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1 February 2014 NGA South East Region Governor Conference School governance - What inspection tells us and learning from the best Emma Ing, Senior Her Majesty's Inspector

NGA South East Region Governor Conference

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NGA South East Region Governor Conference. School governance - What inspection tells us and learning from the best Emma Ing, Senior Her Majesty's Inspector. 1 February 2014. Overview. An opportunity to consider: Why good governance is importance - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

1 February 2014

NGA South East Region Governor Conference

School governance - What inspection tells us

and learning from the best

Emma Ing, Senior Her Majesty's Inspector

Page 2: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

Overview

An opportunity to consider:

Why good governance is importance

What school inspection tells us about governance

How Ofsted inspects governance

and to:

discuss and share practice

consider the implications for your work as governors

Page 3: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

Strong governance

NGA conference in June 2012 HMCI stated:

Strong governance is increasingly transforming schools and building effective partnerships.

The role of governors is fundamental and they should never forget that. Without strong and effective governance, our schools simply won’t be as good as they can be.

Page 4: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

What inspection tells us

Page 5: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

What inspection tells us

There are many improvements in education

Children in England now have the best chance they have ever had of attending a good school

Page 6: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

What inspection tells us

However England’s schools are not yet among the best in the world. There remain three key barriers

mediocre teaching and weak leadership in a minority of schools

pockets of weak educational provision in parts of the country

significant underachievement of children from low income families, particularly White children

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KS2 attainment by FSM eligibility and region, 2013

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KS4 attainment by FSM eligibility and region, 2013

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What inspection tells us

We also know that

the most able are not doing well enough

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What inspection tells us

In the best schools strong leaders and governors routinely challenge low expectations and mediocre teaching.

They recruit and retain good teachers…They create a culture in which good teaching can flourish- orderly and welcoming schools that insist on high standards.

These leaders reward good performance and tolerate neither inconsistent teaching nor poor behaviour.

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What inspection tells us

Wherever we find success, good leadership is behind it.

Effective governance is an intrinsic part of good leadership.

Good governance is not universal.

Page 12: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

Possible consequences of a failure to challenge undermine the running of the schoolGovernors fail to provide enough challenge to the

headteacher

Improvement planning does not address the real priorities

Performance management of the headteacher is weak because it cannot be based on any meaningful analysis

Governors do not know what training they need or what additional governors to appoint

• Performance management of teachers is ineffective as it is not linked to achievement

The school is incapable of stopping its own decline

Governors do not know what is needed to probe more closely and gather further insight

Governors do not know if their actions are having any impact or how good the school really is

The importance of governance

Page 13: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

What inspection tells us

The Annual report of Her Majesty’s Chief Inspector of Education, Children’s Services and Skills 2012/13 Last year’s annual report emphasised the

importance of leadership in schools.

This year, 70% of schools were judged as good or outstanding for their leadership and management, which is a higher proportion than seen in last year’s inspections.

A key element of this is good governance.

Page 14: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

What inspection tells us

The Annual report of Her Majesty’s Chief Inspector of Education, Children’s Services and Skills 2012/13 Good governance is crucial to tackling underperformance

and supporting improvement.

Governance that is weak does not challenge the school about its performance or press the school to increase its aspirations.

Over the past year, inspectors judged governance to be weak and recommended an external review of governance in around 400 schools.

Some reviews have now taken place and, in others, action has been taken to replace the governing body with an interim executive board.

Page 15: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

Common issues with governance

Issues identified in inspection reports included:

not ambitious about expectations

lack of a ‘critical friend’ approach and challenge

over-reliance on information solely from the headteacher

do not visit the school

lack of engagement with school development planning

limited role in monitoring the impact of actions

limited understanding of data and school quality.

Page 16: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

Knows school very well

Regularly monitors school directly

Improvement planning

Challenges senior leaders

Provides high level of expert support

Exemplary management of statutory duties

Financial management

Has appropriate range of skills

Makes the right appointments

Direct involvement in performance management of teaching

Focus on achievement

High expectations

Vision/strategy

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20

Main governance strengths identified in reports on outstanding schools

In the most effective schools there is robust challenge to senior leaders by governors who know the school well, but who also have a secure grasp of their role

Page 17: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

What is the purpose of governance?

Page 18: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

Governors Handbook

Ensuring clarity of vision, ethos and strategic direction

Holding the headteacher to account for the educational performance of the school and its pupils

Overseeing the financial performance of the school and making sure its money is well spent

Page 19: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

Inspecting governance

Page 20: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

Inspecting governance

Inspectors consider how well governors:

ensure clarity of vision, ethos and strategic direction

contribute to the school’s evaluation and understand its strengths and weaknesses of the school, including the impact of their own work

support and strengthen leadership, including by developing their own skills

provide challenge and hold the leaders to account for improving teaching, achievement, behaviour and safety, including by using the data dashboard, other data and examination and test results

Page 21: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

Inspecting governance

use performance management systems to improve teaching, leadership and management –salary progression

ensure financial resources are managed effectively

operate in such a way that statutory duties are met and priorities are approved

engage with key stakeholders use the pupil premium and other resources

to overcome barriers to learning – performance of groups of pupils

Page 22: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

How do inspectors evaluate the impactthat leaders are making?

Achievement of pupils at the school

- The learning and progress across year groups of different groups of pupils currently on the roll of the school, including disabled pupils, those who have special educational needs and those for whom the pupil premium provides support.

- Pupils’ progress in the last three years- Pupils’ attainment

Quality of teaching in the school

The behaviour and safety of pupils at the school

Leadership and managementThe importance of governance

Page 23: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

Inspect governance – an activity

Page 24: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

Inspect governance

Work in fours, ask the most experienced two governors to be the inspectors

Use the briefing packs to prepare for a meeting between governors and the Ofsted inspector – 10 mins

Conduct the meeting – just 15 minutes The inspectors feed back, what were they

impressed by, less impressed by, what would their judgement be? – 10 mins

Page 25: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

School governance: Learning from the best

Page 26: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

Learning from the best

Knowing their schools

To shape the strategic direction of the school and hold leaders to account through the school development plan:

high-quality information pupils’ progress data quality of teaching visits – focused, purposeful, protocols.

Page 27: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

Learning from the best

Knowing their school A range of good-quality, regular information from a variety

of sources to ensure an accurate understanding of the school’s strengths and areas for development.

Did not shy away from asking questions and sought further information, explanation or clarification as part of their monitoring and decision-making processes.

Two key factors underpinned confident and productive questioning:

a positive relationship with senior leaders absolutely clear understanding of their different roles and

responsibilities.

Page 28: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

Learning from the best

Providing support and challenge

Acted as advocates for the pupils.

Systematically monitored the school’s progress towards meeting targets in the school development plan.

Understood the quality of teaching.

Supported the leaders in taking robust action to improve teaching when necessary.

Used the skills they brought, and the information they had about the school, to ask challenging questions focused on improvement and hold leaders to account for pupils’ achievement.

Page 29: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

Learning from the best

Providing support and challenge All of the outstanding governing bodies visited struck the

right balance between supporting leaders and providing constructive challenge.

Three key elements to getting the balance of support and constructive challenge right:

1. understanding roles and responsibilities2. using knowledge, skills and experience3. asking pertinent questions based on knowledge,

information and understanding of the school.

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Learning from the best

Working efficiently Role of the clerk and the chair of governors

Strong team working between the chair, clerk and headteacher

Delegation of work – for example to committees

Systematic monitoring and evaluation of progress towards meeting targets

Engaging others Parents

Pupils

Wider community

Page 31: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

Learning from the best

Making a difference

Strengthened leadership by:

providing an external view

having high aspirations

approving and monitoring priorities

supporting the development of leadership potential

using skills and expertise to complement those of the leadership team

supporting the appointment and retention of staff.

Page 32: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

Governing body self-review

‘Why are we doing this?

What are we trying to achieve?

What difference have we made?

Challenged own performance

Reviewed systems, structures and terms of reference

Considered committee membership

Seeking and sharing best practice

Governor recruitment, induction and training

Learning from the best

Page 33: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

Learning from the best Questions governors might want to consider:

Do we understand our roles and responsibilities and how they differ from those of the headteacher and senior staff?

What do we know about the achievement of pupils and the quality of teaching in our school?

How do we know that the information we have about our school is robust and accurate?

How do we provide the right balance of professional support and challenge for leaders to help them improve the school’s effectiveness?

How efficiently do we use our time?

Page 34: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

Learning from the best

Do we make the best use of the skills and expertise of all members of the governing body?

How do we know that the governing body is as effective as possible and could we do things better?

How do we review our own performance regularly?

How do we plan our training and development?

Do we consider what might be needed when governors leave? How do we ensure we still continue to have the necessary skills and knowledge?

How do we ensure that member of our governing body are prepared to step into important roles such as the chair of the governing body and chair of committees?

Page 35: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

Supporting improvement and further reading

Page 36: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

Supporting improvement

regional structure – focused projects

HMI working with schools requiring improvement

‘Getting to Good’ seminars

training materials for SEN governors in development

Better English, mathematics and governance conferences

data dashboard

Raiseonline developments

Page 37: NGA South East Region Governor Conference

Unseen children: access and achievement 20 years on, Ofsted (130155), 2013; www.ofsted.gov.uk/resources/130155 .

The most able students: are they doing as well as they should in our non-selective secondary schools?, Ofsted (130118), 2013; www.ofsted.gov.uk/resources/130118.

The Pupil Premium: how schools are spending the funding successfully to maximise achievement, Ofsted (130016), 2013; www.ofsted.gov.uk/resources/130016.

Getting to good: how headteachers achieve success, Ofsted (120167), 2012; www.ofsted.gov.uk/resources/120167.

Schools that stay satisfactory, Ofsted (110151), 2011; www.ofsted.gov.uk/resources/110151.

School governance: learning from the best, Ofsted (100238), 2011; www.ofsted.gov.uk/resources/100238.

Further reading – keep up to date