Agenda and minutes

Education and Young People Overview & Scrutiny Committee - Monday, 20 May 2024 1.30 pm

Venue: Room 2&3 - County Hall, New Road, Oxford OX1 1ND. View directions

Link: video link https://oxon.cc/EYP20052024

Items
No. Item

8/24

New appointment

Ruth Bennie has resigned from the Committee and the Diocese of Oxford has nominated Toby Long to replace her. 

 

Minutes:

The Committee noted that Ruth Bennie had resigned from the Committee and Toby Long had been appointed as her replacement by the Diocese of Oxford.

9/24

Apologies for Absence and Temporary Appointments

Minutes:

Apologies were received from Cllr Ian Corkin (substitute: Cllr Fenton) and from Cllr Povolotsky (substitute: Cllr Haywood), from Toby Long and from Fraser Long.

 

Fraser Long attended virtually as a guest of the Committee, at the discretion of the Chair.

10/24

Declaration of Interests

Minutes:

There was none.

11/24

Minutes pdf icon PDF 304 KB

The Committee is recommended to APPROVE the minutes of the meeting held on 18 January 2024 and to receive information arising from them.

Minutes:

The Committee resolved to AGREE the minutes of the meeting of 18 January 2024 as a true and accurate record.

 

12/24

Petitions and Public Addresses

Members of the public who wish to speak at this meeting can attend the meeting in person or ‘virtually’ through an online connection. 

 

To facilitate ‘hybrid’ meetings we are asking that requests to speak or present a petition are submitted by no later than 9.00 a.m. four working days before the meeting, i.e., 9.00 a.m. on 14 May 2024.  Requests to speak should be sent to the Scrutiny Officer at scrutiny@oxfordshire.gov.uk.

 

If you are speaking ‘virtually’, you may submit a written statement of your presentation to ensure that your views are taken into account. A written copy of your statement can be provided no later than 9.00 a.m. two working days before the meeting. Written submissions should be no longer than 1 A4 sheet.

 

Minutes:

K. Nellist spoke to the committee and questioned the work on how well the voice of the child was heard, the equal rights of the Special Educational Needs and Disability (SEND) youth forum, and how the improvement process was co-produced and communicated. She also offered some ideas to make young people with SEND more involved and interested.

 

The Committee agreed to take item 8 next before returning to the order set out in the agenda.none.

13/24

Inspecting Local Authority Children's Services - ILACS Report pdf icon PDF 221 KB

Cllr Kate Gregory, Cabinet Member for SEND Improvement, Cllr John Howson, Cabinet Member for Children, Education & Young People’s Services, Lisa Lyons, Director of Children’s Services, and Jean Kelly, Deputy Director for Childrens Social Care, have been invited to present a report on the recent ILACS inspection.

 

The Committee is asked to consider the report and raise any questions, and to AGREE any recommendations it wishes to make to Cabinet arising therefrom.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Cllr Kate Gregory, Cabinet Member for SEND Improvement, and Cllr John Howson, Cabinet Member for Children, Education & Young People’s Services, attended to introduce the report on the recent Inspecting Local Authority Children’s Services (ILACS) inspection.  Lisa Lyons, Director of Children’s Services, Stephen Chandler, Executive Director of People, and Jean Kelly, Deputy Director for Children’s Social Care, attended alongside.

 

The Deputy Director provided a broad overview and explained that, after a slightly delayed inspection, the ILACS report was published with Oxfordshire being judged as ‘Good’ across several areas. The inspection checked several themes, such as child neglect and abuse, over a standard 3-week period.

 

The report identified a great number of strengths, across the localities and areas of work. The help and protection offered to children in need had significantly improved since the previous inspection. The strategic and operational leadership was noted for significant praise in the report.

 

The report also identified some areas which could be further improved. The main areas were as follows: how quickly actions were taken to escalate proceedings; arrangements for different agencies to share information; closer collaboration with corporate leaders; and the standard of direct work with disabled children.

 

The Action Plan to be reported back to Ofsted was due on 18 July 2024. This action plan also covered other areas which the Council wanted to improve regardless of the ILACS report.

 

Members of the Committee explored the following issues:

 

A multi-faceted plan was in place for improving the stability of the workforce. This included an apprenticeship scheme, which was funded by the Department for Education (DfE), resulting in twelve new colleagues. Recruitment had begun for the next intake of newly qualified social workers. The service was also looking at international recruitment, which was common across the industry. There was also an active return to social work route, to encourage qualified staff to return to the profession.  Work to support existing staff was also being done to encourage greater staff retention.

 

Lengthy waiting times had been addressed with Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) and other partners. The service had provided some CAMHS engagement for children in care and those with high level needs, and they also signposted families to online support and early intervention approaches.

 

It was acknowledged that waiting times for CAMHS were too long, but the service did not have a ready solution for that. It was suggested that CAMHS should offer a view on how to improve the situation. The Executive Director agreed that this was a problem across the country and suggested that the Committee might refer this to the Oxfordshire Joint Health Overview & Scrutiny Committee (HOSC) to explore further. The Committee agreed that this issue needed to be resolved.

 

The previous 18 months had seen a decrease in the number of children in care, but more efforts were being made to address the main causes, such as domestic violence, drug abuse, and mental health problems. Work had been done to stop issues worsening by helping parents deal with issues  ...  view the full minutes text for item 13/24

14/24

Priority Action Plan Update pdf icon PDF 885 KB

The Committee has requested an update on the Priority Action Plan. Cllr Kate Gregory, Cabinet Member for SEND Improvement, Cllr John Howson, Cabinet Member for Children, Education, and Young People’s Services, have been invited to present the report and will be accompanied by Lisa Lyons, Director of Childrens Services, and Ian Smart, SEND Transformation Programme Director.

 

The Committee is asked to consider the report and raise any questions, and to AGREE any recommendations it wishes to make to Cabinet arising therefrom.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Cllr Kate Gregory, Cabinet Member for SEND Improvement, and Cllr John Howson, Cabinet Member for Children, Education, and Young People’s Services, were present to deliver the report, and to update members on the progress of the Priority Action Plan (PAP).  The Cabinet Members were accompanied by Lisa Lyons, Director of Children’s Services, and Ian Smart, SEND Transformation Programme Director.

 

A further update on the progress made on the PAP would be submitted to the Committee at its meeting in September 2024.

 

There had been a deep dive at the end of March 2024 undertaken by the Department for Education (the DfE). The DfE said appropriate progress had been made. A stocktake was also scheduled for June which would include the wider SEND Improvement and Assurance Board (SIAB) and several other stakeholders. The Director of Children’s Services saw this as a demonstration of the impact and progress that had already been made.

 

The Director informed the Committee that it was likely that the Ofsted monitoring visit would be in the spring of 2025.

 

The SEND youth forum was also to be revamped. It was seen as important that young people with SEND were both engaged and consulted, making sure the youth forum was coordinated and effective in influencing plans. There were existing groups and fora but there was a recognition that the work and involvement of such groups could be clarified, and it was hoped that the work by the steering group would show in policies and approaches taken.

 

Members were advised that the co-production charter they had requested would be circulated that day.

 

Cllr Haywood left the meeting and did not return.

 

The Committee discussed a number of issues, including the following:

 

Working with the co-production board, the Director confirmed that the 2022 definition of co-production had been adopted and was that to which the Council worked and would continue to work. A meeting was to be held with an advisory group of young people with SEND to adapt the language to make it more accessible.

 

In response to concern that some schools had reported that they had received inadequate information on new pupils with Education and Health Care Plans (EHCPs) and insufficient time to implement preparations for their arrival, the Committee was advised that Children’s services worked closely and regularly with schools, including multi-academy trusts and special schools, and their leaders. Most EHCPs were requested by or applied for with the help of schools. Schools with many EHCPs received money based on a central formula, with the Schools Forum's support.  Concern was also expressed that some mainstream schools were expected to cater for a higher proportion of students with EHCPs than others.  A breakdown of the number of pupils with EHCPs at individual schools across the county was requested.

 

The Committee established that the section on page 25 of the agenda pack (paragraph 5 of the section entitled ‘School funding’ in Appendix D) which stated “Schools forum is the key decision making forum for all school funding” was imprecise  ...  view the full minutes text for item 14/24

15/24

Oxfordshire Pupil Outcomes: Validated Exams Data pdf icon PDF 211 KB

Cllr Kate Gregory, Cabinet Member for SEND Improvement, Councillor John Howson, Cabinet Member for Children, Education, and Young People’s Services, Lisa Lyons, Director of Children’s Services, and Zaheer Ahmed, Interim Head of School Improvement and Learning, have been invited to present a report on the Validated Examinations Data.

 

The Committee is asked to consider the report and raise any questions, and to AGREE any recommendations it wishes to make to Cabinet arising therefrom.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Cllr Kate Gregory, Cabinet Member for SEND Improvement, and Cllr John Howson, Cabinet Member for Children, Education, and Young People’s Services, introduced the report on the Validated Examinations Data.  Lisa Lyons, Director of Children’s Services, and Zaheer Ahmed, Interim Head of School Improvement and Learning, attended alongside.

 

The report used the final official results for the 202/23 academic year, which were not the same as the unvalidated results that were issued in November. The report gave a statutory assessment standard of how Oxfordshire children compared to the rest of the country. The report included all children, regardless of home address, in state-funded schools within Oxfordshire, from age 5 until the end of year 13.

 

The Interim Head of School Improvement and Learning identified some main issues including that Oxfordshire's disadvantaged children and black and minority ethnic children performed less well than their national counterparts.

 

The Committee members raised the following queries and issues based on the report:

 

There were concerns that, despite the fame of Oxfordshire educational institutions, the data suggested there was a number of children being let down by the education system.

 

With 95% of Oxfordshire schools being rated either Good or Outstanding by Ofsted, the Interim Head of Schools Improvement and Learning proposed that this indicated that most Oxfordshire schools were performing well in meeting the needs of most children in their community.  Where the data suggested certain cohorts were not achieving to a similar standard as their national counterparts, there was room to adjust their curriculum and provisions to meet their needs.

 

The data was not gathered and formulated specifically to look at the performance of individual schools and was not divided between maintained and academy schools. The data highlighted struggling groups which could be drawn out and communicated with the whole education system. With disparities known, good practices can be promoted to improve the whole system.

 

There were ways to communicate with the Department for Education (DfE), which monitored the results of trusts and academies rather than the local authority. Thos channels of communication were used to improve the system as a whole for all children.

 

The Committee noted that it would have been preferable if clearer headline charts had been provided breaking down the data across different criteria.

16/24

Membership of the Committee

The Committee’s terms of reference, as approved by Council when establishing the Committee, set out that:

In addition to the county councillors the People Overview & Scrutiny Committee shall include in its membership the following voting representatives:

·       one Church of England representative appointed by the Oxford Diocesan Board of Education;

·       one Roman Catholic representative appointed jointly by the Archbishop of Birmingham and the Bishop of Portsmouth to represent the Roman Catholic Church;

·       two persons who shall be parent governors of maintained schools elected in accordance with a procedure approved by the Council.

·       two persons who, at the time of their original appointment, shall be aged 25 or under and either living in Oxfordshire or working for an organisation in Oxfordshire supporting or representing children and young people.

 

The Scrutiny Officer will provide an update on any expressions of interest received from parent governors and/or from young people.  The Committee is recommended to DELEGATE confirmation of their appointment to the Chair and the Scrutiny Officer. 

Minutes:

Whilst no expressions of interest had been received for the parent governor co-optee vacancies, expressions of interest had been received for the young people co-optees.  The Committee resolved to delegate to the Chair and the Scrutiny Officer the practicalities of their appointment process.

17/24

Committee Action and Recommendation Tracker pdf icon PDF 148 KB

The Committee is recommended to NOTE the progress of previous recommendations and actions arising from previous meetings, having raised any questions on the contents.

Minutes:

The action and recommendation traThe Committee resolved to NOTE the action and recommendation tracker.

cker was NOTED.

18/24

Committee Forward Work Plan pdf icon PDF 722 KB

The Committee is recommended to AGREE its work programme for forthcoming meetings,  taking account of the Cabinet Forward Plan and of the Budget Management Monitoring Report.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The Committee resolved to AGREE the proposed forward work plan, having taken account of the Cabinet Forward Plan and the Budget Management Monitoring Report, noting that it will be for the Committee at its first meeting of the next municipal year to agree what it will consider.

 

19/24

Responses to Scrutiny Recommendations pdf icon PDF 204 KB

Cabinet responded to the report submitted by the People Overview and Scrutiny Committee on the Oxfordshire Education Commission at its meeting on 23 April 2024.

 

The Committee is asked to NOTE the response.

Minutes:

The Committee resolved to NOTE the Cabinet response to the report on the Oxfordshire Education Commission.