Principle 8. Transparent and honest
Transparent and honest
Self-evaluation is open, balanced, and non-defensive, acknowledging both strengths and areas for development.
Transparency builds credibility. A culture of honest self-evaluation lays the foundations for trust, external assurance, and meaningful change.
Reflective questions
- How well does our self-evaluation present a balanced picture of our provision, giving appropriate weight to what is working well and what needs to improve?
- How well does our culture support honest self-evaluation as a routine and valued part of improvement, rather than an activity driven by external scrutiny?
- How do we ensure that weaknesses are acknowledged constructively and used as opportunities for learning rather than sources of defensiveness or justification?
- In what ways do staff, learners and other stakeholders contribute to our self-evaluation, and how does this help us avoid a defensive or overly narrow perspective?
- How transparent are our self-evaluation processes and findings to staff, learners, governors, and partners, and how does this openness build trust? Consider who has access to self-evaluation information and how it is shared and discussed.
- What evidence do we use to support our judgements about strengths and areas for development, and how accessible and transparent is this evidence to others?
- Where have we been most honest about areas of underperformance, and how clearly do we understand and explain the underlying causes rather than attributing them to external factors alone?
- How confident are we that an external audience would recognise our self-evaluation as honest and credible, even where it highlights uncomfortable issues?