The Public Face of God Chaplaincy in Anglican Voluntary and Academy Secondary schools in the state maintained sector.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Head of Learning: Job description
Advertisements

Head teacher Performance Management
The Hidden Nature of Chaplaincy Hidden in the workplace: ‘When chaplaincy isn’t integrated into the rest of the institution, it becomes invisible, irrelevant;
Session Objectives: For Mentors to know:
1 Journeying Together. THE WIDER WORLD A VISIBLE PRESENCE FAITH AND VALUES WORSHIP.
Mission 2015 Presentation General Aims For people of all ages to be impacted by the gospel and for some to make a personal commitment to Christ To see.
From Evidence to Action Score card templates These templates can be used alongside the worksheets contained in the From.
Purpose of the meeting To provide information on the academy conversion process and the changes to the status of the school To explain the role of the.
Being Good News For Young People. Wide range of schools in a parish, VA, VC, community, academy, free school, federations, collaborations.....infant,
The Church as Institution
School Chaplaincy Ministry for Mission. “at the heart of the church’s mission to the nation”
Church of England Schools Distinctive Christian Ethos.
Statutory inspection of Anglican & Methodist schools SIAMS Margaret James & Shahne Vickery.
Mission – Development Plans (a tentative suggestion) Mission: The Diocese of Lincoln is called by God to faithful worship, confident discipleship and joyful.
Effective support: working with others Effective support: working with others A Twilight Training Session by Gareth D Morewood, Director of Curriculum.
Webinar: A Headteacher's Guide to Performance Management with PRP Presented by Josephine Smith.
Preparing students for Church schools Hendon 2013.
School Board Development Discernment of new members.
Successful Partnerships between Faith Communities and Faith Based Nonprofits Keeping Services Faithful.
1 GOOD PRACTICE IN APPOINTING A HEADTEACHER IN CHURCH of ENGLAND SCHOOLS Advice to Governing Bodies.
Tracing The Connections Chaplaincy, The Church of England and the Common Good March 1st 2014.
Hertfordshire PE conference Headteacher workshop – ‘Primary PE and School Sport Premium: Evidence & Impact’
SMSC and Inspection Spiritual Moral Social & Cultural.
Research, evidence and engaging learning Profiling the influence of school librarianship Penny Moore
Improving Governance Improving Schools Improving your governing body to improve your school: Messages from Research Chris James University of Bath
The 0-25 Special Educational Needs and Disability (SEND) Reforms (Children and Families Act 2014) School Governor Briefing September 23 rd 2014 Liz Malcolm.
Being a Senco!. What is the core purpose of being a Senco?
Training for Support People 22 nd April Welcome Colette Stevenson.
Developing Enabler Supported Ministry in the Missionary Diocese of Tasmania.
What is required of us? The Role of the Local Church, the Laity & the Clergy in Forming the BECs.
Ofsted lessons Clerks’ Update Jan Ofsted Sept 2012 The key judgements: Inspectors must judge the quality of education provided in the school – its.
Building Effective Interpersonal Relationships
Effective curriculum design and development Evidence from research For further school friendly resources visit For further.
A big picture for Outstanding Citizenship. Three key questions 3 How well are we achieving our aims? 1 What are we trying to achieve? 2 How do we organise.
Leadership that lasts John Dunford General Secretary Association of School and College Leaders.
DCSF/DFE Guidance for Children in Care - Nov ’09 School-based Training to Headteacher, Governor & DT. Ceri May – Teacher, Haringey Virtual School of Children.
Youth for Christ Board of Trustees Training 2-Hour Training (December 2010)
National Standards of Excellence for Head teachers January 2015 Margaret Colley SSIA.
SCHOOL BOARD A democratically elected body that represents public ownership of schools through governance while serving as a bridge between public values.
The Quality Standards for resource provisions For deaf children and young people in mainstream school.
Dilys Williams Section 50 Inspector Section 50 Inspections.
DIOCESAN EDUCATION SERVICE Inspection S48 Diocesan Inspection and Catholic life.
Governance and Commissioning Natalie White DCSF Consultant
Lighthouse Junior Our School Metaphor. Governance Curriculum Climate Staffing WE WILL EXAMINE THE FOLLOWING TOPICS:
Ashdon Primary School Parent Survey – Summary Last term we launched our 2013 whole school Parent Survey – this important initiative is your opportunity.
Self Directed Support and the Workforce. SDS offers four options Option 1 – direct budget, complete control and flexibility Option 2 – control over design.
Illinois Head Start State Collaboration What is it? Why should we do it? How do we do it? Together we can do what none of us could do alone …
Support and aspiration: A new approach to special educational needs and disability A consultation March 2011.
WELCOME Challenge and Support. What is challenge and support Table discussion As a governor what do you think Challenge and Support looks like?
About Forward Together in Hope ‘The purpose of Forward Together in Hope is to help us discover how to be more committed disciples of Jesus Christ.
Parish nursing......supporting people and communities towards whole-person health through the local church. Can also be called church-based nursing, pastoral.
Youth in Focus. Young people’s voices “ money issues are a key thing for me” “the right kind of support is really important to me” “ forming relationships.
Governor Training The Role of the Chair 04/02/16.
Sarratt Church of England Primary School ‘A New Sarratt Governing Body’ 17 th September 2015 Welcome!
Leading Teachers A joint training package from the National Academy for Gifted & Talented Youth and the National Strategies.
Co-Headship A new leadership structure at TLA?. What is Co-Headship? Headship of a school is shared between two (or more) people. This is one model of.
Pastoral Care for the Twenty-First Century CISC Study Day Friday 16 November 2012.
“Better at being Church in every community” A Strategy for Ministry maturity in faith – prayer and worship – community service – evangelism – quality of.
Strong leadership and whole school engagement – How does this happen? Rationale: Whole school change occurs when the leadership team has a common vision,
“Better at being Church in every community”
Employment Opportunities
Section 48 Welcome.
our guide to parish share
Appointing Headteachers
Section 48 Welcome.
Keeping Services Faithful
What’s in this presentation
Standard for Teachers’ Professional Development July 2016
Presentation transcript:

The Public Face of God Chaplaincy in Anglican Voluntary and Academy Secondary schools in the state maintained sector

Hopes for this enquiry An indication of the extent of Chaplaincy ministry in Anglican Schools in England and Wales. An indication of the many different ways in which Chaplaincy is provided, funded, organised and supported in schools. An account of experience and reflection concerning some specific issues in School Chaplaincy. Some pointers towards the development of guidance on what constitutes good practice.

Basic numbers 198 schools (4 in Wales) 72 responses to an online survey 17 schools across 12 Dioceses visited 10 schools across 10 Dioceses spoken to on the phone

How many Chaplains? 58 of the 72 responding schools say they have a Chaplain (or a team of Chaplains) Of the 14 who say they have no Chaplain – 6 in vacancy (some having real trouble appointing) – 3 now want a Chaplain – 3 content to be served by a team of local Clergy – 2 say they don’t have a Chaplain because there is no funding for such posts Health warning – it’s not possible to extrapolate a figure for all Anglican schools from these figures.

Who are they? 34 Clergy 22 Lay 1 Elim Pastor 1 joint Anglican/RC team

How much time? 26 full time appointments (15 Clergy; 10 lay; 1 pastor of a different denomination) 23 part time (12 clergy; 11 lay) 8 voluntary (7 clergy; 1 lay) 1 team of 3 together comprising one fte post

How much time? Most part timers work between 10 and 25 hrs per week Some as little as 3 / 4 hours Most volunteers offer around 3 /4 hrs per week (One volunteer says she does 16 hrs per week!) Some give very little time indeed, maybe an hour or 2 per week (or per month!) 11 of the 58 schools that do have chaplains have less than 4hrs per week.

Why have a Chaplain? “Because we’re a Church School, that’s what you do” Embodying (or ‘grabbing’) the ethos ‘being’ rather than ‘doing’ Placing the ethos into a spiritual context – a theological task – from ‘a deeper place’ Representative – of God - of the Church School as part of something greater – organisation – purpose Someone distinctive Someone prayerful

Paying for Chaplaincy Teachers paid as appropriate. Non teaching Chaplains mostly as Associate Staff, in some cases at a level determined by Incumbent’s stipend + housing. Almost all funding of Chaplaincy posts comes out of school budgets. One Diocese pays for first five years of a Chaplain’s ministry, then asks school to take over. In some places Chaplaincy is included in Parish Priests’ job description at the Church’s expense.

Paying for Chaplaincy “To set the remuneration at a realistic level shows that the school is not just playing at it.” “We can’t afford it, we do what we can”

To whom are Chaplains Ministering? StudentsAll 58 schools (100%) Staff57 schools (98.3%) Headteacher49 schools (84.5%) Governors40 schools (55.5%) Parents45 schools (62.5%) School’s Neighbours25 schools (34.7% All categories24 schools (33.3%) Part time and voluntary Chaplains tend to prioritise particular constituencies (principally students) though some schools with a very small amount of Chaplaincy time still insist that their Chaplain is there for ‘the whole school community’

How many students? Chaplains minister to all the schools’ students but they also encounter some students individually or in small groups. Numbers vary widely (12 to 900) but typically between 100 and ,000 in total Average of 230 per Chaplain

What do Chaplains do? Worship Leading non-Eucharistic worship55 (94.8%) Presiding at celebrations of the Eucharist41 (70.7%) Supporting and resourcing colleagues in leading school worship 59 (101.7%) Co-ordinating visitors who lead worship42 (72.4%) Worship co-ordinator (Chaplain is the lead person in drafting worship policy and determining programmes and themes for worship) 34 (58.6%) NB some figures look rather strange (e.g. over 100%). Some schools said they didn’t have a Chaplain but then went on to set out the things the local Priest did when he came in e.g. Presiding at the Eucharist.

What do Chaplains do? Teaching Teaching RE / RS11 (19%) Teaching philosophy3 (5.2%) Teaching another subject5 (8.6%) Form tutor or year group / house tutor2 (3.4%) Extra-curricular teaching (eg Confirmation classes) 21 (36.2%)

What do Chaplains do? Pastoral Pastoral care for students61 (105.2%) Pastoral care for staff60 (103.4%) Pastoral care for Headteacher50 (86.2%) Pastoral care for others involved in the life of the school 47 (81%) NB some figures look rather strange (e.g. over 100%). Some schools said they didn’t have a Chaplain but then went on to set out the things the local Priest did when he came in.

What do Chaplains do? Spiritual / Theological Leading the spiritual life of the school community 45 (77.5%) Embodies the school’s commitment to its Christian ethos in some way, perhaps by carrying a specific responsibility in respect of promoting the ethos. 56 (96.6%) Commending the Christian faith60 (103.4%) Prophetic challenge to the school leadership 32 (55.2%) Prophetic challenge to the school generally31 (53.4%) NB some figures look rather strange (e.g. over 100%). Some schools said they didn’t have a Chaplain but then went on to set out the things the local Priest did when he came in.

Other things Chaplains do? Maintaining relationships with local community Maintaining relationships with local Church Forging relationships with feeder primaries and participating in transition processes. Running breakfast and lunchtime clubs and ‘drop-ins’. Managing a reflection room. Organising charity collections. Operating a ‘phone or text the Chaplain’ scheme. This was in a school where the Chaplaincy was shared between a local Priest and a parish youth worker, neither of whom were in school very much. It has proved surprisingly popular. Developing Christian distinctiveness. In one school the person who performs the Chaplaincy tasks is actually termed “Christian Distinctiveness Leader.”

Where do Chaplains put their energy? High energy 1.Pastoral 2.Liturgical 3.Spiritual Low energy 1.Missional 2.Pedagogic 3.Prophetic

Support and Accountability Employed Chaplains usually have good in-school evaluation of their work. BUT most in-school reviewers are not experienced in reviewing ministry. Reviews by Diocesan Officers can lack credibility because of their distance from the work place. Where Chaplaincy is offered voluntarily or as a small part of Parish ministry there is unlikely to be any evaluation taking place. Chaplains value peer reflection highly but this must be rigorous and not be too informal Some Chaplains have arranged their own support structures, sometimes at their own expense What’s needed is a self evaluation based MDR which incudes theological reflection on ministry Part time and voluntary Chaplains must take the initiative in including their school ministry in their MDR

Relationship with Headteacher CRUCIAL Christian ethos depends on the Head Access Pastoral care of Head Praying together Head’s care for other staff

Ordained or Lay (Good to have a Priest because…) Sacraments Clarity of role Authority of and representative of the Church The formation, commitment and life of a Priest A certain level of confidentiality. Eucharist gathers and offers the life of the community. Best if President ‘part’ of the community Regular contact with Clergy will help to challenge stereotypes in the minds of young people and make the Church and her Clergy more approachable. Chaplaincy is a demanding theological task. Requires someone equipped to engage in that theological reflection. Gravitas

Ordained or Lay (Good to have a lay person because…) Necessity of forming a positive web of relationships outside the school. A lay minister embodies and exemplifies a response to God’s call to ministry to all His people. Appointment of a lay person opens up the possibility of finding someone who is a specialist. Openness to a lay appointment is likely to offer greater choice. Sometimes it can be hard to get a Priest.

Teacher or not? Good to be a teacher because… Teacher understands the pressures from the inside so recognised by staff as as ‘one of us’. Day to day contact with students in the context of learning can give Chaplain credibility with students. Enables effective use of sparse resources and provides for some Chaplaincy rather than none.

Teacher or not? Good not to be a teacher because… Role confusion both for the Chaplain and for the students (eg regarding behaviour management ) Best if Chaplain has flexibility to roam Being a teacher can compromise the Chaplain’s ability to offer pastoral care to colleagues because she is too close or too implicated in teachers’ personal issues. Importance of Chaplain being someone who is distinctive and clearly different from those of other members of staff. Chaplain released from accountability for progress. Chaplain can hold the commitment to the ethos and raise the school’s vision above what can sometimes feel like a very ‘driven’ culture.

Full time in school or not Having Chaplain in school is good because Visible expression of the school’s ethos and the Church’s ministry etc Worship more engaged with day to day life of School More available when needed Closer relationship with Head Relationship with local Clergy is precarious depending on their willingness Organisational task for Head or other staff member Evaluation expected

Full time in school or not Having a Chaplain not based in school is good because It’s helpful to know that the Chaplain is ‘a real Vicar’ with a real life and ministry in Church and world Better promotes Church / School relationship Genuinely distinctive Wide scope to involve more people and deploy a variety of skills

Team Work Many schools have Chaplaincy teams of one sort or another, there are many different models. All agree that collaborative ministry, making use of a wider variety of talents and experiences is thoroughly desirable.

Frustrations Working within ‘given’ context – Timetabling – Target culture Time Space Relationships with local Clergy Exclusion from the circle of confidentiality

Relationship with the Wider Church Mixed picture Some Dioceses support Chaplaincy very strongly. Licensing is important and liturgical inauguration of Chaplaincy ministry is warmly welcomed (NB neither of these is universal) Often depends on interest of this Archdeacon or that Suffragan. Some Chaplains feel like ‘a lonely outpost’ Local support equally mixed – Parish Clergy not always positive. Joined up care (school/parish) not common. Some Churches desperate to get people into schools to get involved.

Challenges to the Church Affirmation of this ministry to large numbers of young people. Resourcing of Chaplaincy ministry. Advice for schools on how to structure, recruit to and evaluate posts. Policy for Chaplaincy ministry in schools. Training for Clergy to develop both skills and confidence. Appropriate and ‘light touch’ review of Chaplaincy as ‘ministry’ along with robust theological reflection. Prayer, personal engagement, support and co-operation from local Clergy colleagues

Challenges to Chaplains More effort to be part of the local Church, Manage time so as to facilitate this Be pro-active in making Chaplaincy part of MDR

Lessons Schools wish to share Anglicans are too apologetic. Each school is unique and needs to work out its own pattern of Chaplaincy. The Church needs to make decisions about how it wants school Chaplaincy to be formulated. The Church at Diocesan and National level needs to be more affirmative; more involved; more helpful, in some cases more directive even. Many Clergy are woefully underprepared for work in schools, needing development of both skills and confidence. Schools willing to assist. The Church must recognise much more explicitly and actively the value of the ministry of school Chaplains to young people.

Lessons Schools wish to share Some Headteachers report difficulty in understanding how to employ Clergy. Woodard and Bloxham valuable sources of advice. Team work is crucial. Some involvement in the classroom is important as is some knowledge of the curriculum. A holy space of some sort is essential. Starting Chaplaincy off in a school which hasn’t experienced it before is a very different task from building on an established ministry. Ministry takes time to build.

Lessons Schools wish to share Being part of the school in the sense that the Chaplain is employed within the school as a member of the staff is a very different ministry from that of someone who is based outside the school. Both are valuable in their different ways but they are very different. The bottom line is that the Christian ethos of the school depends on the Headteacher. If the Head isn’t promoting it, it will not happen and sometimes the Head has to force the issue if the desired ethos is to be firmly embedded. It is the Chaplain’s task to be the ‘executive’ face of that promotion

The Public Face of God Chaplaincy in Anglican Voluntary and Academy Secondary schools in the state maintained sector