Governance Arrangements
Governance in our school and the role of the school board
At our school, DSAT holds ultimate statutory accountability, while the Local School Board acts as its local partner, providing essential support and oversight on the ground. Together, they collaborate closely to ensure that Trinity Croft C of E Primary maintains the highest possible standards and continuously strives for improvement.
For a detailed overview of the roles and responsibilities of both DSAT and the Local School Board, please refer to the Scheme of Delegation available on the DSAT website.
Each DSAT academy also has a Local School Board, which acts in an advisory capacity. Our school board members are listed below. It meets three times yearly to consider and scrutinise how we deliver all aspects of education for our pupils and parents. Members of the school board may also support the school in recruitment and other local activities that help ensure the school reflects the community's needs and retains its unique identity. More details can be found here: DSAT Local Governance Guide
Attendance records of each trustee at board and committee meetings
Safeguarding
Governance and statutory oversight of safeguarding lies with the trustees. The main trustee for safeguarding is James Dugmore. However, local boards are ‘our eyes and ears’, the protection of children is the core of this. We invest in training to provide LSBs with more incredible skills in this area. We cannot think of a more critical task for an LSB than bringing together their local community knowledge and knowledge of school practice to ensure that safeguarding is at the core of what we do. The LSB has access to all relevant information, including the audits that DSAT complete centrally. The LSB always asks, “Do the audits reflect how the local community view safeguarding at the school?”
Monitoring School Performance
DSAT’s school improvement protocols mean a school has support visits throughout the academic year. The Record of Visit will typically focus on the many positive elements we see, but the purpose is to identify areas where support is required. These ROVs (Record of Visits) provide information that can assist the LSB in asking the right questions at LSB’s meetings. LSBs can have data to be a better ‘critical friend’ influencing the outcome, not just reviewing it. The LSB is critical to asking the right questions about school progress, understanding the priorities, and ensuring the community’s needs are met. Feedback from LSBs has been very positive regarding the training we provide. Good data is only meaningful when it is understood. DSAT aims to ensure through training and coaching that LSBs understand the information to which they have access. LSBs are not required to pass comments on classroom practice, judge teaching methods or assess the perceived quality of teaching. DSAT expert practitioners will provide the LSB with this information where it is relevant to do so. At every LSB meeting, the group ask, “Is this school delivering positive progress for every pupil” asking, “Are relationships with the community and parents supporting this progress?”
Local School Board Membership
