E - 内射大奶 Policy and Procedures for Fitness to Practise(FtP)
Contents
Glossary of Terms and Definitions
Part I: Introduction
The University’s Fitness to Practise Policy
Scope of this regulation
Fitness to Practise where programmes of studies are provided in partnership with other universities
Fitness to Practise during intercalated studies
Fitness to Practise for students studying for a University award employed by a body with its own Fitness to Practise regulation
Responsibilities of the University for supporting Fitness to Practise
Responsibilities to applicants
Responsibilities to students
Responsibilities of students
Student support
Data protection and confidentiality
The Policy Advisor for Fitness to Practise
The responsible Persons in Fitness to Practise matters
The Investigating Officer in Fitness to Practise matters
Monitoring the effectiveness of this regulation
Part II: Reporting and receiving concerns
Health and Wellbeing matters that might give rise to concerns about the Fitness to Practise of a student
Unprofessional conduct that may give rise to concerns about the Fitness to Practise of a student
The duty to raise concerns about the Fitness to Practise of a student
Reporting concerns when the student is at the University
Reporting concerns when the student is in a placement setting
Reporters
Anonymous reports of concern about the Fitness to Practise of a student on grounds of their health or wellbeing
Part III: Investigating concerns
Temporary suspensions of students when there are concerns about their Fitness to Practise
Appointing an Investigating Officer
Informing the student of an investigation
Investigating concerns relating to unprofessional conduct
The Investigating Officer’s report
Investigation and reporting by an OH Professional
Dealing with allegations of academic misconduct in the context of Fitness to Practise
Part IV: Preliminary hearings
Receiving reports from an OH Professional and/or an Investigating Officer
The purpose of a preliminary hearing
Hearings in absentia
Sequence of events
Outcomes of a preliminary hearing
Part V: Hearings by Fitness to Practise Panels
Status and purpose of Fitness to Practise Panels
Membership of a Fitness to Practise Panel
Training for Fitness to Practise Panel members
Attendance of the OH Professional, Investigating Officer and the Responsible Person
Notice to the student in Fitness to Practise proceedings and information that must be provided for them
Expert and legal advice
Preliminary matters for Fitness to Practise Panels
Hearings in absentia
Burden of proof and standard of proof in a Fitness to Practise Panel hearing
Sequence of events at a Fitness to Practise Panel hearing
How the Fitness to Practise Panel reaches its decision
The options open to a Fitness to Practise Panel
Reporting the findings and recommendation of a Fitness to Practise Panel
Status of the student following a hearing by a Fitness to Practise Panel
Part VI: Appeal against the confirmed findings of a Fitness to Practise Panel
Making an appeal against the findings and/or recommendations of a Fitness to Practise Panel that have been confirmed by the Pro-Vice Chancellor of a College
Grounds for an appeal against the findings and/or recommendations of a Fitness to Practise Panel
Appeals that do not fall within the grounds specified by the University
Convening a Fitness to Practise Appeal Panel
Membership of a Fitness to Practise Appeal Panel
Training for new members of Fitness to Practise Appeal Panels
Notice to the student and information that must be provided for them
Information that will be provided for a Fitness to Practise Appeal Panel
Expert and legal advice
The burden of proof and the standard of proof in an appeal against the findings of a Fitness to Practise Panel
Purpose of Fitness to Practise Appeal Panels
Preliminary matters for Fitness to Practise Appeal Panels
Hearings in absentia
The sequence of events at a hearing by a Fitness to Practise Appeal Panel
The options open to a Fitness to Practise Appeal Panel
Reporting the findings and recommendation of a Fitness to Practise Appeal Panel
Appendices:
Annex 1: 内射大奶 programmes subject to the Regulation
Annex 2: Responsible Persons - Role description and person specification
Annex 3: Investigating Officers – Role description and person specification
Annex 4: Procedures for the temporary suspension of a student in connection with Fitness to Practise
Annex 5: Exceptions
GLOSSARY OF TERMS AND DEFINITIONS
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Burden of Proof |
The term Burden of Proof is used in this Regulation to define where the responsibility rests for proving a case. |
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Conditions and Undertakings |
Conditions and Undertakings may be imposed by a Responsible Person, following a Preliminary Hearing, or as the outcome of a Fitness to Practise Panel. They are made when allegations or concerns are found to be valid and can be made whether or not an impairment of Fitness to Practise is found to have occurred. Conditions and Undertakings may include restrictions on clinical placements, a requirement to undertake treatment or seek therapeutic interventions, a requirement to undertake exercises designed to promote reflection, monitoring arrangements, requirements regarding disclosure of Fitness to Practise proceedings or restrictions on future conduct. Conditions and Undertakings are designed to ensure future and/or ongoing Fitness to Practise and are usually considered to be rehabilitative in nature. |
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Disclosure and Barring Service (DBS) |
A body formed from the Criminal Records Bureau and the Independent Safeguarding Authority to carry out checks on individuals applying to work in specified occupations and/or places in order to establish whether an applicant, including an applicant to a Registration or Regulatory Body, has previous convictions. The University has a duty to make a report to the DBS where a Student is removed from a regulated activity as a result of concerns of risk of harm to children or vulnerable adults. |
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Documentation Bundle |
A Documentation Bundle is produced in advance of a Fitness to Practise Panel and contains an identification of the Registration or Regulatory Body guidance that may be referred to, or consulted, during the hearing; membership of the Panel; a chronology of events; the allegations being considered and why they might be seen to impair Fitness to Practise; who the Panel will hear from; a list of the written evidence to be considered; copies of the documents submitted by the College in support of its case; and, copies of the documents to be submitted by the Student in support of their case. |
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Fitness to Practise |
For Programmes that are linked to one or more Registration or Regulatory Bodies in each case the University follows the definition of Fitness to Practise that the relevant Registration or Regulatory Body itself follows. |
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Support for 内射大奶 |
The University's "Health, Wellbeing and Support for 内射大奶 Procedure" is normally invoked where there are "emerging concerns about a Student's health, wellbeing and or behaviour and the impact this has on his/her ability to progress" at the University. This Procedure cannot be invoked for Students studying on a Programme linked to a Registration or Regulatory Body (subject to the exceptions set out in Annex 5). |
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Intercalation, Intercalated Studies |
A period, usually of one year, in which a medical Student can study a subject of their choice outside the Programme for which they are registered, at either Bachelor’s or Master’s degree level. The 内射大奶 normally locates Intercalated Studies between the fourth and fifth years of a Programme in Medicine. Studies during Intercalation may be undertaken at the University or at another University with which it has a formal agreement to facilitate such an arrangement. |
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Investigating Officer |
A member of the University's staff appointed by a Responsible Person to investigate concerns regarding a Student's Fitness to Practise. The Investigating Officer should be a Registrant of the relevant Registration or Regulatory Body. |
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OH Professional |
An accredited specialist in occupational medicine. |
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Material Contact |
When used in this Regulation with respect to an Investigating Officer, Responsible Person, member of a Fitness to Practise or Appeal Panel, "material Contact" means any significant connection or contact, such as social contact or a direct supervisory relationship with the Student under investigation, that could lead a reasonable observer to conclude that a conflict of interest may exist. |
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Notification of Outcome |
A letter sent to a Student after a Preliminary Hearing outlining the decision of the Responsible Person, together with any Conditions or Undertakings imposed. |
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Personal Sensitive Data and Information |
In the context of this Regulation, data and information relating to physical or mental health, alleged or actual criminal offences and related proceedings, sexual life, religious or other beliefs of a similar nature. |
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Placement Provider |
An organisation providing a placement setting in order to support a Programme of study. |
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Placement Setting |
Any setting outside the University where the Student has been placed by the University as part of their Programme in agreement with the placement provider. Placement Settings will include but not be limited to schools and associated study centres; further and higher education colleges; hospital, clinical and laboratory settings; surgeries; consulting rooms and diagnostic facilities whether NHS or privately provided and/or managed. |
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Professional Conduct |
The standard of behaviour and conduct that is required of a Student following a University Programme that leads to eligibility for registration by a Registration or Regulatory Body may be published in a code of Professional Conduct. It will be consistent with the conduct required by the relevant profession, the employers of such professionals and those who provide clinical and other work placements for University Students. It is behaviour and conduct that: |
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Programme of research |
A Programme of supervised activities undertaken by a postgraduate Student that enables them to prepare to be assessed for the award of a higher degree of the University. In the specific context of this Regulation , it is a Programme of activities that includes one or more periods of clinical professional or practice-based activity, in a setting that requires them to subscribe to this Regulation or to equivalents agreed for that setting or settings. See below, "Programme". |
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Programme |
The Student's Programme consists of the sum of the modules, courses, clinical and other learning opportunities that they follow to enable them to show that they have met the Learning Outcomes set for them and have demonstrated the necessary skills to achieve the award for which they are studying. The term "Programme" as defined above should be read as also and equally referring to a Programme of Research that leads to a higher degree of the University and that includes time spent in a clinical or practice-based setting, other than when expressly stated. |
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Record of Determination |
A Record of Determination is produced by a Fitness to Practise Panel and outlines their Determination on the Facts, Determination on Impairment, Determination on Mitigation and Determination on Sanction. Within the Record of Determination, the Panel shall provide a rationale for each determination. |
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Register |
The record maintained by a Registration or Regulatory Body of persons it recognises as meeting its standards for training, professional skills, behaviour and health and Fitness to Practise. |
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Registration or Regulatory Body |
A Registration or Regulatory Body is a Body that administers a Register where entry of a person's name on the Register is necessary to enable the person to practise in that profession or hold qualified status within that profession |
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Registrant |
A person whose name is on the Register of a Registration or Regulatory Body or Bodies. |
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Regulated Activity |
In the context of work with children and vulnerable adults including teaching, training and instruction of children, or providing personal or health care to children or adults, Regulated Activity is 'work that a barred person must not do'. See Safeguarding Vulnerable Groups Act, 2006. |
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Reporter |
A person reporting a concern about the health, wellbeing, behaviour or conduct of a Student following a Programme that is linked to a Registration or Regulatory Body or a Programme that has been designated by the University to be subject to this Regulation. |
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Responsible Person |
A Responsible Person is a member of the academic of the University who has been designated by a College Pro-Vice Chancellor or Faculty Dean to receive expressions of concern about the health and/or wellbeing of a Student that affects or may affect their Fitness to Practise and/or complaints about their Fitness to Practise and/or Professional Conduct. In this Regulation the term "Responsible Person" is taken to include any professional or administrative assistants supporting the Responsible Person(s) in their work. The name(s) of Responsible Persons for Fitness to Practise are published in the handbooks for relevant Programmes or their digital equivalents and publicised by the relevant School or College, as appropriate. |
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Senior Member of the University |
For the purpose of this Regulation, a Senior Member of the University is defined as a member of the University's Senior Management Team, a Faculty Dean or College Pro-Vice Chancellor. |
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Standard of Proof |
The term "Standard of Proof" is used in this Regulation to describe the level of certainty that a Fitness to Practise Panel and a Fitness to Practise Appeal Panel should seek in deciding whether the case against the Student has been proven. It is that the Panel should be satisfied that the person or body on whom the Burden of Proof rests should have been able to show that it is more likely than not that the Student's Fitness to Practise is- or has been- impaired This is sometimes called the "standard of proof in civil cases" or otherwise "the balance of probabilities" |
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Student |
For the purpose of this Regulation, the term "Student" denotes: |
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Vulnerable adult/adult at risk |
For the purposes of this Fitness to Practise Regulation the University recognises each of the above terms as co-equivalent in meaning. See also above, "Regulated Activity". |
PART I: INTRODUCTION
PART II: REPORTING AND RECEIVING CONCERNS
PART III: INVESTIGATING CONCERNS
PART IV: PRELIMINARY HEARINGS
PART V: HEARINGS BY FITNESS TO PRACTISE PANELS
PART VI: APPEAL AGAINST THE CONFIRMED FINDINGS OF A FITNESS TO PRACTISE PANEL
ANNEX 1: REGISTRATION OR REGULATORY BODIES LINKED TO UNIVERSITY OF EXETER PROGRAMMES
| College | Programme |
| College of Life and Environmental Sciences |
Counselling for Depression Practitioner Training |
| College of Medicine and Health | BMBS Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery BSc Medical Imaging Certificate in Independent Prescribing MSc Applied Health Services Research MSc Clinical Education MSc Medical Imaging MSc/PGDip/PGCert Extreme Medicine MSci Nursing PGCert Clinical Pharmacy |
| College of Social Sciences and International Studies |
DEdPsych Doctorate in Educational Psychology PGCE (various awards) |
ANNEX 2: RESPONSIBLE PERSONS - ROLE DESCRIPTION AND PERSON SPECIFICATION
Role description
The role of a Responsible Person in Fitness to Practise Matters is:
- To receive expressions of concern and complaint about the health, wellbeing or Professional Conduct of a Student whose Programme is subject to this Regulation.
- To determine whether the expressions of concern and/or complaint require urgent action to safeguard, pupils, young persons, vulnerable adults, patients, clients, other Students, members of staff, practitioner-staff and members of the public, the form such action should take, and to ensure that, where necessary, action is taken.
- To determine whether the expressions of concern and/or complaints require investigation and what form that should take.
- To instruct an Investigating Officer and/or OH Professional to make preliminary enquiries and conduct initial investigations, in a proportionate manner, in order to determine whether the concerns require further investigation and to report on that to the Responsible Person.
- To instruct an Investigating Officer and/or OH Professional to undertake fuller investigations into an expression of concern or a complaint about a Student's Fitness to Practise and to gather evidence that may be put to a Fitness to Practise Panel.
- To receive progress and other reports on their investigations from Investigating Officers from time to time.
- To decide on the basis of the final report of the Investigating Officer whether a Fitness to Practise Panel should be convened to receive the Investigating Officer's report.
- To convene and hold Preliminary Hearings with Students following an investigation.
- To oversee the College’s arrangements for convening and holding hearings by Fitness to Practise Panels.
- To ensure that the findings, recommendations and reports of Fitness to Practise Panels are provided to the College Pro-Vice Chancellor in a timely manner.
- To observe confidentiality about individual cases of Fitness to Practise throughout, other when to do so would prevent the effective conduct of this Regulation.
- To participate in training, briefing and development activities provided by the University to enable them to undertake the duties of a Responsible Person or continue in that role.
Person specification
When considering who they might designate as a Responsible Person, a College Pro-Vice Chancellor or Faculty Dean will take the following into consideration:
- Whether the proposed individual is a Registrant of a regulated profession.
- Whether any special expertise in the subject, professional, or clinical area is required to discharge the role effectively.
- Whether the proposed individual is able to make sound and reasoned judgements about academic, practice-related and procedural matters.
- Whether they have the authority to give directions to other staff and particularly those undertaking Investigations.
- Whether the proposed individual should have proper clerical and professional support in order to fulfil the role.
ANNEX 3: INVESTIGATING OFFICERS – ROLE DESCRIPTION AND PERSON SPECIFICATION
Role description
The role of an Investigating Officer is:
- To conduct initial enquiries and investigations when requested to do so by a Responsible Person, in order to determine whether concerns or complaints that have been reported require further investigation
- To undertake such initial enquiries and investigations in a proportionate manner, and to report on their preliminary findings to the Responsible Person so that the latter can determine how best to respond to the concerns or complaints.
- To undertake fuller investigations into an expression of concern or a complaint about a Student's Fitness to Practise and to gather evidence that may be put to a Fitness to Practise Panel.
- To provide progress and other reports on their investigations to the relevant Responsible Person from time to time.
- To provide a report to the Responsible Person that states the nature of the concerns or complaints that were expressed to the Responsible Person, explains how they relate to the Student's Fitness to Practise and explains what their investigation found so that the Responsible Person can decide whether a Fitness to Practise Panel should be convened to receive the Investigating Officer's report.
- To attend Preliminary Hearings and hearings by Fitness to Practise Panels and Fitness to Practise Appeal Panels as required, in order to answer questions from the Student and the Panel(s) about their enquiries and how their report was produced.
- To participate in training, briefing and development activities provided by the University to enable them to undertake the duties of an Investigating Officer or continue in that role.
Person specification
An Investigating Officer, who should be a registrant of the relevant profession, must have the skills and competences to:
- Undertake thorough and detailed investigations and pursue enquiries, in confidence, and in a timely manner, about concerns and complaints that have been reported to a Responsible Person.
- Understand how to gather oral and written evidence and write up accounts of the same that can be relied on by a Responsible Person and a Fitness to Practise Panel when deciding what action to take.
- Make accurate and reliable notes and transcripts of meetings in connection with particular Fitness to Practise matters or ensure that they are made.
- Provide coherent and clearly stated reports of their findings to enable a Responsible Person, a Fitness to Practise Panel and the Student who is the focus of the Investigation to understand the allegations that were made, how, if proved, they would relate to the Student's Fitness to Practise, and how the allegations were tested and investigated.
- Explain at a Preliminary Hearing and to a Fitness to Practise Panel and the Student, in the context of a Panel hearing, how they undertook their investigation and present the evidence they gathered and their findings and answer questions .
- Additionally, the Responsible Person nominating an Investigating Officer will take into consideration whether Investigating Officers need particular subject, clinical, professional or practice-based expertise to perform their role in a particular context, and the need to identify and train a sufficient number of Investigating Officers to ensure that there is adequate capacity across the College to investigate more than one case and that there is continuity of cover for Investigating Officers when they undertake other duties on behalf of the University.
ANNEX 4: PROCEDURES FOR THE TEMPORARY SUSPENSION OF A STUDENT IN CONNECTION WITH FITNESS TO PRACTISE
| Power to recommend the temporary suspension of a Student while a Fitness to Practise investigation is being undertaken | |
| 1 | Where a Responsible Person and/or an Investigating Officer comes to the view that it is necessary to suspend a Student who is the subject of allegations of unprofessional conduct or behaviour on a temporary basis they may ask the relevant College Pro-Vice Chancellor to suspend the Student under powers conferred by Senate in approving this Regulation. |
| 2 | In exceptional circumstances, such as the absence of the relevant College Pro-Vice Chancellor or an interregnum, the Responsible Person may request that an alternate (who may be a Faculty Dean) acts on a recommendation to suspend a Student. |
| 3 | A student can be temporarily suspended from placement activity, academic activity (including assessment) or both. |
| 4 |
In making a request for the temporary suspension of a Student, the Responsible Person will: a. Outline the grounds for the recommended suspension in writing. |
| 5 | A Student who is under temporary suspension will not permitted to represent the University, including in sporting or other activities. |
| 6 | Where a College Pro-Vice Chancellor or (exceptionally) a Faculty Dean has approved a temporary suspension it takes effect immediately. |
| 7 |
A breach of the terms of suspension will be added to the matters for consideration at a Preliminary Hearing and/or Fitness to Practise Panel. a. Where a student breaches the terms of their suspension by entering university premises when they are not permitted to do so, they may be removed by Estate Patrol. |
| Appeal against a temporary suspension | |
| 1 |
A Student who has been served with a notice of temporary suspension may appeal against the suspension or its terms in writing within ten working days of receiving the notice, stating why the suspension or specific terms in it should be lifted. |
| 2 |
The appeal should be submitted to the College Pro-Vice-Chancellor (via the relevant College Cases Team email address) within ten working days of being notified of the temporary suspension. All supporting evidence should be included. The College Cases team should normally aim to resolve an appeal against temporary suspension within 30 days of receipt of the appeal, or otherwise inform you of the expected delay. |
| 3 |
The grounds on which an appeal can be made against a temporary suspension are the following: a. That the Responsible Person failed to make reasonable enquiries before recommending the temporary suspension.b. That the Responsible Person or the Dean or other person who approved the temporary suspension is biased against the Student. c. That the temporary suspension of the Student, or its terms, are disproportionate. |
| 4 |
Where the College Pro-Vice-Chancellor is satisfied that the Student's appeal against their temporary suspension has succeeded they may cancel the suspension or vary the terms of the suspension to cure any defect that the Student has identified. Where the College Pro-Vice-Chancellor confirms the temporary suspension it continues in force for its specified term. |
ANNEX 5: EXCEPTIONS
Exception A applies to the following programme:
- MSci Nursing
Exception B applies to the following programme:
- MSci Applied Psychology (Clinical)
| Exceptions | |
| A |
[Para. 153] Fitness to Practise Panels convened to consider students on programmes regulated by the Nursing & Midwifery Council, must include no less than one Nursing & Midwifery Council Registrant, currently employed in an associated NHS Trust or Placement Provider. Where the Fitness to Practise Panel is convened in order to consider conduct that has occurred within a placement environment, the Panel Member should not be drawn from the NHS Trust or Placement Provider within which the student is/was most recently based. |
| B | [Para. 10] Students registered on the MSci Applied Psychology will be subject to the Health, Wellbeing and Support for 内射大奶 during years one and two; this Regulation will apply during years three and four. |
ANNEX 6: EXCEPTIONS FOR POSTGRADUATE CERTIFICATE OF EDUCATION PROGRAMMES
| 1 | In addition to the standard procedure as outlined in Parts II to IV of the Regulation, students on the Postgraduate Certificate of Education can be subject to the following amended procedure. |
| 2 | This amended procedure must not be used in circumstances where a health or conduct concern is considered to pose a risk to the safety of pupils, peers, staff, or the public. This includes cases in which safeguarding concerns have been raised |
| a. In such circumstances the standard Fitness to Practise procedure must be followed and the imposition of a Temporary Suspension considered by the Responsible Person for Fitness to Practise | |
| IDENTIFICATION OF CONCERNS | |
| 3 | Instead of a Notification of Investigation letter, students may be notified of concerns against them using the Cause for Concern Procedure outlined within the programme handbook. |
| 4 | The Partnership Director or the Head of Initial Teacher Education may refer the matter to the Responsible Person for Fitness to Practise in circumstances where there has been:
a. A failure to meet Cause for Concern targets, demonstrating repeated unsatisfactory progress towards the same Teachers’ Standards; and b. A meeting with the Subject Leader (Secondary) / Pathway Lead (Primary) / School Direct Programme Director and a Partnerships Relations Manager or Director has taken place. |
| 5 | If the Responsible Person considers the matter to warrant immediate temporary suspension, the matter should be dealt with under the standard Fitness to Practise procedure instead, commencing at Part III of the Regulation. |
| INITIAL PRELIMINARY HEARING | |
| 6 | Where a Responsible Person receives a referral under this amended procedure, an initial Preliminary Hearing will be convened between the Responsible Person and the Student. |
| 7 |
The initial Preliminary Hearing will contain the following amendments to the standard procedure: a. Instead of an Investigating Officer Report in the standard format, all information relevant to the Cause for Concern will be circulated. This may include Occupational Health reports. b. Where the Responsible Person considers the concerns to have substance, instead of a Notification of Outcome letter the student will be issued with a Serious Weaknesses Letter and Action Plan. i. The Action Plan will be written by the Responsible Person and agreed with the Mentor/ITEC. c. The meeting will be adjourned pending review of satisfaction of the Action Plan. |
| 8 | The following aspects of the standard procedure will remain:
a. The student will be provided with not less than five working days’ notice of the Hearing. i. Arrangements for the hearing: date/time/venue ii. A copy of any reports and/or evidence under consideration. iii. A copy of this regulation and any other relevant guidance. iv. Copies of any relevant guidance relating to the Teachers’ Standards. c. The student may be accompanied, in a non-participatory capacity, by a friend, relative, member of staff or a member of the Advice Unit of the Students’ Guild or FXU. d. The student will have the opportunity to answer questions from the Responsible Person and to make statements. e. A member of the University’s professional services shall be present to make a record of what is discussed. f. An audio recording will be made with the consent of those present, from which a verbatim transcript will be produced. |
| REVIEW STAGE | |
| 9 | The Responsible Person, or delegate, will appoint an Internal Moderator to visit the student within their placement setting to review evidence gathered that the student has met the requirements of the Action Plan. |
| 10 | Instead of an Investigating Officer Report in the standard format, the Internal Moderator will provide all information relevant to the student’s satisfaction of the Action Plan. |
| 11 | Upon receipt of the Internal Moderator’s Report, before the matter can progress to the Final Preliminary Hearing, the Responsible Person will satisfy themselves that:
a. No extension should be granted. b. No further investigation, including Occupational Health input, is necessary. |
| FINAL PRELIMINARY HEARING | |
| 12 | In amendment to the standard procedure, the possible outcomes of the Final Preliminary Hearing are as follows:
a. Where sufficient progress has been made, the Responsible Person may: i. Conclude that the student no longer be considered to have Serious Weaknesses and dismiss the case entirely ii. Conclude that the student no longer be considered to have Serious Weaknesses but that concerns remain valid and: 1. Place the student back on a Cause for Concern or ask the University Visiting Tutor to do so on their behalf, failure to adhere to which would result in the resumption of this process. 2. Impose Conditions and Undertakings (as per the standard procedure contained within the Regulation), failure to adhere to which would result in referral to a Fitness to Practise Panel. b. Where sufficient progress has not been made, the Responsible Person must: i. Request permission from the Pro-Vice Chancellor to impose immediate Temporary Suspension. ii. Refer the case to the Fitness to Practise Panel. |
| 13 | The following aspects of the standard procedure for Preliminary Hearings will remain:
a. The student will be provided with not less than five working days’ notice of the Hearing. b. When providing notice of the Preliminary Hearing, the letter should include: i. As above ii. A copy of any reports and/or evidence under consideration. iii. A copy of this regulation and any other relevant guidance. iv. Copies of any relevant guidance relating to the Teachers’ Standards. c. The student may be accompanied, in a non-participatory capacity, by a friend, relative, member of staff or a member of the Advice Unit of the Students’ Guild or FXU. d. The student will have the opportunity to answer questions from the Responsible Person and to make statements. e. A member of the University’s professional services shall be present to make a record of what is discussed. f. An audio recording will be made with the consent of those present, from which a verbatim transcript will be produced. |
| 14 | The student will receive a Notification of Outcome Letter within 5 working days.
a. Where a student wishes to challenge the outcome of the Preliminary Hearing (including the imposition of a Cause for Concern, Action Plan or Conditions and Undertakings) the letter will advise that their appeal will be heard by a Fitness to Practise Panel and that they will be temporarily suspended in the intervening period. b. Where the student has been referred to the Fitness to Practise Panel, they will be given the opportunity to withdraw from the programme rather than proceed to a Fitness to Practise Panel. i. Where sufficient credits have been gained, students withdrawing from the programme will be granted an exit award without Qualified Teacher Status. |