Introduction
Following the publication of the first Ofsted report cards for FE & Skills providers, the sector has entered a slight pause period with no further reports yet released, but the signals from the initial 19 are already clear.
Last week’s analysis focused on what the new report card format is showing: clearer visibility of strengths and weaknesses, no compensating strengths, and a secure‑fit model that raises the bar across every evaluation area.
This week’s question is the more important one: "What should FE & Skills providers actually fix first?"
Based on patterns across the 19 reports, this blog sets out the priority actions providers should now focus on, and where targeted support can make the difference between holding an “expected standard” and slipping into “needs attention.”
1. Inclusion as a System, Not a Set of Services
Inclusion emerged as a volatile evaluation area in the first batch of report cards. Where it was judged as needs attention, the issue was rarely intent. Instead, it was inconsistency.
Common features included:
Under the secure‑fit model, inclusion now requires a closed operational loop: identifying need, implementing support, reviewing impact and adapting practice over time.
What to fix first:
How AiVII can support with this: inclusion system audits, review of your SEND systems and operational practices, as well as a dedicated Learning Support Dashboard, and progress tracking models within the AiVII platform.
2. Governance Must Move from Oversight to Challenge
Leadership and governance was the next most common area for needs attention. In most cases, boards were engaged and well‑intentioned, but not sufficiently equipped to challenge educational quality.
Inspectors highlighted:
Under report cards, governance visibility has increased. Weak challenge now sits in plain view.
What to fix first:
How AiVII can support with this: non-executive director services, review of your current governance arrangements, and a dedicated Governance Dashboard with real-time view of your governance health within the AiVII platform.
3. Essential Skills Remain a High Risk
Achievement judgements were often shaped not by vocational outcomes, but by English, maths and functional skills.
Where needs attention appeared, inspectors commonly cited:
Even strong vocational delivery could not offset this.
What to fix first:
How AiVII can support with this: review of your essential / functional skills delivery models and curricula, quality improvement support that ensures high quality teaching, and learner progress‑tracking dashboards and achievement risk indicators within the AiVII platform.
4. Curriculum Leaders Central to Inspection Confidence
Across the first 19 reports, inspection confidence rested heavily on curriculum‑level conversations.
Strong outcomes were evident where curriculum leaders could:
Where leaders deferred to central teams or policy language, confidence reduced.
What to fix first:
How AiVII can support with this: curriculum leader coaching, Ofsted readiness prep and mock inspections, as well as toolkit‑aligned self‑evaluation dashboards, and mock inspection activities within the AiVII platform.
5. Quality Assurance Must Evidence Change
Quality assurance featured in almost all reports but its impact varied.
Inspectors were clear where:
And equally clear where QA was procedural.
What to fix first:
How AiVII can support with this: quality improvement planning and execution, review of your current observation practices and CPD models, QIP templates and guidance, as well as dedicated Quality Assurance Dashboards within AiVII where you can plan and record observation, sampling, and standardisation activity, and capture learner feedback.
From Insight to Readiness
The first report cards confirmed that most FE & Skills providers are meeting the expected standard but they also show how easily confidence can slip when one area is not secure. We also need to acknowledge that they were all fairly small providers, so this landscape is likely to change as larger and more complex inspections take place under the new regime.
The shift now is from understanding the framework to operational readiness.
Providers that act early, strengthening inclusion systems, sharpening governance challenge, stabilising essential skills delivery and equipping curriculum leaders, will be best placed as further report cards are published.
Final Thoughts
The new Ofsted report cards are not designed to catch providers out. They are designed to make quality visible. For FE & Skills providers, the priority now is not prediction, but preparation - ensuring that everyday practice, leadership oversight and learner experience align securely to the toolkit.
At AiVII, we support providers to move from insight to action - translating inspection expectations into practical systems, real‑time intelligence and sustained improvement.
The question is no longer “How will Ofsted see us?”
It is “Are we ready for what they will see?”
Follow AiVII for weekly Ofsted insight briefings, toolkit interpretation and practical guidance for FE & Skills leaders.