dejavuatbtn
Well-known member
Governors are unpaid. Misguided rant.
Maybe not currently, but you just wait.
Governors are unpaid. Misguided rant.
I know but you clearly said there are good and bad parent governors but they are elected - that was misleading.
There is a process whereby parent governors are chosen by election. Clearly if there is only one candidate provided they are a fit and proper person and pass the checks, they get elected unopposed
That's common sense
I don't know if you are being deliberately obtuse?
Got to be a good thing.
Two of the parents at my son's school who were parent governors would have climbed over their own decomposing granny to get the position as the school was an OFSTED outstanding at the time. Under their watch it went from a 1 to a 3 (requires improvement) at which point one sent their son to a private school and the other to a church school.
I'm sure there are decent and well meaning parent governors the length and breadth of the country but my experience is that it was used as a badge of honour for the ruthlessly ambitious.
Got to be a good thing.
Two of the parents at my son's school who were parent governors would have climbed over their own decomposing granny to get the position as the school was an OFSTED outstanding at the time. Under their watch it went from a 1 to a 3 (requires improvement) at which point one sent their son to a private school and the other to a church school.
I'm sure there are decent and well meaning parent governors the length and breadth of the country but my experience is that it was used as a badge of honour for the ruthlessly ambitious.
But the governing body is a mix of Governors including community/Co opted and lea as well as staff and Headteacher
Parent governors are one part of that. governors are also part of the Ofsted review and can be sanctioned if not performing
So without knowing the specifics of the school here or what Ofsted said or saw it's difficult to comment further other than to say that clearly there are people who are status driven in any role but that there should be enough support/control and checking to prevent that from happening.
One of the things that was highlighted as in great need of improvement was the communication between everyone in the leadership and that governors "didn't know what was happening". Since then an oversubscribed school has been leaking pupils alarmingly.
I'm no fan of this government, or their educational policies, but I am a school governor and a parent of 2 kids at the school, but I'm not actually a 'parent governor' but I'm formally co-opted onto the governing body.
I don't think the idea is to get rid of parents being governors, it is having the right parents with the right skills doing the job. Therefore they are looking for accountants, solicitors, architects, engineers, human resources, educational professionals etc. etc. to be on governing bodies for those reasons - your role as parent is just your motivation for offering your time.
They'll never stop having parents as governors because who else would make up the majority of the governing bodies? But rather than having a playground election and Betty gets voted on because she has the most friends, the school needs to target their skills gap and try to attract the right people, the right parents, to their governing body.
At least this is how I've understood it, and how I personally was co-opted onto our governing body.
Oh, and as far as I'm aware, governors don't get paid. You can claim travel expenses, but I would think most rarely do.
they really should introduce classes on government, then people would maybe learn that a white paper is a document for discussion, not a fixed statement of policy. an awful lot of assumptions, fear and indignation for something that is speculative.