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The Windsor Boys' School continues to be a good school.
What is it like to attend this school?
Pupils at The Windsor Boys' School are proud of their school and its heritage. They are ambitious for their future.
High expectations of behaviour are encapsulated in the mantra of 'Ready, Respectful, Safe'. Bullying is rare and dealt with quickly and appropriately. Pupils are happy and safe.
Sixth-form students are positive role models for younger pupils.
Leaders and staff are highly committed to providing academic success and pastoral support. Health, welfare and well-being are actively supported through the assembly, tutorial and personal development programme. ...r/>Pupils know that they can talk with a member of staff if they have any concerns.
The school provides high-quality advice and guidance through its well-organised careers programme. Choices are supported through a range of activities, including interviews, talks, visits and work experience.
Aspirations are high. Pupils and students are very well prepared for their future.
Extra-curricular activities offer plentiful opportunities for character development and curriculum enrichment.
The school offer includes orchestra, jazz, law, debating and the celebrated big band. There is a vast range of sports clubs, including rowing, rugby and ultimate frisbee as well as trips abroad, musical evenings and theatre visits.
What does the school do well and what does it need to do better?
Leaders have developed a curriculum that focuses on the knowledge, skills and attributes relevant to pupils.
The curriculum is well planned and sequenced. It is suitably considered across all years, including the sixth form. The academic sixth form offers an ambitious, relevant and inclusive curriculum.
Outcomes in the sixth form are very strong and three quarters of the students proceed to universities of their choice.
In a small number of subjects, the quality of education is not as secure and consistent as it is elsewhere. In these subjects, there is too much emphasis on general teaching strategies rather than planning a well-sequenced curriculum.
Subject leaders have not identified what exact knowledge they want pupils to master. In these subjects, pupils are not achieving as highly as elsewhere.
Leaders place great importance on personal development.
Pupils are taught about healthy relationships, mental health and consent as well as issues, such as knife crime. There is a programme of personal, social, health and economic education covering relationships and sex education. The programme is continued into the sixth form, but content does not follow seamlessly from the work previously undertaken.
Pupils benefit from teachers' strong subject knowledge. They appreciate the relationships which they have with their teachers. Disadvantaged pupils and pupils with special educational needs and/or disabilities are known and supported.
Teachers and teaching assistants have a clear understanding of their individual needs. Careers support is a priority. Support for higher prior attaining pupils includes masterclasses, competitions and additional university visits.
Lesson planning ensures that knowledge is revisited. There is an emphasis on embedding knowledge through the 'do now' activities. These activities are also used to ensure a prompt and calm start to the lesson in line with 'The Windsor Boy's Way'.
Assessment is regular and used to identify where further support is needed to address gaps in pupils' knowledge. Assessment is also used to identify where the curriculum might be improved.
The reading curriculum is under development.
Leaders are working hard to develop pupils' love of reading in order to support their progress. A reading strategy has been introduced, including intervention for the weakest readers. A love of reading is not yet consistently highlighted and affirmed across the school.
Links between other subjects are not systematically pursued to support pupils' wider knowledge and skills. Pupils and students identify areas where content from one subject is used in another subject. However, opportunities are missed to develop skills across the curriculum and support pupils to know and remember more.
School leaders are firmly committed to the school's vision. They work with determination to provide a high-quality education which caters for all. Leaders are firmly and fully committed to improve the quality of teaching and learning.
They know that this will raise outcomes for all groups of pupils.
Middle leaders are supported through effective line management and well-focused training. Staff are complimentary about leaders' consideration of their workload and well-being.
Teachers speak very positively about their experience of working in the school. They are proud to be part of the school and its history.
Governors and trustees are clear and confident about their roles and responsibilities.
They know the school well through their regular visits and their probing questions. Leaders are held to account for the quality of education. The school works cooperatively with a range of other partner organisations as well as the neighbouring girls' school.
Safeguarding
The arrangements for safeguarding are effective.
The school has a very strong and well-established culture of safeguarding. Record-keeping and the single central record are robust.
All staff receive well-timed training and frequent updates. They know how to report safeguarding issues. The school undertakes regular and detailed reviews of its safeguarding provision.
Safeguarding leaders work with determination to ensure that all pupils are safe. They work well with external agencies, including the local authority. Pastoral systems ensure that all pupils have an adult they can talk to if necessary.
Any issues arising are dealt with swiftly and effectively.
What does the school need to do to improve?
(Information for the school and appropriate authority)
• Leaders recognise that the quality of education is not yet securely and consistently embedded across all subjects. This means that in some subjects, lessons are not sequenced sufficiently or effectively to enable pupils' learning to build on prior knowledge.
Leaders should continue to ensure that the curriculum is implemented consistently, sharing the very best practice which already exists. ? Many pupils do not read widely enough, either within academic subjects or for pleasure. Pupils' love of reading is not yet fully developed across the whole school.
This occasionally limits the breadth of their vocabulary and the depth of their writing. Leaders should ensure that pupils are encouraged to read more widely across the whole of the school. ? Leaders have not made the most of linking curriculum content across different subjects.
As a result, pupils do not always make important connections across their learning. Leaders should ensure that the curriculum supports pupils to make connections across subjects to deepen their understanding and help them to remember more.
Background
When we have judged a school to be good, we will then normally go into the school about once every four years to confirm that the school remains good.
This is called an ungraded inspection, and it is carried out under section 8 of the Education Act 2005. We do not give graded judgements on an ungraded inspection. However, if we find evidence that a school would now receive a higher or lower grade, then the next inspection will be a graded inspection, which is carried out under section 5 of the Act.
Usually this is within one to two years of the date of the ungraded inspection. If we have serious concerns about safeguarding, behaviour or the quality of education, we will deem the ungraded inspection a graded inspection immediately.
This is the first ungraded inspection since we judged the school to be good in February 2018.