Governors

The staff and governors at Mundella Primary School believe in the power of education to enhance and change children’s lives. The primary education stage is so crucial; it is during this time that a child should be nurtured and encouraged to enjoy and embrace learning and hopefully to establish a lifelong desire and ability to develop new skills and interests. Our school provides the safe and secure environment in which our pupils can develop not only their intellectual but also their personal skills. At Mundella Primary School we want to provide a wide range of opportunities and experiences for our children, creating for them the very best start in their lives.

Peter Williams

Chair of Governing Body

List of current Governors

Register of Governor Attendance 2020-21

Register of Governor Attendance 2019-20

Register of Governor Attendance 2018-19

Register of Governor attendance 2017-18

The Governors at Mundella

Mundella Primary School has a vision of “Aspire and Achieve” which encourages our pupils to aim high and to develop the skills that they need to meet their academic and personal goals. This vision is underpinned by our six core values of:  Respect; Collaboration; Honesty; Creativity; Caring; Independence. We encourage our pupils to use these core values in all aspects of their lives so that they develop in themselves the all important attributes of being good citizens.

Shepway as a whole, and Folkestone in particular, has ambitious and well founded plans for economic development and, where needed, for regeneration. The governors and staff are determined that our school will provide our pupils – present and future – with the skills and confidence they will need to benefit from and indeed contribute to, the area’s increasing prosperity and regeneration.

So, who are the governors and what do we do? All maintained schools, like Mundella Primary School, are required to have a governing body with the purpose of promoting high standards of educational achievement at the school. Governing bodies has three core strategic functions:

  1. Ensuring the clarity of vision, ethos and strategic direction.
  2. Holding the headteacher to account for the educational performance of the school and its pupils and the performance management of staff.
  3. Overseeing the financial performance of the school and making sure its money is well spent.

 

At Mundella Primary School our governors are highly experienced and from a range of backgrounds. The Governing Body meets formally up to eight times a year and, in between, the governors undertake regular meetings and monitoring activities with the headteacher, staff and the pupils. The governors are very keen to hear your views and ideas, so please join in with any consultations that we organise or just contact us whenever you wish by writing to me via the school office.

Mr Pete Williams

Chair of the Governing Body

Why do we need a Governing Body

The day to day management and operations of Mundella Primary School are the responsibility of our Headteacher, Mr Westmorland, and his team of staff. However, there is an additional group of people who come together as the Governing Body of Mundella School. I would like to explain why do we need a Governing Body?

Let’s start at the top – the government. We live in a democratic society which is not without faults but at least we, the people, have the opportunity to take part in the process of appointing our government. The government governs the country through a number of departments headed up by government ministers and administered by civil servants. Through these departments, the elected government implements the plans it described in its election manifesto. The Department for Education (DfE) is responsible for education and children’s services in England. Its aim is to achieve a highly educated society in which opportunity is equal for children and young people, no matter what their background or family circumstances. In order to achieve this aim, the DfE, under the direction of the Secretary of State for Education, introduces policies and practices that have to be implemented by all schools. Recent examples include the new National Curriculum, pupil premium funding and the PE initiative for primary schools. The DfE provides the funding for schools, which, for maintained schools, is delegated to the local authorities.

Our local authority is Kent County Council (KCC). KCC has responsibility, delegated by the government, for many aspects of education and children services such as childcare, adoption and fostering and child protection. Its responsibilities for maintained schools include, determining the number of school places available in each school and the admissions policy, term dates, free school meals, school attendance and educational support services including training for governors.

So how does the government ensure that all its policies and practices are being carried out correctly by each and every school and that the money that we, the people, provide through our taxes for education is being used appropriately? How does the local authority know that its schools are carrying out its directives? How do you as parents and carers know that your child is receiving the best possible education?

There are several ways in which every aspect of the work of a school can be checked and reported on. At the highest level there is the Office for Standards in Education, Children’s Services and Skills (Ofsted). Ofsted regulates and inspects services which care for children and young people, and those providing education and skills for learners of all ages.  Ofsted is independent of the government, is impartial and reports directly to Parliament. Ofsted is led by Her Majesty’s Chief Inspector (HMCI). Every school is inspected by Ofsted on average every three to five years. There is a very detailed and extensive inspection framework that is used by inspectors when making judgements about a school. The inspection reports for all schools are published and available on the Ofsted website.

For maintained schools the local authority carries out some scrutiny of the work of the school. For example, every three to five years each school will have a compliance audit undertaken by the local authority. This process looks critically at how a school manages its resources and how adequately and effectively it carries out its responsibilities for financial planning and control, procurement, data protection and health and safety. In addition, each school is allocated an improvement adviser who will visit and report on the school to KCC several times each year.

All schools are required to publish annually their performance data such as attendance and achievement. These data can be viewed via the websites of the school, the local authority and the DfE.

These major assessments of every school are very detailed but infrequent. So, on a day to day basis, who is responsible for ensuring that the school is carrying out its duties correctly and effectively? This is the role of governing bodies.

The DfE has determined that in all schools in England the governing bodies are the strategic leaders of the schools. The Education Act 2002 states that the purpose of maintained school governing bodies is to ‘conduct the school with a view to promoting high standards of educational achievement at the school’.

Governing bodies have three core strategic functions:

  1. Ensuring the clarity of vision, ethos and strategic direction.
  2. Holding the headteacher to account for the educational performance of the school and its pupils and the performance management of staff.
  3. Overseeing the financial performance of the school and making sure its money is well spent.

Mundella School has a committed and multi-skilled governing body. There are 13 governors including a local authority governor, governors elected by our staff and by our parents as well as co-opted governors who bring particular skills and expertise. The Governing Body meets as a full team at least six times in the year. In addition, the governors make visits to the school to carry out the monitoring of key areas such as pupil engagement, pupil behaviour, expectations of pupils, pupil performance, early years transition, health and safety, financial management, staff performance management, parental involvement and spiritual, moral, social and cultural development. As Chair of the Governing Body, I meet with Mr Westmorland on a regular basis to discuss the on-going work of Mundella School.

Governors attend many of the school events and very much welcome the opportunity to talk to you and to listen to your comments and ideas.

In the meantime, if you wish to discuss any matters with me please contact me by writing to me c/o the school office.

With very best wishes,

Peter Williams

Chair of the Governing Body of Mundella Primary School