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How do you read an Ofsted report?

Find the full report free on the official Ofsted reports site at reports.ofsted.gov.uk by searching the school's name, then read past the headline into the narrative. Check the inspection date first, because a school can change a lot between inspections. Then read what inspectors actually said about teaching, behaviour, personal development, safeguarding and leadership, not just the top-line grade. Two schools with the same grade often read very differently once you read the detail, which is where the useful information lives.

A grade is easy to glance at, but the report behind it is where the real information is. Learning to read the full text, and to weigh its date, tells you far more than the one word ever could. Here is how to do it properly.

Where do I find the full report?

Every published Ofsted report is free on the official Ofsted reports site, reports.ofsted.gov.uk. Search by the school's name or area, open its page, and you will see its inspection history with each report available to read on screen or download as a PDF. You can also reach a school's page from Get Information about Schools (get-information-schools.service.gov.uk), the Department for Education's register, which links across to Ofsted. Always use these official sources rather than a third-party summary, so you read exactly what inspectors wrote.

What do the sections mean?

An inspection report is organised into sections. The exact headings depend on the framework in force at the time, but you can expect the report to cover, in some form:

What the main sections of an Ofsted report tell you
SectionWhat to look for
What is it like to attend this schoolA plain-English summary written for parents; read this first
Quality of education / what pupils learnHow well the curriculum is planned and taught, and how pupils achieve
Behaviour and attitudesConduct, attendance, bullying and how calm and orderly the school is
Personal developmentWider opportunities, character, wellbeing and preparation for later life
Leadership and managementHow well the school is run, and whether safeguarding is effective
What the school should do to improveThe specific things inspectors want fixed; a candid list of weaknesses

The "should do to improve" section is often the most revealing, because it names concrete shortcomings in the school's own report. Read it carefully.

Why read the narrative, not just the grade?

A grade compresses a whole school into a label. The narrative unpacks it. Two schools rated the same can differ enormously: one may be strong across the board, another strong in most areas but flagged on one serious point. The words tell you which. Look for specifics rather than praise: what pupils are actually taught, how the school supports children who are behind, how it handles behaviour and inclusion, and what it admits it needs to fix. If a passage worries or reassures you, note it and ask about it when you visit.

Takeaway: the grade is the headline; the narrative is the story. Read the "what it's like to attend" summary and the "should do to improve" list, and you will know far more than the label conveys.

How much does the date matter?

A great deal. Schools are inspected on a cycle, not every year, so a report can be several years old. Check the inspection date at the top before you weigh anything it says: leadership, staff and intake can all change between inspections, for better or worse. A glowing report from years ago and a critical one from last term are not equivalent evidence. Where a school has had a shorter follow-up inspection since its last full one, read that too; its outcome (for example, that the school "remains good") updates the picture. Our report is built around this, showing every school near a postcode with its latest rating and the year it was given, so the age of each judgement is never hidden.

What do inspectors actually look at?

Inspectors gather evidence over the inspection days: they observe lessons, talk to pupils and staff, look at pupils' work and the curriculum, review records including safeguarding and attendance, and consider the views of parents and pupils gathered through Ofsted's surveys. They are judging the substance of a child's education and how safe and well-run the school is, not a single day's polish. Understanding that helps you read the report as a considered judgement, while still remembering it is a snapshot of particular days.

To put a report in context, read our guide to what Ofsted ratings mean, and because the system is changing, Ofsted report cards explained and the 2024 grade changes. When you are ready to compare the schools near you, each with its latest rating and inspection year, use the report built directly on Ofsted's published data.

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Every rating we show comes from Ofsted's own published reports, with the year it was given, so you can always open the full report on reports.ofsted.gov.uk and read it for yourself.