Council tax communication
The council is now sending e-mails, SMS messages and voice messages to residents who have missed a council tax payment. See our webpage for more information.
Each school has a Governing Body, made up of people like you, making important decisions about how the school is run, to help provide the best possible education for pupils.
Governing bodies represent the public in the running of the school. School governors bring perspectives from ordinary life. They work with staff and the Local Authority to help the school provide the best possible education for all children and young people.
The governors have important responsibilities like managing the school budget, overseeing the curriculum and appointing the staff. There is a reciprocal accountability between the governors and the headteacher and leadership team.
The head is accountable to the governing body and the governing body is judged by Ofsted, as part of the leadership of the school and on the extent to which it works in partnership with the head and leadership team. Schools need governing bodies to be accountable and to support them in the work that they do.
Anyone who cares about children and young people and the education they receive can make a difference by becoming a school governor and helping shape the future for children and young people in their own local community.
The most effective governors:
Governors need to be able to attend governors meetings, usually between three and six a year. They will also be asked to sit on a committee of the governing body that specialises in a particular aspect of the school, for example, the finance committee, the premises committee, the curriculum committee, or perhaps a committee or working party linked to a particular local or national initiative: perhaps The Every Child Matters Agenda.
Please contact us on 01628 796960 or email governors@rbwm.gov.uk, or call into the school and ask. If you are a parent or member of staff, the next time you get a nomination form why not fill it in and join the largest volunteer group in the country.
Governors have three main roles.
The strategic role:
The Governors Role in School Improvement - the 'Challenge and Support' role, and in this role they:
The Accountability role of the Governing Body which is concerned with:
School governors make important collective decisions and the governing body is answerable to parents and the community. The responsibilities of the governing body include:
Governors take responsibility for all the learning opportunities that pupils experience including spiritual, moral, social and cultural development. The governors must also decide a curriculum policy for their school, which takes account of the Local Authority's policy, the National Curriculum and technological advances.
As nothing in this world remains the same, governors need to keep abreast of national and local initiatives and make any necessary adjustments to the curriculum to ensure that the curriculum prepares the pupils for the world they will live in as adults in the 21st century.
Governors are responsible for ensuring that children, young people, and adults in their school are treated fairly and with dignity and have equality of opportunity.
Our main purpose is to promote and develop excellent governance of all our schools so that all pupils have the opportunity to achieve their very best. We do this through providing leadership, support, information and advice to governing bodies and school leadership teams.
Our main purpose is to promote and develop excellent governance of all our schools so that all pupils have the opportunity to achieve their very best. We do this by providing leadership, support, information and advice to governing bodies and school leadership teams.
Yes we do, across the whole borough.
If you would like to volunteer to support children and young people by becoming a school governor we would love to hear from you.
School Governors Team
Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead
Town Hall
St Ives Road
Maidenhead
SL6 1RF
United Kingdom