Water Mill is a one form Primary School in Selly Oak, Birmingham. Due to its proximity to the University and Hospital, we have many families stay with us for just a short period, maybe 2 years, whilst parents complete their University placement. As such we have very high mobility, around 1/3 of the school leave each year and a new 1/3 join. In July 2018 the school was rated as Requires Improvement by Ofsted. Since then we have placed Skills Builder (our Owlstanding Skills) at the heart of school improvement. We recognised the importance of the essential skills across the curriculum, especially for our mobile community.
By following the Accelerator Program, we have been able to keep skills development as a prominent whole school priority. Working towards the awards provides motivation and engagement from the whole team. As a leader, the time to stop and reflect with the advisors has given me the space to step back from the day to day manic nature of school life and go back to our key aims and objectives to pick apart the bits that are working and get inspiration on where we can go next.

Skills Builder and our Owl-standing Skills really do underpin all we do at Water Mill Primary School. They are brought to life right across the academic curriculum and beyond, including Afterschool clubs, Weekend Sports, Choir Performances or Ballet Try Outs. Because both the resources and cross curricular links are specifically picked out for staff, it's really easy for anyone in school to pick it up and run with it. Now that we've been doing it for some time, it's become a key part of our community's shared language. This in turn produces increased returns as talking about skill development becomes just second nature.

Beyond the general school curriculum, we really value the real life opportunities to develop and apply the skills that have been explicitly taught. We prioritised funding to access the 10 hour projects for every class in the school, tapping into the great resources and saving staff workload. Pupils have also really benefitted from working on projects with national partners, like Wates Construction. We even took the whole school off timetable for a half term following Covid to focus on how to work well together again. Children see the Owlstanding skills as a fundamental aspect of how we work together and can articulate really effectively the value of the skills and how they can progress further. In a recent Ofsted Inspection, Personal Development was rated as Outstanding, with inspectors specifically describing the impact of our skill development as a pivotal factor in the school's provision.
Skills Builder feels like it's built into the fabric of the school life now and I can't see us returning to a time when skill development isn't at the heart of our curriculum. Now it's time to step beyond the provision offered by the partnership to forge our own way. We are already making links ourselves with employers and vocational resources. We aim to find aspirational role models who look and sound like our community to demonstrate how these skills are key to their own success.