Local Advisory Board
The role of a local advisor is to contribute to the work of the local advisory body in ensuring high standards of achievement for all children in Gretton Primary School.
The main responsibilities are:
- Setting the academy’s vision, ethos and strategic direction;
- Holding the headteacher to account for the educational performance of the academy and its pupils
1. As part of the local advisory team, a local advisor is expected to:
- Contribute to the discussions at local advisory board meetings which determine:
- the vision and ethos of the academy;
- clear and ambitious strategic priorities and targets for the academy;
- that all children, including those with special educational needs, have access to a broad and balanced curriculum;
2. Hold the senior leaders to account by monitoring the academy’s performance; this includes:
- agreeing the outcomes from the academy self-evaluation and ensuring they are used to inform the priorities in the academy development plan;
- considering all relevant data and feedback provided on request by academy leaders and external sources on all aspects of academy performance;
- asking challenging questions of academy leaders;
- acting as a link local advisor on a specific issue, making relevant enquiries of the relevant staff, and reporting to the local advisory body on the progress on the relevant academy priority;
- listening to and reporting to the school’s stakeholders: pupils, parents, staff, and the wider community.
3. When required, serve on panels of local advisors to:
- appoint the headteacher and other senior leaders;
- appraise the headteacher;
- set the headteacher’s pay and agree the pay recommendations for other staff;
- hear the second stage of staff grievances and disciplinary matters;
- hear appeals about pupil exclusions.
The role of a local advisor is largely a thinking and questioning role, not a doing role.
A local advisor does NOT
- Write academy policies;
- Undertake audits of any sort – whether financial or health & safety - even if the governor has the relevant professional experience;
- Spend much time with the pupils of the academy
- Fundraise – this is the role of the PTA – the local advisory board should consider income streams and the potential for income generation, but not carry out fundraising tasks
- Undertake classroom observations to make judgements on the quality of teaching – the local advisory board monitors the quality of teaching in the academy by requiring data from the senior staff and from external sources;
- Do the job of the academy staff – if there is not enough capacity within the paid staff team to carry out the necessary tasks, the local advisors need to consider and rectify this.
In order to perform this role well, a local advisor is expected to:
- get to know the academy, including by visits occasionally during academy hours, and gain a good understanding of the academy’s strengths and weaknesses;
- attend induction training and regular training and development events;
- attend meetings (full governing body meetings and committee meetings) and read all the papers before the meeting;
- act in the best interest of all the pupils of the academy;
- behave in a professional manner, as set down in the governing body’s code of conduct, including acting in strict confidence.