Hobby acknowledged that schools and school leaders have an important role in alerting parents and appropriate authorities if encountering evidence of extremism, but ensured schools will struggle to perform without authority assistance.
Hobby said: “Where heads have clear evidence that young people may travel to Syria or get involved in extremism they can and must alert parents and the appropriate authorities. But they are not counter-terrorism experts nor do they conduct surveillance on young people."
He continued: “Schools’ duty of protection involves educating people well and sharing what information they do have with other agencies. Beyond that, they need clear guidance and somewhere to turn to for help. We cannot reasonably expect schools to perform police functions.”
Ofsted has announced it will be holding a programme of sector engagement events in September to go alongside the final set of education inspection reforms.
Overstretched children’s social care services has led to an alarming number of children leaving the care system and becoming homeless, not in employment or not in education, according to a report by the Education Committee.
A new report suggests the free schools programme in England has generally had positive impacts on pupil outcomes at secondary, including GCSE and A-Level attainment and secondary school absence.
A new report from the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) finds that the Department for Education (DfE) lacks a coherent plan, suitable targets and sufficient evidence of what works as it seeks to improve teacher recruitment and retention.