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COMMUNITY FOCUSED SCHOOLS YSGOLION BRO

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Title: COMMUNITY FOCUSED SCHOOLS YSGOLION BRO


1
COMMUNITY FOCUSED SCHOOLS YSGOLION BRO
CROESO WELCOME
  • CYFLWYNIAD BYR I LYWODRAETHWYR YSGOL
  • A BRIEF INTRODUCTION FOR SCHOOL GOVERNORS

2
AIMS OF THE SESSION
  • To raise awareness of Community Focused Schools.
  • To consider and discuss the role of governors in
    developing Community Focused Schools.
  • To consider and discuss the benefits and
    implications of developing a Community Focused
    Schools approach in your schools.
  • To look at governance models for managing the
    development of community focused services and
    activities?
  • Anything else .?

3
TODAYS PROGRAMME .
  • 1. Introduction to Community Focused Schools.
  • 2. The role of governors in developing Community
    Focused Schools.
  • 3. The practicalities of delivering Community
    Focused Schools services and activities.
  • 4. Next steps.

4
INTRODUCTIONS
  • About ContinYou Cymru .
  • And you?
  • Name?
  • Which schools do you represent (primary,
    secondary, special)?
  • What sort of Governor are you? (LEA, Community,
    Parent, etc.)

5
1. INTRODUCTION TO COMMUNITY FOCUSED SCHOOLS

6
WHAT IS A COMMUNITY FOCUSED SCHOOL?
  • A community focused school is one that provides
    a range of services and activities, often beyond
    the school day, to help meet the needs of its
    pupils, their families and the wider community.
    Across Wales many schools already provide some
    community services including adult education,
    study support, ICT facilities and community
    sports programmes
  • Community Focused Schools, National Assembly for
    Wales Circular No 34/2003

7
COMMUNITY FOCUSED SCHOOLS THE VISION
  • always be supportive of the core mission of
    schools to improve pupils ability to learn,
    and to support their families.
  • provide a range of activities/learning
    opportunities outside the school day for
    children, young people, families and adults. Some
    of these will be available to the wider
    community.
  • provide a range of additional services/opportuniti
    es and relevant information for children, young
    people, families and the wider community.
  • be sustainable schools that consult with their
    communities, engage in community life, work in
    partnership with others and think about the local
    and the global environment.

8
TABLE EXERCISE
  • In your groups, discuss
  • What sorts of Community Focused Schools
    activities and services are taking place
    in/through your schools?
  • Why are these activities/services being
    delivered?
  • In response to particular needs?
  • For how long?
  • Who is delivering/providing?
  • 5 minutes, feedback from each group.

9
KEY MESSAGES
  • Schools cannot, and should not, work alone in
    helping children and young people reach their
    potential.
  • Children and young people learn more effectively
    when they are happy and healthy.
  • Working in this way is a vehicle for
  • meeting a range of targets
  • delivering on a range of agendas including
  • school improvement,
  • delivering integrated childrens and community
    services
  • and community regeneration.
  • Start small .
  • The approach isnt new and there is no blueprint.
  • CFS - more than just dual-use of school
    buildings.
  • Activities/services do not have to take place on
    school sites.
  • Not about competing with existing provision
  • The school can act as a signpost.
  • Cluster working can be really helpful
  • Well planned and implemented provision responds
    to identified needs.

10
DISPELLING SOME MYTHS ABOUT COMMUNITY FOCUSED
SCHOOLS
It isnt about small and rural schools
It isnt about Urban disadvantage
It is about ALL SCHOOLS In ALL AREAS In ALL
CIRCUMSTANCES
11
SO, WHAT DOES A COMMUNITY FOCUSED SCHOOL LOOK
LIKE?
  • No blueprint, but would expect a well planned and
    managed approach to include these elements
  • Community Focused Schools provision responds to
    need.
  • Community Focused Schools provision is embedded
    within the School Development Plan.
  • Community Focused Schools provision is
    benefitting the wider community.
  • There is a partnership approach to developing and
    providing Community Focused Schools.
  • Planning for sustainable provision.
  • Appropriate leadership and management structures
    in place to support Community Focused Schools
    developments.

12
WHY DEVELOP COMMUNITY FOCUSED SCHOOLS?
  • 80 of childrens waking hours is spent outside
    the classroom.
  • Supports School Development Plan built in, not
    bolt on.
  • Benefits for children and young people, families
    and the wider community.
  • Can help raise standards, improve motivation,
    improve attendance.
  • Can help you engage with the community.
  • Can help to meet a range of targets/agendas.
  • But ..

Partnership working is key to a well planned and
sustainable Community Focused Schools approach
you cannot do it alone.
13
COMMUNITY FOCUSED SCHOOLS AND THE SCHOOL
DEVELOPMENT PLAN
Where do Community Focused Schools developments
fit in the development cycle?
What is your role in this development cycle?
Plan
Evaluate
School Development Plan
Implementation
Modify Action
Monitor
Built in, not bolt on
14
TABLE EXERCISE THE BENEFITS OF COMMUNTIY
FOCUSED SCHOOLS
  • In your groups
  • Thinking about the services and activities you
    identified earlier, what are the benefits they
    are bringing to your school/pupils/families/wider
    community?
  • Or think about potential services/activities
    which could meet the needs in your school and
    community.
  • 5 minutes, feedback on the two or three benefits
    from each group.

15
SOME BENEFITS WHICH YOU MIGHT HAVE IDENTIFIED
  • For pupils and schools
  • higher levels of achievement
  • increased pupil motivation and self-esteem
  • specialist support to meet wider needs
  • enhanced partnership working with the local
    community
  • For families
  • improvements in child behaviour and social
    skills
  • greater parental involvement in childrens
    learning
  • more opportunities for local adult education
  • local access to specialist family support
  • For communities
  • better access to services
  • improved local availability of sports and other
    facilities
  • local career development opportunities
  • things to do for children and young people
    outside school
  • closer relationship with the school

16
COMMUNITY FOCUSED SCHOOLS INPUTS AND OUTPUTS
Improving Achievement
7 Core Aims
Community Focused Schools
Meeting community needs
Better services for children and families
Greater parental involvement
Supporting each others targets
17
CHILDREN AND YOUNG PEOPLE RIGHTS TO ACTION
  • 7 Core Aims
  • Have a flying start in life (children aged 0-7
    years).
  • Access to a comprehensive range of education,
    training and learning opportunities, including
    essential personal and social skills.
  • Enjoy the best possible physical and mental,
    social and emotional health, including freedom
    from abuse, victimisation and exploitation.
  • Have access to play, leisure, sporting and
    cultural activities.
  • Children are listened to, treated with respect
    and able to have their play and cultural identity
    recognised.
  • Have a safe home and community that supports
    physical and emotional well being.
  • Not disadvantaged by child poverty.
  • Children and Young Peoples Plans.
  • The vehicle for planning children and young
    peoples services across all Local Authority
    areas.
  • Each plan will need to show how services and
    activities will contribute to achieving the 7
    Core Aims.
  • Significant role for Community Focused Schools.

18
WHAT DOES THE RESEARCH TELL US SO FAR?
  • Most FSESs developed additional provision to
    overcome pupils barriers to learning, which
    were seen as related to family and community
    problems.
  • Promising partnership arrangements, genuine pupil
    and community involvement, and strategic
    initiatives at local level were emerging, but in
    some places sustainability and partnership
    working were a problem.
  • FSESs were impacting positively on the attainment
    of their pupils particularly those facing
    difficulties. They were also having a range of
    other impacts on outcomes for pupils, including
    engagement with learning, family stability and
    enhanced life chances.
  • FSESs were generating positive outcomes for
    families and local people, particularly those
    facing difficulties.
  • FSESs typically experienced improved school
    performance, better relations with local
    communities and an enhanced standing of the
    school in its area.
  • Where decision making was shared with partners
    beyond the school (including local people), this
    could lead to greater stability of resourcing.
  • The success of FSESs bodes well for the roll out
    of the extended schools approach nationally.
    Their experience underlines the importance of
    clear thinking about the nature and purposes of
    that approach. This needs to take place in the
    context of a coherent and stable policy context
    at national level, and the development of
    frameworks at local level.
  • (Evaluation of the full service extended schools
    (FSES) initiative
  • Final report, DFES, June 2007)

19
2. GOVERNORS ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES
20
TABLE EXERCISE
  • In your groups
  • Try to list as many functions of governing bodies
    as you can.
  • Which ones relate to Community Focused Schools
    developments?
  • 10 minutes, feedback from each group.

21
PURPOSE OF GOVERNING BODIES
  • To help the schools they lead provide the best
    possible education for pupils. This involves
  • Setting the schools vision and strategic aims,
    and agreeing plans and policies, making creative
    use of available resources.
  • Monitoring and evaluating performance and acting
    as a critical friend to the headteacher and
    leadership team to support and challenge them in
    managing the school.
  • Ensuring that the school is accountable to the
    children and parents it serves, to its local
    community and to those who fund and maintain it,
    as well as to the staff it employs.
  • Source Governing the School of the Future

All three are central to the development of CFS
and your roles as governors.
22
GOVERNORS ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES (1)
  • The governing body has the ultimate
    responsibility for deciding whether the school
    should offer additional activities and services
    and what form they should take.
  • Before making decisions, governors need to be
    aware of any additional responsibilities that may
    arise.
  • As with existing school activities, governing
    bodies can delegate the practical delivery of
    services to others, but they keep ultimate legal
    responsibility.
  • The governing body should identify one of its
    members to take lead responsibility for this area
    of work.
  • Community Focused Schools, National Assembly for
    Wales Circular No 34/2003

23
GOVERNORS ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES (2)
  • As strategic leaders and managers, you are
    critical in the development of Community Focused
    Schools.
  • You offer that vital continuity of vision and
    links with the community when new headteachers
    are appointed.
  • S27, Education Act 2002 legally, the governing
    body has the ultimate responsibility for
    Community Focused Schools provision.
  • Duties to consult and to abide by provision that
    may be included in the LEAs scheme for financing
    schools.
  • Important to have a clear strategic oversight of
    the schools CFS services/activities and how they
    relate to the schools core teaching and learning
    function.
  • Other issues to consider
  • Staffing implications on staffing structures.
  • Allocation of school resources/funds.
  • Re-modelling/workforce reform.
  • Make up of the governing body.
  • Buildings/premises.
  • Inspection.

Toolkit Section 3, Leading and Managing CFS
and Governors Pack.
24
HOW SHOULD I BE INVOLVED AS A GOVERNOR?
  • Providing strategic leadership and direction,
  • together with the headteacher,
  • Develop appropriate governance structures for
    managing CFS
  • including delegated responsibilities and powers.
  • Nominated governor for Community Focused Schools.
  • Being a critical friend to the schools
    Community Focused Schools developments.
  • Ensure that CFS is built into the School
    Development Plan.
  • A link between the school and the community.
  • Ongoing monitoring, evaluation, and management.
  • Safeguarding the delegated budget.
  • Ensure that requirements are met (health and
    safety, insurance, child protection).

25
3. THE PRACTICALITIES OF DELIVERING COMMUNITY
FOCUSED SCHOOLS
26
TABLE EXERCISE
  • In your groups
  • Identify the practicalities and processes to
    consider when planning, implementing, developing
    and managing Community Focused Schools activities
    and services.
  • 10 minutes, feedback from each group.

27
SOME ANSWERS
  • Consultation school staff, pupils, families,
    the wider community.
  • Audit whats already taking place in/through
    the school and in the local community.
  • Developing a vision and an action plan.
  • Funding and sustainability.
  • Working with partners.
  • Monitoring and evaluation.
  • CFS as part of the school inspection.
  • Health and safety, risk assessments.
  • Insurance.
  • Child protection.
  • Accessibility car parking, disabled access,
    welcoming school...
  • Capacity.
  • Staffing.
  • Management of services/activities.
  • Governance structures.

28
THE PRACTICALITIES OF DELIVERING COMMUNITY
FOCUSED SCHOOLS (1)
Toolkit Section 2 Becoming a CFS CD
GOVERNANCE MODEL
AUDIT school community
VISION
CONSULT identify needs
DEVELOP PARTNERSHIPS
PLANNING
CHECK POLICIES
MANAGEMENT LEADERSHIP
MONITORING EVALUATION
CAPACITY
STAFFING
FUNDING SUSTAINABILITY
29
THE PRACTICALITIES OF DELIVERING COMMUNITY
FOCUSED SCHOOLS (2)
  • HEALTH SAFETY
  • Governing body has ultimate responsibility.
  • Needs to satisfy itself that appropriate risk
    assessments have been carried out and
    satisfactorily actioned.
  • PREMISES
  • Governing body control use of school premises
    during and outside school hours. Some
    exceptions.
  • Needs to be clear about the basis on which a
    third party is using the school premises
    agreements/contracts.
  • CHILD PROTECTION/SAFEGUARDING
  • Review existing policy.
  • CRB checks.
  • INSURANCE
  • Responsibility to ensure that appropriate
    insurance cover is in place.
  • When services/activities are provided by external
    providers, any agreement should make clear who is
    responsible for insurance cover.
  • DISABILITY ACCESS
  • Schools are subject to Parts III and IV of the
    DDA in respect of providing CFS services and
    activities.
  • Refer to schools accessibility plan under Part
    IV of the DDA when planning.

Toolkit Section 4, CFS in action and Governors
Pack.
30
THE PRACTICALITIES OF DELIVERING COMMUNITY
FOCUSED SCHOOLS (3)
  • CHARGING FINANCE
  • Governing body will need to develop a charging
    policy setting out what can and cannot be charged
    for.
  • Cannot charge for certain activities.
  • Delegated budget can only support services or
    activities which directly support pupil
    attainment.
  • SELF-EVALUATION INSPECTION
  • CFS services and activities should be integrated
    into the schools self-evaluation cycle.
  • Community Focused Schools provision can be
    inspected as part of Key Questions 3 and 7 in
    particular.
  • Inspection checklist developed by ContinYou
    Cymru, with input from Estyn evidence of
    Community Focused Schools provision can be
    presented under each Key Question.

Toolkit Section 4, CFS in action and Governors
Pack.
31
THE PRACTICIALITIES OF DELIVERING COMMUNITY
FOCUSED SCHOOLS (4)
  • REMEMBER
  • We can only give an overview here and it isnt
    intended to replace advice or information from
    your LEA.
  • Each LEA has officers who can advise on issues
    such as health and safety, insurance, child
    protection, finance, accessibility and wider
    legal issues.

Governors Pack annex sample template
memorandum of understanding, pre-service checklis
t and an initial checklist when planning CFS.
Toolkit Section 4, CFS in action and Governors
Pack.
32
MODELS FOR DELIVERING COMMUNITY FOCUSED SERVICES
AND ACTIVITIES
  • Direct delivery school/cluster provides services
    and activities directly with the governing body
    having overall responsibility.
  • Delivery contract school sets up a contact or a
    Service Delivery Agreement with a third party,
    specifying how it is to be provided and how.
  • Management contract as above, but a contractor
    is paid to manage the extended services and
    sub-contract their delivery.
  • Hosting a service/activity hosted on the school
    site but the governing body does not arrange or
    take a direct role in its delivery.
  • Access only/signposting the school provides
    information about a service, and may help with
    access, but neither hosts nor provides it.
  • Co-location of services other services share the
    school site e.g. multi-agency team, an integrated
    childrens centre, sports centre, community
    library.

Any delivery model should be underpinned by an
agreement setting out roles, responsibilities
and accountabilities. There should be agreed
governance structures in place which allows for
decisions to be made about the services or
activities, involving those providers.
Toolkit Section 3, Leading and Managing CFS
and Governors Pack.
33
GOVERNANCE ARRANGEMENTS FOR COMMUNITY FOCUSED
SCHOOLS
  • What does this mean? The system of
    decision-making which will determine the services
    offered through a Community Focused Schools
    approach. Ways and models of managing Community
    Focused Schools developments.

Governors Pack annex sample template
memorandum of understanding.
Toolkit Section 3, Leading and Managing CFS
and Governors Pack.
34
MODELS OF GOVERNANCE MODEL 1
  • Full governing body
  • In smaller schools in particular, it may be more
    effective to include stakeholders as part of the
    full governing body.

35
MODELS OF GOVERNANCE MODEL 2
Full governing body
Community focused schools sub-committee
Stakeholders
36
MODELS OF GOVERNANCE MODEL 3
School Council
Other stakeholders
Community Focused Schools Co-ordinator (if in
post)
Community focused schools Steering Group
Parental representation e.g. PTA
Headteacher / Member of SMT
Governing body
37
MODELS OF GOVERNANCE MODEL 4
Community Focused School Cluster Co-ordinator
(if in post)
School Council Representation from each school
Community representation from each of the areas
in the cluster
Community focused schools School Cluster
Steering Group
Other stakeholders
Parental representation from each school
Headteacher / SMT representative from each
school
Governing body representative from each school
38
4. NEXT STEPS
39
NEXT STEPS
  • Resources from ContinYou Cymru
  • Community Focused Schools, Making it happen A
    toolkit.
  • Community Focused Schools A Governors Pack.
  • Community Focused School, Making it happen a
    checklist for audit and inspection.
  • Website www.continyou.org.uk (click on red
    dragon on homepage).
  • Out of school hours learning resources to support
    particular activities.
  • LEA
  • Developing Community Focused Schools strategy and
    other support.
  • Next governing body meeting
  • Discuss way forward.
  • School Development Plan
  • How can CFS support your priorities?
  • Vision
  • Develop the school/school clusters vision.

Any burning questions?
40
FURTHER INFORMATION
  • Heledd James, ContinYou Cymru
  • Heledd.james_at_continyou.org.uk telephone 07792
    185278.
  • Website
  • www.continyou.org.uk

DIOLCH AM DDOD THANK YOU FOR ATTENDING
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