Minimising risk in choosing a private school

April 7, 2025

Project BEATRIX

Chattan Harbour Education Consultancy logo for Project BEATRIX data tool

The image you can see attached to this post is BEATRIX.

She is a developing analysis tool 🧰 for Chattan Harbour - and one of the hidden reasons we have finally come out to play 🏏 . We thought of bringing her into existence a long time ago. She isn’t an AI agent 🕶️ - it is hard to describe what she is - so we profiled her and asked a couple of smart AI people what she looked like and we think it works.

She’s asleep 💤 for a little while longer. Probably about 10-16 weeks longer, but this week saw a big breakthrough in how we will organise and export.

In our workspace HQ, we are treating the moment we started filing with Companies’ House as the birth of our company, but in reality, it has been going on much longer.

BEATRIX abides by all legal protocols - particularly when it comes to web scraping (we won’t infringe a robots.txt ever) but - and I keep coming back to this: when we say we are profiling the sector differently, we mean it. We aren’t copying. We’re innovating.

BEATRIX pulls on huge quantities of data; a dash of python; two AI models; old school database graft; snacks (very important) and then finally, most importantly, executive, hands-on knowledge of the sector at the highest level 🏫(state and independent - we just want to be informed by the very best!) from Heads so that we can ask profiling questions of our families and then have BEATRIX work with some of the most experienced Heads in the industry to interpret the results correctly 💥. She can’t work properly without human interpretation because children can’t be reduced to an AI model. It isn’t what we are building.

We are using our knowledge and BEATRIX combined to give the most accurate recommendations for families looking to send a child into the independent sector. We need data - lots of it. Oodles 📈 . It is out there but it is too…disparate. However, how are you going to marry all the available information out there with real world examples of the complexity of a child? That is where our unique approach to building a stable of Heads comes in.

We’d finish with a joke to lighten the post, soften things up…and lighten the mood - but BEATRIX hasn’t learned jokes.

Yet. 😘

#independentsector

#boardingschools

#projectbeatrix

August 5, 2025
Inclusion isn’t a metric. It’s a feeling - and a pattern of experiences over time. When organisations want to understand whether their culture truly supports equity, trust, and belonging, policy audits and staff surveys can offer important insights. They won’t tell you what it feels like to raise a concern. They won’t show you how leadership decisions are experienced, and they won’t surface what goes unsaid when power is in the room. That’s why we’re currently supporting one trust to build a qualitative strand into their trust-wide Equality, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) review — focused specifically on leadership and organisational culture. The approach is shaped by two central ideas: That voice is not the same as safety, and that ethical inquiry must be both rigorous and humane. Drawing on Robson & McCartan’s model of real-world research, the review uses open-ended, accessible questions to explore staff experiences across five themes: Do people feel psychologically safe to speak openly? How do leaders show up - in crisis, in conflict, in care? Whose voices shape decisions, and who gets left out? Are there fair, visible pathways into leadership? Do the organisation’s values show up in practice, especially when things get hard? Each session - whether a focus group, 1:1 interview, or anonymised submission - is framed through a trauma-informed lens. That means offering choice. Respecting silence. Avoiding extraction. Making sure people know they can walk away. For example, a staff member might be asked: "Do you feel safe to share ideas or concerns with your line manager or SLT?" Instead of a yes/no, they’re invited to reflect: "Can you think of a time when you did or didn’t feel safe? What made the difference?" The language throughout is plain, thoughtful, and non-clinical. It’s designed for staff at all levels - not just those with policy fluency or HR confidence. This is not about collecting complaints. It’s about mapping patterns. If one staff member feels unsafe, that’s important. If ten do - in different roles, at different sites - that’s culture. We often say at Chattan Harbour: “People don’t need to be told they belong. They need to feel it.” And that feeling, more than any policy, tells us whether inclusion is real.
Harbour at sunrise
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Discover how Chattan Harbour Education Consultancy is developing The Harbour Pathway, a new school leadership programme grounded in the Headteachers’ Standards 2020 and designed for sustainable, reflective educational leadership.
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Discover Chattan Harbour's new bespoke leadership services for schools and trusts, launching July 2025. Expert coaching, strategic consultancy, and tailored programmes from former Heads.