of the mouth, eyes and, nose. In sheep, signs include ulcers or sores in the mouth and nose, discharge from the eyes or nose and drooling from mouth, and the swelling of the lips, tongue, head and neck, as well as the coronary band (where the skin of the leg meets the horn of the foot). Other symptoms include red skin as a result of blood collecting beneath the surface, fever, lameness, breathing problems, abortion, foetal deformities and stillbirths. The disease can be fatal. We'll work with anyone for rural life, say farmers
Yahoo
9 hours ago
- Yahoo
Court hands a lifeline to AmeriCorps, but its future remains uncertain
Green Bay Conservation Corps workers, from left, Emily Swagel, Zak King and Cailie Kafura, plant native shrubs in Fireman's Park. The work is part of installing a pollinator corridor and a larger land restoration project across Green Bay. (Photo courtesy of Green Bay Conservation Corps) Jake White says he was lucky. A University of Wisconsin-Madison graduate with a global health major, White was in his second year of an AmeriCorps placement in the Sawyer County Public Health Department, where he helped out with department reports and outreach to the community. Then AmeriCorps pulled the plug at the end of April — cancelling its grants to agencies all across the country. White was in the middle of working with a team assigned to produce a community health assessment for the county when he got the news. Sawyer County kept him on so he could stick with the project, converting his position to a limited-term employee (LTE) through the end of June, when White starts medical school in Wausau. The reprieve also gave him a chance to hand over a second project, on substance abuse prevention, to another community member, White said. The future of that work was one of his biggest worries about AmeriCorps' sudden shutdown. His AmeriCorps experience at the county 'really gave me the foundation for the skills and knowledge I will carry into my role as a physician,' White told the Wisconsin Examiner. The aftermath of the AmeriCorps shutdown didn't go as smoothly for Maxwell Robin. He was placed with the St. Vincent DePaul charitable pharmacy in Madison. 'I did whatever needed to be done,' Robin said — working on computer projects at the pharmacy, filling prescriptions, serving as an interpreter for Spanish-speaking patients. When the AmeriCorps cancellation notice arrived, the projects he was working on 'got thrown into chaos,' Robin said a week after the notification. Now a federal judge has ordered AmeriCorps to restore its grants and reinstate its volunteers. But all of that remains up in the air. 'Things are just very confusing now,' Robin said Friday. Despite that, Robin has been able to move on. He is waiting to hear back from several job applications. And he still volunteers part-time at the pharmacy, where he developed a strong interest in working in the nonprofit sector. 'We were able to take people who, for whatever reason, had been kicked to the side,' Robin said. The federal judge's order, issued Thursday, includes an injunction ordering the federal government to reverse the cancellation of AmeriCorps grants and projects across the country and to restore those programs, funding and personnel. But program administrators still don't know for sure what will happen and when. 'We are still waiting for official notification from AmeriCorps,' said Jeanne Duffy, the executive director of Serve Wisconsin, in an email message Friday. Serve Wisconsin, based in the Wisconsin Department of Administration, is the state administrator for AmeriCorps. Wisconsin has 25 AmeriCorps programs operating in more than 300 locations across the state — volunteers who are paid a stipend and who work in health care, help with environmental projects, assist in school classrooms and carry out other projects. When the Trump administration canceled AmeriCorps grants April 25, the action caught participants in the program as well as officials responsible for coordinating its work by surprise. Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers and Attorney General Josh Kaul joined the federal lawsuit brought by 25 states to challenge the AmeriCorps shutdown. Thursday's order, by U.S. District Judge Deborah L. Boardman in Maryland, found that the Corporation for National Community Service, the agency that operates AmeriCorps, and its administration 'likely violated the Administrative Procedure Act by failing to engage in notice-and-comment rulemaking before making significant changes to service delivery, that the plaintiffs will be irreparably harmed if this injunction does not issue, and that the balance of the equities and the public interest favor an injunction.' The cancellation affected programs all over Wisconsin that have worked with AmeriCorps, some of them for years, and the volunteers who have flocked to AmeriCorps looking for experience through community service work. 'It's a tragedy,' said state Rep. Supreme Moore Omokunde (D-Milwaukee), who spent two years as an AmeriCorps participant 15 years ago. 'AmeriCorps is about volunteerism. We have limited resources and we have this unlimited need.' In Green Bay, AmeriCorps helped staff the Green Bay Conservation Corps. Founded in 2022, the Conservation Corps has fielded teams of AmeriCorps members each year on projects that have included establishing a pollinator corridor through the city, removing invasive plants, maintaining walking trails and restoring area streams. 'Altogether we've seen over 70 AmeriCorps members come through our doors,' said Maria Otto, the Green Bay Conservation Corps coordinator. 'They're the ones getting the work done.' The Green Bay city council passed a measure covering the rest of the 2025 service year from city funds. 'After two weeks of uncertainty, our entire crew was able to work for the Conservation Corps again' thanks to the funds, said Cailie Kafura, one of the AmeriCorps volunteers. The money will allow the program's work to keep going through August. 'We were doing a lot of work that people maybe don't even know is being done,' said Kafura. 'I know that the work I'm doing, I want to be doing that kind of work in the future. I want to be using my body and my mind for good out in the world.' Lynn Walter operates a nonprofit, New Leaf Foods, that promotes access to healthy food and education in the greater Green Bay area. Founded 15 years ago, New Leaf began working with AmeriCorps five years ago through a partnership with Marshfield Clinic. The clinic deploys AmeriCorps participants on health-related projects around the state. Walter said Friday after the cancellation she was able to retain one of her three AmeriCorps participants this year on a contract basis. A second AmeriCorps member chose to stay on as a volunteer to complete a project she had been working on, while the third needed more paid hours and went to another job. Even with the court ruling, Walter said, she's been told that what happens next remains uncertain. And she fears there's been longer-term damage regardless of what happens in the court case. 'Even if the program starts up again, there won't be the momentum that there has been in the past,' Walter said. She expects prospective participants to be wary of signing up in the future: 'What would you tell a young person?' In his early 30s, Omokunde joined Public Allies, a leadership development nonprofit, in 2010 and 2011 as an AmeriCorps participant. He called the experience 'a tipping point' for him personally and professionally. 'One of the core values is collaboration,' Omokunde said. 'It taught me that collaboration is one of the most difficult things to do — but it's one of the most necessary things to do.' Omokunde is blunt in his assessment of why AmeriCorps was targeted in President Donald Trump's second term. 'I think it follows a long tradition of people not valuing the work that is done in certain communities,' Omokunde said. 'Donald Trump is a bully. He doesn't want anything in opposition to him and his agenda.' Omokunde ticked off a list of colleagues in politics who came up through AmeriCorps and Public Allies: State Rep. Darrin Madison (D-Milwaukee), Milwaukee County Executive David Crowley, former state Rep. David Bowen, and the late Milwaukee alder Jonathan Brostoff, also a former Assembly member. 'When he sees this cadre of individuals who are rooted in community and learning about asset-based community development, diversity and being committed to anti-oppression as well, people who represent all people, he doesn't want that kind of opposition,' Omokunde said. 'He just wants people to go along and do his bidding.' SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Exhibition shines light on River Wye pollution
A group of artists are raising awareness of the "catastrophic problem" of pollution in the River Wye with an exhibition. Campaigners from the Save the Wye group have created a display of 16 glass panels which trace the journey of the river and the build-up of pollution as it flows towards the sea. It is on display at the Forest of Dean District Council offices in Coleford, Gloucestershire until 30 June. "The new exhibition looks incredible and really helps to spread the message about the deterioration of our waterways in the Forest of Dean," said the council's river water quality champion Andrew McDermid. More news stories for Gloucestershire Listen to the latest news for Gloucestershire "After the council unanimously supported the Rivers and Oceans Motion last year, it's essential to keep this conversation alive and push for real change," he added. McDermid said tackling pollution would require cooperation from the community, local groups and government. "This is a problem of such scale it cannot be tackled alone," he said. "We want everyone to be able to enjoy our rivers long into the future, and working together we can make that a reality." The council's Water Improvement Group said it was working to identify pollution sources, monitor water quality and involve local people in caring for the district's waterways. The exhibition comes after a £1m fund to investigate the sources of pollution in the River Wye was announced by the Welsh and UK governments. Artist and Save the Wye member Mollie Meager said exhibiting at the council offices was a great opportunity to highlight the campaign. "We hope that all residents and visitors will take the opportunity to explore the artwork further and to put their voice behind the campaign," she said. "The river should be something that is enjoyed by all. "Together we can make the change." Follow BBC Gloucestershire on Facebook, X and Instagram. Send your story ideas to us on email or via WhatsApp on 0800 313 4630. Governments to investigate River Wye pollution Government wins court case over River Wye pollution New law proposed over River Wye pollution Forest of Dean District Council