In my office the desk is cleared, the diary is appointments free - not a meeting in sight. My role is to reflect, to be a blue skies thinker. Outside my window there is only the Dartmoor sky to distract me.

Accidently, I press the wrong button on my computer and on the screen appear sixteen different live views of the site, all being digitally recorded. Video surveillance brings the school into my office like never before. As I watch, one of the toilets is visited by a suspicious youth, quickly followed by another. It’s only ten minutes since the start of the period. I can’t resist the urge to challenge, and I soon find myself over in the block, telling them to get back to class, taking their names and warning them that Maths is not to be missed. Remembering the recording, I return to the blue skies b
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As the dedicated staff, going beyond the call of duty, prepare to clear the mess, I decide to play Inspector Lewis and hunt the culprits, using the new digital system. We go through the video and find the first to exit at around the time the loo was reported vandalised. The screen shot is emailed to the Sixth Form Centre and, within seconds, we have a name and soon confirmation that we have the correct time. It’s an innocent and totally reliable sixth form student. TV detectives never achieve results this quickly.
Speeding through the recordings we find the last students to go in who confirm all was well. Then we have our vandals - three year elevens who spent fifteen minutes in there - the last to come out before our sixth form witness. Now it’s just the interviews - more in sorrow than in anger. ‘Bring them in,’ I say, in my best Lewis voice.
They can’t explain why. Perhaps they really are just potty. Two caretakers have spent an hour restoring the room to normality. So all three toileteers agree to toil - twelve hours’ community service with the cleaners. Judgement passed, they are led away and parents informed.
However, it’s taken most of the afternoon and wrecked my blue skies day. I look again at the scribbled priorities. I cross out personalised learning, curriculum innovation and leading practice networks. Instead, I write in bold my first and only priority: extend security cameras to provide total coverage. It may not be visionary, but forget the blue skies - I’m on a real mission now.
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