| Introduction Records kept within a school are part of the history of 
                  a school and are used for planning future actions and policy. 
                  Records in a school contain important information about school 
                  administration, for example, the safekeeping of money, how it 
                  is collected and used. However hardworking and intelligent you 
                  may be, you cannot carry all the information about every teacher, 
                  nor all the records about the administration of the school, 
                  in your memory. Information about the staff and school administration 
                  needs also to be available to others, for example, the inspector. 
                  This unit, however, is not about school financial records or 
                  those concerned with books or property, nor of keeping minute 
                  books or log books. The subject of this unit is the keeping 
                  of staff records.
 Individual study time: 3 hours
 Learning outcomesAt the end of this unit, you should be able to:
  understand the purpose of keeping staff records
  know the different types of records of staff which 
                    should be kept.
 The purposes of staff recordsActivity 6.1Keeping records is the only way to ensure that information 
                    is not lost. This is true of all the different kinds of staff 
                    records that you will learn about in this unit. You, as the 
                    school head, are the leader of both staff and pupils. It is 
                    therefore vital that you understand, and are well informed, 
                    about the staff as well as the school, the pupils, and the 
                    administration of the school. Although you will delegate tasks 
                    to others, you remain responsible for all that takes place 
                    and for future planning. In particular, you are responsible 
                    for ensuring that every pupil is assigned to a class, and 
                    that pupils are taught all the subjects of the school curriculum.
 (1) List as many purposes of keeping records of staff as 
                  you can.
 (2) Give one example to illustrate each of the purposes you 
                  have listed.
 
  CommentsThe purposes you listed may have included the following:
 Administrative and supervisoryRecords, if they are kept efficiently, are a help to the 
                    school head in managing the school, in identifying needs within 
                    the school and in monitoring progress. They help the head 
                    to plan for school and staff development. Workloads need to 
                    be shared out between members of staff so that there is a 
                    fair distribution of teaching, administration, and non-teaching 
                    time. You, as the school head, need to know where all the 
                    teachers are throughout the school day, which rooms they are 
                    in, what classes and subjects are being taught. This cannot, 
                    and should not be, carried in the head. It needs to be recorded.
 ProfessionalBefore staff are allocated to classes, you or, in a large 
                    school, a deputy head, will have reviewed staff qualifications 
                    and experience in particular subject areas. You will not want 
                    to allocate a teacher to a subject in which he or she has 
                    neither qualifications nor experience. Teachers with expertise 
                    in senior secondary Mathematics should not, for example, normally 
                    be allocated to teach a first grade class, nor the other way 
                    round. Staff need to be matched to subjects and year groups 
                    according to qualifications, experience and interests. Your 
                    records are important for this process.
 Your records will include information about the category 
                    of qualifications, for example, certificate, diploma, degree. 
                    These, together with experience and competence, will help 
                    you decide how best to use the staff member's expertise, and 
                    will have been taken into account for salary purposes. Staff developmentThe purposes of keeping staff records which have so far 
                    been given have been related to the administrative, supervisory 
                    and professional duties of the school head. However, as well 
                    as ensuring that, for example, every pupil is provided with 
                    teaching in every subject of the curriculum, you also have 
                    a responsibility to provide for staff development. Records 
                    of staff will therefore include details of in-service courses 
                    attended by the teacher, private study undertaken for upgrading 
                    purposes or extra-curricular responsibilities undertaken by 
                    the teacher.
 The staff development responsibility of the school head is 
                    part of the continuous process of staff appraisal. Records 
                    kept for the purpose of staff development should contain dates 
                    when the school head has observed a teacher's classroom work, 
                    notes of observations and discussions with the teacher. Where 
                    there has been a complaint about the teacher's work, the records 
                    should contain details of the reason for the complaint, the 
                    date/s, the action taken and whether there has been improvement. 
                   Types of staff records
 Staff records can be grouped according to whether they 
                    are purely factual and objective, or whether the information 
                    contained within them depends on judgements which are often 
                    subjective. You need to remember, however, that the differences 
                    between the two types of record are not always as clearcut 
                    as one might think. In apparently factual records there can 
                    sometimes be a subjective element, for example, the choice 
                    of information to be recorded. This problem can be largely 
                    overcome by using the same factual record form for all staff 
                    and an awareness that the risk of being subjective exists.
 Confidential recordsAll records which contain subjective information, for 
                    example, the process and outcome of teacher appraisal procedures, 
                    should be regarded as confidential and should be kept locked 
                    in the school head's room. Details of salary bracket, copies 
                    of references, should also be regarded as confidential, as 
                    should any note of personal problems or domestic difficulties. 
                    Staff are entitled to privacy.
 Examples of confidential records kept on a staff member's 
                    file:1 References
 2 Observations of teaching
 3 Interview/discussions with school head as part of staff 
                    appraisal
 4 Personal ambitions/personal or professional problems revealed 
                    in discussions
 5 Notes, for example, of verbal warnings, or copies of written 
                    warnings as part of a disciplinary procedure
 6 Teacher's salary bracket and financial status
 7 Promotion prospects
 8 Copies of correspondence, for example, curriculum vitae
 9 Medical and health records
 10 Other, for example, comments on attendance, punctuality, 
                    etc.
 Factual and objective recordsFactual and objective details such as the ones listed 
                    below would be likely to be kept in the secretary's or administrative 
                    office but you may find it convenient to have this information 
                    also available on the staff member's confidential file.
 1 Full name, address, date of birth, sex, nationality2 Qualifications, where obtained and date of qualification
 3 Subjects in which the teacher is qualified to teach
 4 Subjects taught, but without formal qualifications
 5 Date of appointment to the school
 6 Details of previous posts, length of service in these
 7 Length of teaching experience
 8 Timetable
 9 Summary of number of teaching periods in each subject taught 
                    and number of non-teaching periods
 10 Details of any extra-curricular or extra-mural duties undertaken, 
                    for example, sports coaching, homework or hostel supervision
 Activity 6.2What notes would you make of this discussion and which type 
                  of file would you use to keep your record of the discussion 
                  and your advice to the teacher?You have had reason to discuss a member of staff's 
                    problems with class discipline. You have suggested to him 
                    that he might have less difficulty with his classes if he 
                    introduced some practical work and encouraged the pupils to 
                    talk together during their work and ask him questions.
 
  Updating recordsActivity 6.3To be really useful, you will need to keep your records 
                    up to date. For example, the notes that you made under Activity 
                    6.2 need to be reviewed after a few weeks and added to according 
                    to whether there has been improvement or not. To take another 
                    example, you would want to record the fact that a woman teacher 
                    has gained a further qualification through part-time study 
                    even though she is the sole earner and head of her household 
                    with five young children. This example should be recorded 
                    in both the factual file and in the confidential file since 
                    her circumstances make her extra qualification even more creditable.
 Design a factual staff record to be kept in the staff 
                  member's file which gives all necessary information. Begin with 
                  the date of completion of the record form.
 
  CommentsThe way in which you choose to keep your records up to date 
                    and organise them will depend on whether there are record 
                    forms supplied to a school or whether you need to design your 
                    own. If the design of a record form is left to the individual 
                    school and school head, then you will want to make the record 
                    form as simple as possible so that your work is kept to the 
                    minimum. A blank form which you create, duplicate and complete 
                    is a useful way of easing your workload.
 Making use of recordsYour records will be most useful to you if they are kept 
                    in an organised way so that the information you need is immediately 
                    visible to you.
 If you keep your records up to date, not only will you be 
                    behaving in an efficient way, but you will get to know your 
                    school and its staff in a very thorough manner. That alone 
                    will assist your task of managing and developing the school 
                    for the benefit of pupils and staff alike. Schools are like 
                    living things; they are not static but are constantly developing. 
                    Your records need to keep pace with that and be updated whenever 
                    there is new information to add. Alternatively, updating your 
                    records can become part of your routine activities at the 
                    beginning of each term. SummaryThis unit has been concerned with the basic staff records 
                    required to assist in the smooth functioning of a school. 
                    Administrative requirements may differ from country to country, 
                    region to region, or district to district. However, in the 
                    absence of directives from a central authority it is important 
                    that school heads maintain a record of their staff members. 
                    To maintain an understanding of the needs of the school and 
                    the individual staff members, the keeping of efficient staff 
                    records is an important tool in the hands of the school head.
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