Ofsted

Ofsted Insights: from inclusion to independence

Written by Alexandra Fowkes | May 5, 2026 9:16:51 AM

 

Introduction

Last week’s Ofsted reports again reinforce the shift that has been building across the FE & Skills sector for some time. Providers are increasingly effective at:

    • identifying learners’ needs
    • creating inclusive environments
    • putting support in place

However, inspectors are now asking a more fundamental question: How do leaders know that support is actually improving outcomes?

A sector strengthening inclusion

Across last week’s report cards, inclusion is a clear strength in some.

Leaders are:

    • identifying needs early
    • creating supportive environments
    • training staff to respond to a wide range of barriers

In some cases, this is particularly well embedded. For example, one provider demonstrates a culture where support is continuously reviewed and adapted, helping apprentices to become more independent over time.

In another monitoring visit, leaders ensure that support is adjusted at key points in the programme and - enhanced, reduced or removed - depending on learners’ needs and progress.

This reflects significant progress in operationalising inclusion.

The emerging gap: from support to impact

Despite this progress, a consistent theme across multiple reports is that: Leaders are not always evaluating the effectiveness of the support they provide

Inspectors highlight that:

    • staff are not trained to record or evaluate support effectively
    • leaders do not ensure that the impact of support is reviewed over time

This is a critical shift.

It is no longer sufficient to:

    • provide support
    • respond to need
    • create inclusive environments

Inspectors are increasingly testing whether support:

    • improves progress
    • reduces barriers over time
    • leads to sustained achievement and independence

Digital inclusion and AI: a growing dimension of inclusion

A notable feature this week is the increasing emphasis on digital inclusion.

One provider is working with adults who are digitally excluded, helping them to:

    • access online services
    • complete applications
    • engage with healthcare and employment systems independently

This highlights a broader point: Inclusion is no longer just about access to education - it is about access to society.

Alongside this, there is growing focus on AI and digital skills within curriculum design. Providers are developing programmes that reflect emerging labour market needs, including digital and AI-related skills.

However, the reports also show that:

    • strong curriculum intent alone is not enough
    • learners must be supported to apply these skills confidently
    • and leaders must evaluate whether this learning leads to meaningful progression

This brings digital skills and AI firmly into the inclusion conversation: digital capability is now a core part of learner inclusion and future employability.

Achievement: where inclusion is tested

Achievement continues to be a key differentiator again this week.

In stronger provision:

    • learners and apprentices make sustained progress
    • achievement is high and consistent
    • progression into employment or advanced roles is clear

In weaker cases:

    • too many learners leave early
    • achievement declines or remains too low
    • leaders are only beginning to use data effectively to drive improvement

This reinforces an important point: Inclusion and achievement are no longer separate conversations.

If support is effective, it should be reflected in:

    • retention
    • progress
    • achievement

Leadership: knowing vs proving

Across the reports, leaders generally:

    • understand their learners
    • identify barriers
    • put support in place

However, the difference between providers is increasingly clear.

Stronger providers:

    • evaluate support systematically
    • adapt strategies over time
    • link support directly to outcomes

Others:

    • provide appropriate support
    • but do not yet demonstrate its impact

Inspectors are now testing not just leadership intent, but leadership effectiveness over time.

What distinguishes stronger provision

Where providers achieve stronger judgements, there are clear and consistent features:

    • precise identification of learner needs
    • support that is actively reviewed and adapted
    • strong alignment between curriculum and employment outcomes
    • effective use of data to monitor progress
    • clear evidence that support improves outcomes

In these cases, inclusion leads to something more: independence, confidence and sustained progression

An AiVII Consulting perspective: connecting inclusion to impact

From an AiVII Consulting perspective, this week’s analysis highlight a familiar challenge.

Most providers now have:

    • inclusive practices
    • support mechanisms
    • quality processes

The gap lies in evaluation and consistency.

Through AiVII, leaders can:

    • monitor progress, attendance and achievement in real time
    • track performance across learner groups
    • identify where support is or is not working

This becomes:

    • structured self-assessment
    • targeted improvement planning
    • systematic evaluation of impact

This ensures that: support → intervention → measurable improvement → independence is visible, consistent and defensible.

Key questions for leaders and boards

This week’s findings raise important questions:

    • How do we know that our support for learners is improving outcomes, not just engagement?
    • Are we systematically reviewing and adapting support over time?
    • How well are we developing learners’ digital and AI-related skills as part of inclusion?
    • Can we demonstrate that learners are becoming more independent as a result of our provision?
    • Do we have a clear line of sight from support to progress to achievement?

Final thoughts

This week’s reports do not suggest a sector that is failing to support learners. They highlight a sector that is increasingly inclusive, but expectations are shifting; it is no longer enough to support learners well.

Providers must now demonstrate that support:

    • works
    • improves outcomes
    • and leads to independence

The direction of travel is clear.

Inclusion is no longer judged by what is provided
It is judged by the difference it makes

And increasingly, that difference must be:
visible, measurable and sustained over time.

 

 

  • AiVII provides the real-time dashboards and risk models that surface progress, inclusion, funding and compliance signals across the organisation. 

  • AiVII provides a structured Inclusion and SEND improvement framework — Diagnose → Prioritise → Implement → Measure → Refine — aligned to Ofsted and DfE expectations.

  • AiVII generates governance reports instantly. No more manual data compilation. Give your board the information they need to make strategic decisions.

  • AiVII provides Quality & QIP Management with digital quality improvement that works. Move beyond spreadsheets. Create, track, and evidence your Quality Improvement Plans digitally, link actions to outcomes and demonstrate continuous improvement.

  • AiVII provides a Self Evaluation Dashboard fully aligned to the Ofsted Toolkit, enabling providers to honestly evaluate current performance, using fact based evidence to inform decisions, and link actions directly to your QIP.

We support providers to move from insight to action - translating inspection expectations into practical systems, real‑time intelligence and sustained improvement.

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