Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation

Support the Guardian

Fund independent journalism with $15 per month
Support us
Support us
Ruth Perry was a former pupil at the school and had worked there for 13 years. Photograph: Brighter Futures for Children
Ruth Perry was a former pupil at the school and had worked there for 13 years. Photograph: Brighter Futures for Children

Headteacher killed herself after news of low Ofsted rating, family says

This article is more than 1 year old

Ruth Perry was told that Caversham primary school in Reading would be downgraded to inadequate

A headteacher killed herself after she was told that her school would be given the lowest possible Ofsted rating, her family has said.

Ruth Perry, 53, who had worked at Caversham primary school in Reading for 13 years, took her own life in January after she was informed that the school was being downgraded from outstanding to inadequate.

Her sister, Julia Waters, said Perry had described the inspection in November last year as the worst day of her life. She said Perry had been “an absolute shadow of her former self” while waiting for the report’s publication.

Matt Rodda, the Labour MP for Reading East, said Ofsted must take action after Perry’s “devastating” death. “Ofsted must now ask themselves some tough questions about their role and how we prevent further tragedies in the future,” he said.

Rodda said he had met the schools minister, Nick Gibb, adding: “I think it’s fair to say there are local concerns about the way the inspection was carried out, also about the way the Ofsted framework and other regulations affecting Ofsted effectively work, and the wider pressure on headteachers.”

Waters told BBC South that Perry was informed that the school’s rating would be downgraded on the first day of the inspection, which was the first she had faced as headteacher.

She said inspectors reported that a boy doing a flossing dance move, from the video game Fortnite, was evidence of the sexualisation of children at the school. She said inspectors told staff they had seen child-on-child abuse, which turned out to be a playground fight.

Waters said: “Ruth took her own life on January 8; all during that process, every time I spoke to her, she would talk about the countdown. I remember her clearly one day saying ‘52 days and counting’. Every day she had this weight on her shoulders hanging over her and she wasn’t officially allowed to talk to her family.

“I remember the very first day I saw her, rather than just speaking to her on the phone, a couple of days after the end of the Ofsted inspection, she came, she was an absolute shadow of her former self.”

The report, which was published this week, found the school to be good in every category apart from leadership and management, where it was judged to be inadequate, the lowest rating. It meant the entire school dropped to the lowest rating.

Waters said the rating had “destroyed” the vocation of her sister, who had once been a pupil at the school. “This one-word judgment is just destroying 32 years of her vocation – education was her vocation – 32 years summed up in one word, inadequate,” she said. “It just preyed on her mind until she couldn’t take it any more.”

skip past newsletter promotion

The Ofsted report said the school leaders did not have the “required knowledge to keep pupils safe from harm”.

In response to the report, Caversham primary school said in a letter: “The school, led by Ruth, responded immediately after the inspection visit, to take action to resolve the issues raised. Following the heartbreaking loss of Ruth, we have continued her work to ensure that the school is an effective, safe and happy place for children to learn and achieve.”

Matthew Purves, Ofsted’s regional director for the south-east, said: “We were deeply saddened by Ruth Perry’s tragic death. Our thoughts remain with Mrs Perry’s family, friends and everyone in the Caversham primary school community.”

More on this story

More on this story

  • Ofsted reforms to focus on inclusion, behaviour and attendance

  • ‘Always ludicrous’: three views on the end of Ofsted single-word ratings

  • Ofsted single-word school ratings to be scrapped immediately

  • ‘Landmark moment’: Ruth Perry family campaign ends single-word Ofsted reports

  • Headteacher paid damages in disability discrimination case against Ofsted

  • Inquiry into headteacher’s suicide says ‘macho culture’ of inspections must end

  • Ruth Perry’s family dubious after ex-Ofsted chief appointed to review inspectorate

  • Sister of Ruth Perry urges teachers thinking of suicide to seek help

  • Former Ofsted chief says Ruth Perry inspection was error-free

  • Gillian Keegan says she would have punched ‘rude’ Ofsted inspectors

More from Headlines

More from Headlines

  • Exclusive
    ICC prosecutor allegedly tried to suppress sexual misconduct claims against him

  • Georgia
    Georgia’s pro-EU opposition calls for protest over ‘rigged’ election result

  • Israel-Gaza war
    Israeli strikes in Gaza kill 70 as UN chief calls civilians’ plight ‘unbearable’

  • US politics live
    Harris heads to Philadelphia and Trump gears up for Madison Square Garden rally

  • Washington Post
    Bezos faces criticism after executives met with Trump on day of Post’s non-endorsement

  • UK
    Labour suspends MP Mike Amesbury after video appears to show him punching man

  • Bolivia
    Bolivia’s Evo Morales says his vehicle hit by gunfire as political tension rises

  • Japan
    Japan’s ruling coalition to lose majority in election, national broadcaster says

  • UK
    Labour backbenchers accuse Keir Starmer of ‘colonial mindset’

  • US
    American Airlines tests boarding technology that calls out line cutters

Most viewed

Most viewed