Ofsted-ready quality

Ofsted-ready apprenticeship software for the Nov 2025 framework

Self-assessment, safeguarding, wellbeing and per-role dashboards built around the new report-card model — eight evaluation areas on a five-point scale, with safeguarding shown separately.

Journey / Compliance & SAR
JS
Dashboard
Learners
Funding
Compliance
Quality
Gateway
Ofsted Readiness (SAR)

Self-Assessment Report · Evaluated Nov 2025

Safeguarding: Met
Provision Grades
Internal 5-point scale evaluation against EIF criteria.
Quality of education
Strong
Behaviour and attitudes
Exceptional
Personal development
Expected
Leadership and management
Strong
Apprenticeships
Strong
Key Strengths
  • High achievement rates across digital standards.
  • Strong employer engagement in tripartite reviews.
  • Robust safeguarding culture and rapid escalation.
Areas for Improvement
  • Consistent recording of 20% OTJ across all cohorts.
  • Deepening contextualised English and Maths delivery.

Illustrative Ofsted readiness view with sample data.

Definition

What does Ofsted-ready mean for apprenticeship providers?

Ofsted-ready means a provider can evidence the quality of its apprenticeship provision against Ofsted's inspection framework — covering quality of education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, leadership and management, and safeguarding. It is about having that evidence organised and current, not about any approval or endorsement from Ofsted.

Is Journey built for the new Ofsted framework?

Yes. Journey implements the November 2025 Ofsted report-card model: eight evaluation areas graded on a five-point scale, safeguarding shown separately as a distinct status, and no single overall grade. Self-assessment, safeguarding and quality evidence read from your live delivery data. Journey is independent software and is not DfE or Ofsted approved. It does not guarantee funding or inspection outcomes.

Brings together what used to be separate tools

SAR spreadsheetsSeparate safeguarding logs

Report-card model

Eight evaluation areas on a five-point scale with safeguarding as a separate status — matching the November 2025 framework.

Self-assessment (SAR)

Provider self-assessment uses the full set of areas; per-learner reviews use a curated, non-skippable set.

Safeguarding & wellbeing

Safeguarding, wellbeing, inclusion and reasonable adjustments are first-class, gated to the roles that need them.

Single Central Record

Staff vetting and the Single Central Record are built in for inspection readiness.

Last reviewed: June 2026

What changed in the November 2025 framework

From November 2025 Ofsted moved to a report-card model for further education and skills. Instead of a single overall grade, providers are evaluated across eight areas on a five-point scale, with safeguarding reported separately as a distinct status rather than folded into an overall judgement. The shift puts more weight on evidence across each area and on safeguarding being demonstrably effective in its own right.

Journey is built around that structure. Provider self-assessment uses the full set of evaluation areas, while per-learner reviews use a curated, non-skippable set so nothing important is quietly missed. There is no synthetic 'overall grade', because the framework no longer works that way.

Quality evidence that reads from live delivery

The strongest inspection evidence is the kind you did not have to assemble specially, because it is a by-product of how you deliver. In Journey, self-assessment, safeguarding, wellbeing, inclusion and reasonable adjustments all read from your live delivery data, and each is gated to the roles that need it. Staff vetting and the Single Central Record are built in, so the basics of inspection readiness are maintained continuously rather than reconstructed before a visit.

Kept current with the framework

This page reflects the framework as it stands in mid-2026: the November 2025 report-card model, eight evaluation areas, a five-point scale and separate safeguarding. In June 2026 Ofsted published its first annual update to the further-education and skills inspection toolkit and operating guides — including added wording on identifying learners at risk of harm from mental-health issues — coming into force in September 2026; the report-card model itself is unchanged. Journey is independent software designed to help providers maintain Ofsted-ready evidence from their everyday delivery data. It is not Ofsted approved and does not guarantee inspection outcomes.

Sources & further reading

This page reflects current public guidance. For the definitive rules, always check the official sources below.

Frequently asked questions

Funding-safe and audit-ready by design

Built so your data, your funding and your audit trail hold up

Hard tenant isolation

Every record is scoped to your organisation on each read and write — one provider can never see another's data.

Append-only audit log

Every state change is recorded against the real person who made it, so the history stands up at audit.

Versioned DfE rule packs

Funding is computed server-side against the right year for each start date — 2024/25 and 2025/26, and built to adopt the 2026/27 pack now published by the DWP.

Governed AI

AI is metered per tenant, prompts are scrubbed of learner PII and outputs are validated, falling back gracefully.

ISO 27001 & Cyber Essentials

Built and operated by a UK company to externally-audited information-security standards.

Your data and employers stay yours

No lock-in: export your data whenever you like, and your employer relationships always remain yours.

Journey is independent software and is not DfE or Ofsted approved. It does not guarantee funding or inspection outcomes.

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