About Mike Treadaway

Mike Treadaway was previously FFT’s director of research and a research associate at Datalab. A former teacher, lecturer and LA adviser, he founded the FFT Data Analysis Project in 2000 and developed models for analysing pupil progress, and led the processing, matching and data analysis for the National Pupil Database. He passed away in December 2021.

Don’t try to forecast Progress 8!

In our visits to secondary schools this year we are seeing a huge variety of target setting strategies. It is completely understandable that headteachers want a framework for knowing whether year groups are on-track to do well. This isn’t easy with re-scaled GCSEs dribbling on-stream and a hard accountability target – Progress 8 – that [...]

By |2017-03-03T09:50:15+00:0024th February 2016|School accountability|

Pupil premium isn’t working… or is it?

When national results at Key Stage 4 were published last November phrases like "the gap between rich and poor widens" typified headlines in the national press. This was because the gap between the attainment of disadvantaged (often called Pupil Premium) pupils and others in the headline measure of 5A*-C including English and maths had increased [...]

By |2017-03-03T09:43:22+00:0013th March 2015|Exams and assessment, Pupil demographics|

Why measuring pupil progress involves more than taking a straight line

We have an accountability system that has encouraged schools to check that children are making a certain number of sub-levels of progress each year. This is the basis on which headteachers monitor (and now pay) teachers and on which Ofsted judges schools. Yet there is little hard science underpinning the system in use: take a [...]

We are closing the pupil premium gap – if we look in the right places

This Government has invested enormous amounts of money and political capital in closing the attainment gap between children from low-income families, and everyone else. They give schools a pupil premium for children eligible for free school meals (and some other vulnerable groups) now worth £1300 for primary pupils and £935 for secondary pupils. They gave [...]

By |2016-12-07T12:55:39+00:005th March 2015|Exams and assessment, Pupil demographics|

We worry about teachers inflating results; we should worry more about depression of baseline assessments

It's not uncommon to hear schools express a view that the attainment of their intake is systematically over estimated or 'inflated' in some way. Schools are not accusing another of cheating; simply that high stakes accountability pushes teachers to ensure children achieve the best result possible. And where a feeder school outperforms expectations for an [...]

By |2018-02-23T15:18:09+00:005th March 2015|Exams and assessment, School accountability|
Go to Top