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Convergence

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Title: Convergence


1
Convergence Transformation SSAT 28th November
2008
  • Alan McMurdo
  • CEO Principal

2
Aims
  • Background to the Thomas Deacon Academy
  • Leadership, management and governance
  • Convergence
  • Transformation
  • System impact

3
Quick Facts.....its a school !
4
The convergence task KS4 Starting points in
our 3 predecessor schools
  • Key Stage 4 2006
  • 74 5A-C DS 98, JMS 58, HCC 52
  • 40 5A-C (inc. Eng and Maths) DS 71, JMS
    21, HCC 9
  • 89 5A-G DS 99, JMS 89, HCC 70
  • 2 of all GCSE grades A
  • Key Stage 4 2007
  • 74 5A-C DS 99, JMS 50, HCC 65
  • 41 5A-C (inc. Eng and Maths) DS 70, JMS
    15, HCC 25
  • 92 5A-G DS 99, JMS 89, HCC 84

5
The convergence task Starting points in our 3
predecessor schools
  • DS JMS HCC LA mean
  • Authorised Absence 5.8 8.1 1.6 6.6
  • Unauthorised absence 0.1 1.1 4.2 1.2
  • F.S.M Number on roll Contribution to Thomas
    Deacon
  • DS 12 1055 49
  • JMS 20 736 34
  • HCC 36 379 17
  • Mean 19

6
System impact
  • Admission protocol
  • LA coordinated scheme
  • LAC SEN then Distance to 4 school gates
  • Fair banding assures a comprehensive intake
  • Geographic impact has resulted in the removal of
    the catchment area
  • Replaced a selective school and two poor
    performing comprehensives with an all ability
    school
  • Reduced capacity within the LA to respond to new
    arrivals.
  • Hard to place protocol
  • Agent for improvement at LA level....offset the
    loss of revenue ?

7
Business involvement Strategy Action
  • Sponsorship
  • Target setting and the 5 A-C
  • Enterprise and entrepreneurship
  • Strategic planning
  • Governance

8
Business involvement Strategic Planning
  • Vision All our learners are of equal value and
    deserve to achieve their full potential. This
    will be recognised in both the planning and
    execution of all aspects of Academy life.
  • Mission Maximum achievement for every
    individual
  • Method Aim High Fulfil Potential Succeed
    Together
  • Values Driven Leadership
  • Integrity The power of honesty
  • Excellence The power of quality
  • Teamwork The power of working together
  • Commitment The power of responsibility

9
Strategic intentions to be the leading Academy
in the country we will have.....
  • Culture for learning a kind, calm purposeful
    academy where everyone feels valued, known,
    challenged and supported
  • Motivation for learning where students desire
    for learning and achievement is met by the
    passionate commitment of all staff
  • Specialism for learning our specialism in
    mathematics and science will be integral to our
    work in raising standards across the curriculum
  • Environment for learning that represents a
    positive, considered response to local and global
    environmental issues.
  • Resources for learning a business like
    academy characterised by resources that are fit
    for purpose, an operational efficiency that is
    measured and continually improved whilst all our
    people are fully engaged in learning
  • Leading for learning a confident, self-managing
    academy where everyone is an effective learner,
    able to take responsibility for self and others
  • Quality Assurance for learning Q.A. systems are
    used across all our endeavours to ensure error
    free delivery continuous improvement
  • Teaching for learning Teachers with students
    formulate, deliver and monitor excellent
    activities that ensure learning
  • Systems for learning where bureaucracy is
    minimised and communications with all
    stakeholders is effective and efficient.
  • Partnerships for learning as a catalyst for
    change we recognise that effective external
    partnerships are a key to both our own and system
    wide improvement.

10
So what are we after, what is our product ? That
each of our students .
  • Is an articulate, independent yet collaborative
    learner, who understands how he/she learns and is
    committed to lifelong learning
  • recognises the importance of fulfilling potential
    and has the strength of purpose to maximise
    achievement of themselves and those around
  • has a broad view of achievement and recognises
    the importance of her/his spiritual journey,
    moral code and cultural heritage
  • has the emotional intelligence to engage, in a
    meaningful way with others, as individuals and
    groups
  • recognises that rights bring responsibilities and
    relishes the opportunity to play a full and
    active role in the community
  • learns through engaging with educational
    experiences that are enriched and extended with
    opportunities and challenges
  • is supported by various people, materials and
    ICT
  • is challenged supported and monitored through a
    pastoral system that is linked to general
    well-being but crucially focussed on learning
  • is proud to be part of our Academy whose culture
    and structures sustain the continuous improvement
    of educational processes and outcomes across the
    breadth of the achievement agenda.

11
Strategic Goals
  • All our students will achieve level 2 equivalent
    to 5A-C at GCSE by the time they leave us.
  • 2008 65 2009 75 2010
    95 2011 100
  • We will have a positive, and improving,
    value-added score in terms of Key Stage 2 4
    performance.
  • 2008 1010 2009 1011 2010
    1012 2011 1013
  • All our students will leave to appropriate
    employment, education or training.
  • 2008 85 2009 90 2010
    95 2011 100
  • The majority of these destinations will reflect
    our specialism. This figure will increase year on
    year.
  • 2008 40 2009 45 2010
    50 2011 60
  • Staff and student satisfaction values indicate
    that the vast majority over 90 of the Academy
    community are committed and engaged in our work.
  • 2008 70 2009 80 2010
    90 2011 90
  • No student falls below 90 attendance.
  • 2008 20 2009 15
    2010 10 2011 0

12
Business involvement Structures monitoring
  • Leadership team structures
  • College based planning and evaluation
  • Monitoring
  • Quantitative and qualitative data

13
Key Performance Indicators based on strategic
intentions
  • Culture Behavioural incidents Student absence
  • Motivation Attitude to learning grades Staff
    absence Enrichment participation
  • Specialism post 16 students on maths and
    science related programmes
  • of Y13 leavers going into maths and science
    related HE programmes
  • Impact of extra-curricular specialist
    opportunities
  • Impact of specialism across the curriculum
  • Environment Recycling stats Sustainability report
  • Resources ICT serviceability ICT use
    Budget spend
  • MMRC use FM failures time to close
  • Leading Line management meetings
  • Distributed leadership survey findings
  • Quality Assurance Lesson observations undertaken
  • Performance management meetings
  • Professional development / learning
    activities undertaken
  • Open issues
  • Average time to close open issues
  • Teaching of lessons satisfactory good
    outstanding
  • Systems Parental satisfaction Student
    satisfaction Staff satisfaction
  • Partnership External partnership activity
    Number of staff/students involved

14
Monthly Dashboard data reported to the
C.E.O./Principal Drill down will include
benchmark and actions required / proposed. Report
will generally be by exception report outside
tolerance
  • College Performance Academy Performance
  • Student satisfaction survey Student satisfaction
    survey
  • Staff satisfaction survey Staff satisfaction
    survey
  • students on target Budget spent
    against benchmark
  • students above target Predicted outturn
  • students below target ICT serviceability
  • Student attendance ICT use
  • Students attitude to learning grades MMRC use
  • Enrichment participation Parental survey
    satisfaction
  • Serious incidents number/nature Sporting
    achievement
  • Exclusions number/nature Specialism update
  • Number of lesson observations
  • of lessons satisfactory or better
  • of lessons good or better
  • Staff absence
  • HR incidents number/nature
  • Professional development / learning activities
    undertaken

15
Directorate structure
  • Three phases
  • Prior to opening.
  • Year one.....20 months
  • Long term sustainable
  • HR
  • Business Resources
  • The educational stuff.......vertical and
    horizontal...
  • Colleges, Teaching and Learning
  • Innovation and Development

16
Human Resources Directorate
  • Staff absence
  • Staff turnover
  • Employee relations issues managed
  • Vacancies v Positions Filled and Time to Fill
  • Performance Management Process Fulfilment
  • Evaluation of CPD / Learning Activity
  • Oversight of CPD budget (in due course)
  • Professional development / CPD / Learning
    activities undertaken
  • Staff Satisfaction / Employee Opinions
  • Leadership Feedback Process (Upward feedback)

17
Resources Directorate
  • Ecovert overview stats
  • FM failures time to close
  • Sustainability report electricity, gas, water,
    paper, waste, recycling
  • Budget spend and against benchmark
  • Predicted outturn
  • Health Safety incidents
  • accidents
  • security ecovert
  • fire ecovert
  • Risk assessments
  • Risk management policy

18
Colleges, Teaching and Learning Directorate
  • Student attendance Global attendance figure by
    year group College, number of students gt10
    unauthorised absence by year group and college
  • students on target trajectory V
    aspirational by year group and college
  • students above target by college/year group
  • students below target by college/year group
  • Students attitude to learning grades by
    college/year group9 point scale
  • Enrichment participation by college/year group
  • post 16 students on maths and science related
    programmes
  • Sporting achievement
  • Serious incidents and removals by college/year
    group number/nature
  • Exclusions by college/year group
    number/nature
  • Number of lesson observations by college
  • of lessons satisfactory or better by
    college
  • of lessons good or better by college

19
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20
Innovation and Development Directorate
  • of Y13 leavers going into maths and science
    related undergraduate programmes benchmark and
    baseline
  • Student Parent satisfaction surveys
    satisfaction.
  • Impact of extra-curricular specialist
    opportunities number of students by year groups
    colleges hours per student by year groups
    colleges
  • Impact of specialism across the curriculum
  • ICT serviceability qualitative survey of users
    and sampling PINACL reference, fitness for
    purpose/procurement
  • Average time to close open issues help desk
    data
  • ICT use log ons, classroom based use
  • MMRC use borrowing rate, timetable allocation,
    student use
  • External partnership activity quantitative list
    of partnership activity
  • Number of staff / students involved

21
Business involvement The model of governance
  • The Funding Agreement...
  • Board of Directors...
  • 9 directors...
  • 4 meetings a year
  • Resources Facilities committee
  • People Remuneration committee
  • Admissions committee
  • Exclusions committee
  • One or more Appeals committees
  • Advisory Board of Governance

22
Governance gap analysis
  • Local accountability....reference groups
  • Students
  • Staff
  • Parents
  • Community
  • Frequency of meetings
  • The need for the board to
  • Ensure that the sponsors vision is verbalised
    and operationalised
  • Receive input and discuss strategic issues
  • Monitor the development and effectiveness of
    external partnerships and communication strategy
  • Monitor the impact of specialism across the
    academy.

23
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24
The transformational agenda
25
Learning Expectations
  • Extended Learning Extended School
  • L2L and the learning journey
  • VLE
  • Vertical tutoring / mentoring
  • Achievement pathways
  • Literacy
  • EAL
  • Academy freedoms
  • Code of Conduct
  • Behaviour policy

26
Relationships Human Utopia
  • Enabled us to analyse the role that relationships
    play in producing an institution where all feel
    empowered to drive their own learning agenda.
  • Students are led through a carefully constructed
    programme that builds up self esteem, then
    pro-social skills and finally commercial skills.
  • Children who come through the system are not
    necessarily any better placed to apply personal
    enterprise skills to their portfolio of
    qualifications to cash in their life chances.
  • This is particularly true for youngsters in an
    urban environment where significant behavioural
    cycles have to be broken.
  • The HU programme allows a cutting edge of
    enterprise to lift all children from the mundane
    grade gathering pursuit of Key Stage 4 and 5,
    develop skills that cut across the ability range
    and free young people up to pursue their own
    developments and dreams.
  • Nice by-product respectful relationships
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