Teach Middle East Magazine Sep-Dec 2019 Issue 1 Volume 7 | Page 33

Sharing Good Practice became the driving force behind the birth of ‘Raha’s Exceptional Journey’. I was very fortunate to have an incredible team of senior leaders and teaching staff, who enthusiastically bought into the concept of moving Raha from Outstanding to Exceptional. The team recognised the need for continued forward momentum, instead of resting on their laurels. Like me, they were dedicated to working hard towards continued improvement to ensure the highest learning outcomes for our students. But it was more than that. When I took over the school, it was obviously doing very well, however, it went about its business quietly and without much fuss. I wanted to change that, put the school on the map and make the entire community even more proud of the school. Our exceptional journey has now been adopted as a permanent, lifelong journey for the school, providing the vision for continued excellence beyond the regular school inspection framework. We have also gone so far as to change our mission and values to incorporate our relentless drive towards being exceptional. We are now three years on from the start of this initiative and can look back at how we started and where we are now. We began by letting parents know our core aim to move from Outstanding to Exceptional (we realised one year in, that this was the wrong way to label our vision, but I will come back to that). We wanted to emphasise our intention to never take our foot off the pedal and to ensure continued improvement. I’m not ashamed to admit that the psychology of telling inspectors two years later that we are on a journey beyond outstanding was a more difficult thing for them to argue against, but let’s keep that secret between ourselves for now! Once the parents knew about our plans we spent a considerable amount of time, a full year in fact, creating what is now labelled Raha’s Exceptional Journey. This process involved the entire breadth of stakeholders, including students. We looked at what we already did very well and what could be improved even further. This didn’t have to have anything to do with inspection frameworks, and even now you will see that there is nothing in our journey relating to attainment or progress, or even teaching and learning. As a school we already knew we did this very well so we looked at where we could go beyond these areas to offer more to our students and wider community. Towards the end of the year-long process we began to have parents ask us about what the chances were of us actually achieving ‘exceptional’ in the inspection the following year. It took us a while to realise that parents were under the impression that ‘exceptional’ was an official rating, so we changed Class Time Term 1 Sep - Dec 2019 33