Martyn Oliver's speech at the Festival of Education
Sir Martyn Oliver, Ofsted바카라 사이트s Chief Inspector, spoke at the 2025 Festival of Education.

Optimism, inclusion and Ian Dury
Good morning, everybody. I바카라 사이트m delighted to be here at the festival of education; to be here in the beautiful grounds of Wellington school; here in the sunshine.
And that바카라 사이트s apt because I바카라 사이트m hoping in the time we have together this morning we can let a little sunshine in. We can talk a bit about optimism. I want us to think about why we do what we do as educators, as people who work in this field: in many cases, as people who have dedicated their working lives to improving the life chances and prospects of a younger generation.
I thought I바카라 사이트d open my speech this morning with a cliché. And I thought I바카라 사이트d try and find out who coined that cliché and how far back it goes. But there is no clarity about who first said, 바카라 사이트school days are the best days of your life바카라 사이트. So, as we all do, I asked AI for the answer 바카라 사이트 and I know a lot of the discussions over the next couple of days are going to be dominated by the march of AI.
The AI summary told me that 바카라 사이트the phrase doesn바카라 사이트t have a clear single origin or a specific person who first said it바카라 사이트. It went on: 바카라 사이트one early reference comes from a 1910 song titled School Days by Will D. Cobb and Gus Edwards which includes the line school days, school days, dear old golden rule days. While not an exact match it captures the nostalgic view of school days as a cherished time.바카라 사이트
So, no answer then.
Like all cliches, this one has survived because it works 바카라 사이트 because it바카라 사이트s true, at least for many of us (though not all, and I바카라 사이트ll return to this later). It alludes to the idea of a more carefree time, of friendships built in the playground, of growing confidence, moments of satisfaction, of joy 바카라 사이트 reasons to be cheerful to quote Ian Dury. That바카라 사이트s why we say it.
I바카라 사이트m starting with that cliché because I want to strike an optimistic note this morning 바카라 사이트 which is not always a natural position for people in our profession to adopt. Things are always tough in education; there are always challenges to overcome. There are new expectations put on all of us 바카라 사이트 and it바카라 사이트s not lost on me that you바카라 사이트re waiting to read about Ofsted바카라 사이트s revised inspection model in September. There바카라 사이트s never enough money to go around. Doing 바카라 사이트more with less바카라 사이트 is another cliché 바카라 사이트 as old as it is tiresome 바카라 사이트 but still a reality that we need to accommodate.
But even so, I still believe there are plenty of reasons to be cheerful and reasons to be optimistic. And those reasons are rooted in schools. These transformative institutions that have shaped lives for centuries and will, I hope, shape them for centuries to come.
However hard bitten and cynical we may have become over the years, most of us can look back to our school days and agree that they were, at least some of the happiest days of our lives.
Schooling shapes lives
I want to talk a little bit about what school meant for me.
I바카라 사이트ll do my best to do this without the aid of rose-tinted spectacles. I shan바카라 사이트t be skipping through the daisies of my mind as it were. There바카라 사이트s a lot that wasn바카라 사이트t great about my school days. The quality of teaching and the quality of the curriculum I was taught was not good enough 바카라 사이트 and I think that was something that an awful lot of schools in the 1970s and 80s had in common. Standards were not high, and aspiration was not always encouraged.
But, as with many of us, I had stand-out, individual teachers 바카라 사이트 people who I really connected with and who helped shape my life. People like my art teacher, Mrs Scarsbrick 바카라 사이트 she had a wonderful skill for painting and drawing landscapes. I remember that watercolour paintings of trees was her particular talent, whilst I was already increasingly focusing on portraiture, which I later went on to study.
Then Mr Senior, the English teacher who inspired me from the first lesson at the beginning of secondary school. That very first lesson in September started with a brand new, hardback book: Steinbeck바카라 사이트s Of Mice and Men. We spent the first 10 minutes being instructed on how to loosen the binding and prevent cracking the spine. I also remember being devastated when he took a secondment to the USA when I was in Year 4/5 (Year 10/11 now): I took GCSEs in their first year of use and can recall even now that some teachers were totally lost in the new specification 바카라 사이트 so losing my trusted English tutor at this crucial time was especially difficult.
And there was Mr Ashton, the PE teacher who arranged for me to go training 3 lunchtimes a week 바카라 사이트 running the well-known, and often well-hated, cross-country course with his staff, as I was a budding cross-country runner.
Each of these experiences recall relationships. Relationships with teachers 바카라 사이트 teachers who went above and beyond, teachers who I placed trust in and who I knew had my best interests at heart. They didn바카라 사이트t just inspire in art, English and PE, they inspired my interest in education, in teaching itself.
And school had another function for me. It was the place I built friendships.
I was extremely ill from the age of 2 to 12 (the crucial years to get the best start in life) and whilst my school attendance was good, the powerful drug I was on had clear side effects for me which affected my concentration. The drug relied on sedation 바카라 사이트 ideal in helping me be well, but not at all good for educational purposes!
I undoubtedly would have had an EHCP had such things existed then. Instead, I had a few stand-out teachers who cared for me as an individual and I had an army of excellent friends. The benefit of living on a new housing estate meant that many families moved onto the estate at the same time and I had dozens of peers who lived on the same street, let alone the same estate, who I could rely upon to help me.
Generational shifts
A lot has changed over the years in our schools. The quality of education has most definitely changed for the better. There are lots of reasons for that 바카라 사이트 including better training and development for teachers 바카라 사이트 the greater professionalisation of the sector in general. And you would expect me to make an argument that the introduction of Ofsted 30-odd years ago had a real impact in improving consistency in education and driving improvements.
But alongside rising standards, schools have also changed to fit the needs and expectations of each generation. They바카라 사이트ve evolved alongside society. They have adapted to new qualifications, crafted new curriculums, embraced new subjects. Perhaps more than anything else, schools have responded to the advance of new technology.
In my school days technology in the classroom was generally limited to that moment when the teacher would wheel out the big telly to play us a video 바카라 사이트 hugely exciting at the time of course. (The debate then was Betamax or VHS, what바카라 사이트s the equivalent debate now? Is it perhaps, generative or predictive AI?)
But as computers made their way into schools, there was a more profound change. And that became seismic when the computers were no longer confined to the corners of classrooms and moved into our pockets. Their influence is everywhere and drives the debates and disagreements over the place of technology in learning.
Artificial intelligence
Right now, that debate is focused on artificial intelligence. It dominates the discourse in the media, and at events like this one. It바카라 사이트s a big topic of conversation at Ofsted and within government more widely.
We바카라 사이트ve recently published a piece of research commissioned by the DfE which looks at early AI adopters in education. The research found that AI is beginning to have real benefits in terms of staff workload 바카라 사이트 particularly in areas like lesson planning; and that leaders are clear that they are prioritising safe, ethical and responsible uses of AI. So no robot teachers yet!
It seems that there is always a commentator keen to tell us how AI will either transform learning or destroy it; how it presents an existential challenge to the traditional approach to education that we바카라 사이트ve all grown up with.
But I would mount a defence of the traditional approach. Right now, many children live much of their lives online. Socially, they are never 바카라 사이트off바카라 사이트 and always in touch with their friends. And they increasingly receive life lessons from influencers or AI- generated summaries. I would argue that the place of learning, real learning, classroom learning 바카라 사이트 with human interactions 바카라 사이트 has never been more important.
Young people are growing up in an increasingly curated world in which their favoured influencers or corporate algorithms can have a disproportionate impression on their views and opinions. It바카라 사이트s more important than ever that young people are able to lift their eyes from the screen and connect with their teachers, in person.
They need broad, balanced, considered and above all challenging information to help them learn and to help them grow. Being an art teacher, it was never lost on me that drawing makes you look harder at the world around you, it greatly increases your attention. It seems to me that many technologies now do the exact opposite and actively seek to give short-term, instant gratification.
Not far short of 4 hundred years ago, John Milton wrote that he couldn바카라 사이트t 바카라 사이트praise a cloistered and fugitive virtue, unexercised and unbreathed, that never sallies out and sees her adversary.바카라 사이트 He was arguing in favour of freedom of speech 바카라 사이트 ironically one of the great supposed touchstones for today바카라 사이트s keyboard warriors. Except, of course, they generally mean freedom of speech only for those that agree with them. In fact, in Areopagitica, Milton highlights the idea that true virtue is developed through experience and engagement with challenges, not through avoidance or seclusion.
In a way there바카라 사이트s something cloistered about living one바카라 사이트s life in a curated online environment. You may be able to find 바카라 사이트the best that has been thought or said바카라 사이트 if you go looking for it. But who바카라 사이트s guiding you through it? Where바카라 사이트s the human connection? And of course, where바카라 사이트s the protection?
Community, relationships and learning
Schools have never just been places of learning. They were, and are places of safety, even refuge. Places of community and connection. Places of friendship and humanity. They are citadels of childhood: communities within communities looking after their own and helping children develop into well-rounded adults 바카라 사이트 capable of looking after others in turn.
Human relationships lie at the heart of every school바카라 사이트s success. And I바카라 사이트ve said 바카라 사이트schools바카라 사이트 today, as they are the great universal service. But of course, those relationships begin for many in nurseries and continue on into further or higher education. Human connection is what makes education tick. And that is particularly true for more vulnerable children 바카라 사이트 those who need a little more attention paid to their wellbeing, alongside their education.
Of course, schools have statutory roles to play. Safeguarding is an absolutely fundamental part of what we look at on inspection. Its principles are described over nearly 200 pages of guidance in Keeping Children Safe in Education. Safeguarding is something that all of us involved in education prioritise perhaps above everything else 바카라 사이트 and it바카라 사이트s a human process, not paperwork. People working together to safeguard children. Nothing infuriates me more than glib commentary about schools falling short on inspection because of duff paperwork 바카라 사이트 or schools pulling the wool over inspectors바카라 사이트 eyes because their paperwork is on point.
Any of us here who have worked in schools understand that safeguarding starts with relationships. Good teachers, good head teachers know their pupils. They know which children are having a tough time in their life. They know which children are experiencing vulnerability for one reason or another. Perhaps it바카라 사이트s part of their life story 바카라 사이트 they are a child in care, or a child with special educational needs, or a child growing up in poverty. But really great teachers understand too that children will experience short-term difficulties 바카라 사이트 because childhood is full of challenges. Well-being issues, mental health issues, family issues, financial issues. It바카라 사이트s the ebb and flow of growing up for so many children and the really great schools get that.
When I was head teacher of a secondary school with 2,200 pupils, those personal relationships were clearly difficult, but I always made it my priority to support those who needed us most, no matter how busy I might be 바카라 사이트 and that always involved working with parents and carers, as well as the pupil. I also understood, from my own personal experience, that children form relationships with those they trust 바카라 사이트 their art, English or PE teacher, in my case.
Schools provide a safe, protective environment. To continue with my 바카라 사이트citadels of childhood바카라 사이트 metaphor: they have walls, and they have watchers on those walls. But it바카라 사이트s within the walls where lives are changed. Where sparks of interest are fanned into flames and children can discover talents, they weren바카라 사이트t aware of, and passions that take them by surprise. They are taught the knowledge and skills that they need for life 바카라 사이트 but also the subjects that bring them joy.
Cynics sometimes decry the norms of education. Exams are 바카라 사이트gradgrindian바카라 사이트 in their eyes, the 3 R바카라 사이트s are no longer preparing children for the 바카라 사이트jobs of tomorrow바카라 사이트. And Ofsted are accused of being enforcers for this 바카라 사이트out-of-date바카라 사이트, 바카라 사이트joyless바카라 사이트 system 바카라 사이트 forcing schools to jump through these hoops.
Well let me tell you how it looks from where I바카라 사이트m standing. For Ofsted, teaching a full, rich range of subjects isn바카라 사이트t just a nice to have, it바카라 사이트s fundamental to a great education. Music and art and sports aren바카라 사이트t add-ons to the core curriculum, they are some of the most important subjects to study, in terms of developing a child바카라 사이트s awareness of the world around them. And in a more macro sense, feeding into the cultural evolution of our country and pushing civilization on.
It often surprises people when I say that I started out as an art teacher, in 1995. Art was my passion then and it바카라 사이트s still my passion now. When I have the time I love to paint. I find that it forces me to slow down and deeply observe the world around me. But I too feel that temptation to pick up my smartphone and check my emails far too often, breaking the observational trance-like state. I can only imagine how difficult and tempting this is for children.
Opening doors
Of course, learning about art means learning about perspective.
That바카라 사이트s a good thing in the context of mental health and well-being 바카라 사이트 such hot topics, sadly, at the moment. But if you think about the influence of art on human history 바카라 사이트 its central role in the Renaissance, or the influence of perspective on the Age of Discovery 바카라 사이트 art has been a driver of exploration, of invention and pushing back the frontiers of human knowledge.
It is also no surprise to an art historian that there is expression in breaking the established rules 바카라 사이트 that바카라 사이트s the essence of original creativity. So 500 years after the rules of perspective were established, the Cubists proved this point. Life evolves as we move with the times. Another favourite quote of mine is from Lampedusa바카라 사이트s, Il Gattopardo, 바카라 사이트if we want things to stay as they are, things will have to change바카라 사이트. It바카라 사이트s quite a common refrain that children should be taught 바카라 사이트creativity바카라 사이트 바카라 사이트 but creativity relies upon a deep understanding of knowledge and facts; it comes from pushing at the limits of knowledge, and first you need to be taught where those limits are.
Every subject we teach our children opens doors for them. So, the rounded classroom experience: a broad and rich curriculum, structured carefully by expert teachers and taught within a safe and welcoming environment, is fundamental to the intellectual growth of individuals and the development of society. Matthew Arnold바카라 사이트s quote still holds. 바카라 사이트The best that has been thought and said바카라 사이트 still matters. And while an AI-enabled search engine can find the raw material, I wouldn바카라 사이트t want to entrust the teaching to the same machine 바카라 사이트 at least not without the art and skill of the teacher as a guide and storyteller.
The classroom experience is based on human relationships and a sense of belonging. I spoke about the first priority for schools being the safety of children. Well, children feel safe when they know somebody cares. When they know that their teachers will show up and keep showing up day after day to make sure they바카라 사이트ve learned what they were taught yesterday and are ready to learn something new today. We can바카라 사이트t outsource human contact. Teachers are, and must always remain, the heart of education.
And education is an exercise of the heart as much as it is of the head. It바카라 사이트s about support and care, as well as instruction. They go hand in hand. Which brings me on to inclusion.
Inclusion
As you바카라 사이트ll all be aware Ofsted will publish the full details of our revised education inspection framework in early September. We바카라 사이트re taking time to analyse and consider all of the feedback we were given in the public consultation this spring. There will be some changes from the proposals we published back in February. But I don바카라 사이트t think I바카라 사이트m jumping the gun to say that inclusion will remain a central tenet 바카라 사이트 perhaps the central tenet in our new approach.
And I hope the reason for that is obvious. It바카라 사이트s my north star. Inclusion is both my guiding principle and the fire in my belly. That was true as a teacher, as a head of sixth form, as a head teacher, as a multi-academy trust leader. It바카라 사이트s true now for me as His Majesty바카라 사이트s Chief Inspector.
Those of you who have spent far more time than is healthy listening to or reading about the things that I바카라 사이트ve said since taking on the job, will have heard me talk about vulnerable and disadvantaged children. Asserting repeatedly that if schools get it right for the most vulnerable and disadvantaged among their pupils, they will get it right for all of their pupils.
I use that phrase time and time again because I happen to believe that it바카라 사이트s true. And I have been challenged on my assertion now and then. But I have never seen or heard of a school that looks after the interests of disadvantaged and vulnerable children perfectly well but lets down those pupils who aren바카라 사이트t grappling with some of life바카라 사이트s more obvious challenges.
That바카라 사이트s because those schools get it. They know their children and they understand that the secret of success lies in the relationships that bind the school community together.
A school that truly understands the needs of its pupils will do right by its most vulnerable children, by its most gifted students and by all those children in-between.
As always when we at Ofsted talk about a concept 바카라 사이트 like inclusion 바카라 사이트 it sparks debate and it energises the commentators and consultants to try and unpick what we mean.
It바카라 사이트s really about relationships. It바카라 사이트s about belonging and thriving. It doesn바카라 사이트t mean being soft on behaviour or attendance. It doesn바카라 사이트t mean taking a dim view of head teachers who find the need to suspend or exclude a child, either in the pupil바카라 사이트s best interests or the interests of their classmates.
When we talk about schools as places where children can feel safe, to grow, develop and express themselves we mustn바카라 사이트t forget how stabilising it is to understand the rules and to know they will be applied consistently and fairly. In the words of that 1910 song again: 바카라 사이트School days 바카라 사이트 dear old golden rule days.바카라 사이트
No 바카라 사이트 inclusion is about making sure that all pupils feel that they belong 바카라 사이트 no matter their personal talents or aptitudes, or the barriers and obstacles they need to overcome to feel that sense of belonging.
And it is about putting disadvantaged and vulnerable children at the heart of what you do 바카라 사이트 as they will be at the heart of what we do as an inspectorate.
And just as the term 바카라 사이트inclusion바카라 사이트 can be a little hard to pin down, it바카라 사이트s also not easy to define what we mean by vulnerable. I think we all instinctively have a better understanding of disadvantage. There are clearer definitions. I바카라 사이트m sure everybody here who works in a school will be aware of how many of their children attract pupil premium for example. I바카라 사이트m sure many of you could reel off names.
The concept of vulnerability is a little looser. Statutory responsibilities point us to formal designations: children with SEND, children who are looked after by the state. It바카라 사이트s absolutely right that we all maintain a laser-like focus on those children. But what about others who are experiencing vulnerability?
I recently met with groups of young carers. Listening to their experiences and perspectives was both interesting and humbling. They feel a bit forgotten. All too often they are not included in our headline definitions of vulnerable children. And yet they are vulnerable. They don바카라 사이트t have the care structures that so many of us took for granted during our own childhoods. Instead, they themselves are the care structures for the adults in their lives. That has a huge impact on the way they view themselves, the way they view their potential and the way they think about their future.
This week we published a piece of work that we commissioned from the National Children바카라 사이트s Bureau. We asked the NCB to consider how we might better define vulnerability in the context of our work.
Their report is entitled 바카라 사이트from trait to state바카라 사이트 and the definition of vulnerability that it puts forward leans into the idea that children move into and out of various degrees of vulnerability throughout their childhood.
This describes vulnerability less as an immutable trait and more of a fluid state. It바카라 사이트s an interesting, and a logical concept, speaking to the importance of relationships that I바카라 사이트ve addressed in my comments today. Of course, it doesn바카라 사이트t detract from the responsibility that we all have to the children with SEND, those in care and children supported through pupil premium funding.
But I think this definition gives us more latitude to think about how life impacts on the well-being of children in different ways, at different times. And how we best address vulnerability within the safe and nurturing communities that we create.
I remember a particularly vulnerable cohort of SEND students who my SENDCO was desperately worried about leaving school at 16. So, she worked with their families and offered a uniquely bespoke post-16 course which gave this group the time and support that they needed to prepare for the transition to further education and employment. My wonderful SENDCO knew the children and worked to influence the entire school바카라 사이트s post-16 provision to meet their needs바카라 사이트it wasn바카라 사이트t a case of insisting that those children meet the needs of the school!
Aspiration and optimism
Education should be aspirational. And it should be aspirational for every child. Not everyone can ace their exams and get into Oxbridge. Not everyone will want to. Not everyone will turn a passion for music into a career as a concert pianist. But everyone can aim to learn a little more, develop a new skill and improve themselves one step at a time.
That is as true for children with SEND as it is for those without; it바카라 사이트s as true for the poorest children as it is for the wealthiest. That바카라 사이트s not to deny the existence of barriers, but rather to flag a determination to overcome them.
And if we are aspirational for all children, it stands to reason that we should be aspirational for all schools. I nodded earlier to the influence of Ofsted over the last 3 decades. I do believe that inspection helps schools look at where and how they can improve. It doesn바카라 사이트t make the improvement happen 바카라 사이트 that바카라 사이트s down to brilliant teachers and brilliant leaders working within their school community. But done right inspection can provide some pointers in the right direction.
I바카라 사이트ve repeatedly said that I want inspection to feel done with not done to. That바카라 사이트s not just a nice touchy-feely sentiment. I want inspection to mirror what goes on in the places we inspect. Education at its best is done with, not done to. The best schools 바카라 사이트 the citadels of childhood 바카라 사이트 are places of belonging, rooted in human relationships and a sense of shared endeavour. They are optimistic places.
Optimism isn바카라 사이트t easy. Particularly at our age바카라 사이트and especially if we read the papers!
But children are optimistic. It바카라 사이트s a natural state of mind when you바카라 사이트re young, with your life stretching ahead of you, enjoying the best years of your life.
It바카라 사이트s so much easier to be pessimistic and cynical as you get older. Because they are learned behaviours. But they should never be taught ones.
That바카라 사이트s on all of us.
Thank you for all you do for children and learners 바카라 사이트 and thank you for listening.