Szukanie zaawansowane
   
 
Home Rejestracja FAQ Użytkownicy Grupy Galerie  
 
 

Forum Strona Główna Nasz button Speaking school finances- support staff_963
Wyświetl posty z ostatnich:   
       
Napisz nowy temat  Odpowiedz do tematu

Śro 10:19, 16 Mar 2011
Autor Wiadomość
ghdhair100
120%
120%



Dołączył: 15 Gru 2010
Posty: 1890
Przeczytał: 0 tematów

Ostrzeżeń: 0/5
Skąd: England

Temat postu: Speaking school finances- support staff_963

Speaking school finances: support staff
By Ruth BradburyA friend of mine, a qualified and experienced accountant, was recently lucky enough to be appointed as a businessmanager at a high school recruiting for the post for the first time. The selection process was rigorous; the competitionwas stiff and, on the day of the interviews, the headteacher and governors were keen to put across what an important strategic role they had created. She was really pleased to get the job, and looking forward to joining the leadership team of a large, complex and dynamic organisation. On my friend’s first day in school, however, her perception of the nature of the post was shaken somewhat when the headteacher introduced her in staff briefing as ‘the new nonteaching girl’. Quite aside from the dubious use of the word ‘girl’ to describe a woman in her late 30s, and all of the belittling implications that may or may not contain (would a female deputy head have been introduced as ‘the new pastoral/curriculum girl’? Equally, would a male business manager have been introduced as ‘the new non-teaching boy’?), it was the use of the term ‘non-teaching’ which she found difficult to accept. Coming from an accountancy role elsewhere in the public sector, she is used to being regarded as a professional in her own right. To enter an environment where there appears to be acknowledgement of only one profession (teaching), and where every other member of staff is defined by what they are not, rather than what they are, has been a bit of a shock for her. I am sure she will get used to it (as I’m sure that she will get used to the toilet rolls and broken windows), and that ultimately she will find the job immensely rewarding. However, the way she was introduced and her reaction to it has set me thinking about the perennially thorny issue of settling on a collective noun for the members of the increasingly varied workforce in schools who are not from teaching backgrounds. At present, schools tend to opt for one of three options – namely ‘non-teaching staff’, 'associate staff’ or ‘support staff’. In the case of the first option, I have already described the main difficulty – defining people by the job that they do not do is unhelpful and is potentially demeaning. If I were to be dramatic, I could suggest that it reflects a reluctance or even a denial on the part of the school culture to acknowledge the existence, importance or impact of staff who are not teachers. I have a similar kind of problem with the use of the term ‘associate staff’. A quick browse of the dictionary produces one positive definition for ‘associate’ – a person who shares actively in anything asabusiness, enterprise,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], or undertaking; partner; colleague; fellow worker. However, this is accompanied by two far less acceptable definitions – namely (1) a person who is admitted to a subordinate degree of membership in an association or institution, and(2)having subordinate status; without ful rights and privileges.On balance, the term is probably slightly less offensive than ‘non-teachers’, but hardly a great leap forward for our profile and status. The third alternative – that of ‘support staff’ – is probably the one that I find least problematic. To some extent, it accurately describes the role that is played by employees who do not teach, and the term ‘support’ has a wide range of positive connotations, including the suggestion that the staff concerned may actually have a vital role to play in the organisation. While it may be an improvement on the alternatives, though, I don’t personally think that it solves the problem completely. There is still a hint of subordinacy and, rightly or wrongly, I am still not comfortable with caretakers, dinner ladies, accountants,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], receptionists and IT and HR professionals being lumped together under a single label. I must admit that I am still smarting from reading the headline of the TES article about my headship aspirations – ‘Support staff in top job’. This may be partly a result of my own hyper-sensitivity and/or self-importance of course,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], but I think that the use of the term was intentionally provocative to the TES readership and therefore it reveals an assumption of ultimate inequality between teachers and other school staff. After all, there many headteachers in large secondary schools who don't have a teaching load, but I suspect there are very few who would accept the description of themselves as support staff!Ultimately, I think that trying to find an acceptable collective term for school support staff will always be a fruitless exercise – there are just too many roles and responsibilities to find a single word to appropriately describe them. To me, the way forward is probably, therefore, to abandon the search and to concentrate instead on acknowledging and celebrating the wide variety of staff who now work in our schools. With the advent of extended services, and with the potential diversification of teaching/training roles accompanying the introduction of the new 14-19 diplomas, the use of one definition will become even more problematic. I will suggest to my friend that she make her mark in her new school by referring to the staff she manages by their actual roles wherever possible, by the jobs that they do rather than by the ones that they don’t. And furthermore, as I am changing jobs at Easter, I shall follow her in my new school by doing the same.
The Court of Appeal pointed out that R and F's submission in the county court was of overt, conscious racism, and it was not prepared to find that there had been unconscious discrimination.The decisionThe Court of Appeal said that, unlike the ordinary civil claim where the judge decides, on the claimant's evidence only, whether the claimant has made out a case, in this case the judge had had the benefit of the whole of the evidence. Despite the school's failure to comply with the statutory requirements, the judge had been entitled to find on the basis of all the evidence that R and F had not proved racial discrimination.


[link widoczny dla zalogowanych]


Post został pochwalony 0 razy
 
Zobacz profil autora
      Do góry  
Napisz nowy temat  Odpowiedz do tematu

 
Możesz pisać nowe tematy
Możesz odpowiadać w tematach
Nie możesz zmieniać swoich postów
Nie możesz usuwać swoich postów
Nie możesz głosować w ankietach


      Do góry  

Strona 1 z 1
Skocz do:  
fora.pl - załóż własne forum dyskusyjne za darmo
Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2002 phpBB Group
Avalanche style by What Is Real © 2004
             
Regulamin