190 likes | 380 Views
2. Third Joint ERYC/ERAGB Annual Conference. The Future of Governance12th March 2011. 3. A membership organisation representing the voice of school governors in England at national and regional levelWe aim to improve the effectiveness of governing bodies by providing expert and tailored infor
E N D
1. Clare CollinsChair National Governors’ Association
Introductions Introductions
2. 2 Third Joint ERYC/ERAGB Annual Conference The Future of Governance
12th March 2011
3. 3
A membership organisation representing the voice of school governors in England at national and regional level
We aim to improve the effectiveness of governing bodies by providing expert and tailored information and advice
We represent governors from all state funded schools, including academies
4. 4 GB Responsibilities(2002 Education Act)
5. 5 White Paper The importance of teaching
School governors are the unsung heroes of our education system .... To date, governors have not received the recognition, support or attention that they deserve. We will put that right.
The time and expertise of governors needs to be better respected and deployed.
Sometimes GBs lack the information or training to challenge effectively and support the senior leadership of a school to improve.
We will work with the NGA and others to clarify GB accountabilities and responsibilities to focus more strongly on strategic direction.
Encourage schools to appoint trained clerks.
6. 6
Give governors easier access to data about how their school compares to others.
GBs benefit from having people with business or management experience as members......we will encourage business people and professionals to volunteer as governors.
National College will offer high-quality training for chairs of governors.
Many successful schools have smaller GBs with individuals drawn from the community, such as parents, businesses, local government and the voluntary sector.
We will legislate … so that from early 2012 all schools can establish smaller governing bodies with appointments primarily focused on skills.
Ensure a minimum of two parent governors.
7. 7 Lord Hill at NGA’s Annual Conference ‘the most important decision-making group in any school is the governing body’.
‘governing bodies should set the overall strategic direction of a school, hold the headteacher to account and have a relentless focus on driving up standards – but not get dragged into micro-managing the school or the minutiae of its day-to-day activities’.
‘we need to ensure that governing bodies have the best possible people, with the right mix of skills and expertise, rather than just because they are there wearing a particular hat’
‘all schools are different and need different things at different stages of their development – so school governance needs to be more flexible’.
8. 8 ‘an energetic and sustained attack on the culture of guidance and paperwork … if you are serious about trusting people, you have to start trusting them’.
‘we need – even in these straitened times – to find ways of supporting governors, especially chairs of governors, including by providing access to high-quality training and also making it easier to see a wide range of information and data about the performance of local schools’.
9. 9 Government Position to date More local decision making, less prescription
Academies Act 2010:
no maximum size for GBs
more flexibility on numbers for difference categories
elections for at least two parent governors
Education Bill sets the framework for maintained schools to have the same flexibility:
Regulations will follow and changes to composition of governing bodies will be possible from Sept 2012
Reducing bureaucracy: less guidance
DfE wants to communicate with governors but ...
10. 10 NGA’s View Governance is not ‘broken’
Ofsted
Draw on the best features of so-called ‘business’ model and ‘stakeholder’ model
Good clerking is crucial
Need to ensure strategic focus
Need to relinquish things we might like doing but which are not strategic
Need to ensure school leaders are equipped to do their jobs, including HR
11. 11 Current Challenges 1Changing Landscape of Provision Fractured marketplace:
Community schools / foundation schools / VA and VC schools
Academies Type 1 - replacing failing schools
Type 2 - new converters
Type 3 - free schools
Chains (Ark, ULT, Grace), federations, collaborations, partnerships
The role of the local authority – scope, commissioner/provider models of working, funding pressures
Competition from alternative providers
Deregulation – reduction in bureaucracy
12. 12 Current Challenges 2Focus on Accountability Standards:
Globalisation – international comparisons, workforce requirements
Expectations and entitlement – pupil, parent, employers, government
Evidence – multiple data sources including CVA
Resources:
Declining budgets and focus on value for money
Increased SEN and behavioural issues
Compliance:
Employer responsibilities – employment, equalities and H&S laws
Safeguarding and child protection legislation
School specific legislation - SEN, EYFS, community cohesion
Autonomous schools:
Intelligent accountability – role of self evaluation, LAs, Ofsted
13. 13 Current Challenges 3 Time and Skills, Status and Recognition Complexity of role means that more governors with specific skills (e.g. finance, HR, data analysis, relationships) are required
Those with skills are likely to be highly sought after and therefore have less time to offer
Volunteering can lack of status (there is a duty for employers to allow time off, but not paid time off) and large numbers of GBs do not have professional clerks or policies for paying expenses
There is limited recognition of GB responsibilities from schools, LAs, National College, government
Insurance – LA vs. bespoke
14. 14 A good GB understands the importance of: A good chair: NGA’s ‘Chair’s Handbook’
A good clerk: NGA’s ‘Welcome to Clerking’
A Code of Practice (adopted and signed annually), role descriptions, constitution, protocols
A mix of skills to tackle the complexity of the role – finance, data, HR, H&S, compliance: undertake a skills audit and recruit
Appropriate delegation and committee structure
Relationships based on trust and respect, collective responsibility and confidentiality
Setting the agenda and finding the information
15. 15 Understanding of the role – the strategic focus
High aspirations – standards and expectations, national and international comparators
Commitment to their own development and training (and maybe allocating some resources?)
Collaboration and working in partnership
Listening to parents and carers
Accountability: reporting to the community
Reviews its own effectiveness
e.g. GovernorMark, Target Tracker, ‘a’ SEF
Succession planning
16. 16 How NGA Represents Governor Views Government
Lobbying
Select Committees
DfE Education Forum
DfE SFIG
Direct contact with policy leads
Other bodies
National College
HT Associations
Unions
LGA / LGiU
Think Tanks / Policy Units
17. 17 How NGA Consults Board members have to be governors
National conferences
Regional meetings
Bulletin Board
e-newsletters
nga-assocs
Attending events and conferences
18. 18
19. 19 Join us Standard GB membership Ł60GOLD GB membership Ł250 www.nga.org.uk
governorhq@nga.org.uk
0121 237 3780