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RISE can be a success if we all learn together

Great practice should be shared and not remain isolated within individual schools, trusts or regions
Cathie Paine Guest Contributor

Chief executive, REAch2 Academy Trust

4 min read
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As schools await this year’s SATs results, thousands of teachers and leaders will be reflecting on what has gone well, what they would do differently next year and what they have learned along the way.

That process of reflection is one of the great strengths of our profession. Education only moves forward when teachers and leaders have been willing to share what works, learn from one another and improve together. We learn best when we learn together.

It is also why the success of the government’s RISE school improvement programme will ultimately depend on something very simple: whether it helps schools connect with one another in meaningful and practical ways.

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