The Standing Advisory Council on Religious Education
(SACRE) is a County Council committee. Its purpose is to advise the
County Council, as the local authority, on all matters related to
collective worship and religious education (RE) in community,
voluntary controlled, trust schools and foundation schools without
a religious character. Academies, Free schools &
Voluntary-Aided schools lie outside the SACRE remit, but a good
SACRE will try to establish links with any of these schools in its
area.
In each local authority, SACRE’s role is
to:
-
advise the local authority on matters relating to RE
and collective worship in community schools and some other
schools.
-
oversee RE and collective worship within the
authority: advise on methods of teaching, choice of materials and
provision of teacher training.
-
require a review of the local authority
Agreed Syllabus (opens in new window) (by law every 5
years).
-
monitor RE, collective worship and spiritual, moral,
social, and cultural development. SACRE is also responsible for
“determinations” – deciding whether a particular
school can change collective worship away from the current
requirement to be “wholly or mainly of a broadly Christian
character”.
-
produce an Annual
Report (opens in new window) which is submitted to the
Department for Education (DfE) and the National Association for
Standing Advisory Councils on Religious Education
(NASACRE).
West Sussex
SACRE meets three times a year and is made up of four statutory
groups and co-opted members:
-
Committee A: Christian denominations and other
religions and their denominations, reflecting the principal
religious traditions of the area (and specified in the
SACRE’s constitution)
-
Committee B: Church of England, with representatives
nominated by the diocese
-
Committee C: Teacher and headteacher associations
invited by the local authority
-
Committee D: Local authority - ideally reflecting
the range of political viewpoints across the area. This group may
include representative of school governing bodies.
It is the
responsibility of the local authority to provide funding and
clerking to enable the group to function and ensure that minutes
and agendas are made public.
Further
information is available through the NASACRE website (opens in new
window).
The local
authority works with SACRE to:
-
track and review the provision of RE and collective
worship.
-
consider with SACRE any action that needs to be
taken in respect of support offered to schools.
The latest
version of the Agreed Syllabus was produced in 2021 and is to be
revised in spring 2026. SACRE has a development plan to further its
work and reach. As part of this in 2023 SACRE launched annual
Religions and World Faiths Roadshows. Taking place in the south and
north of the county, the roadshows promote contact and dialogue
between school practitioners in relation to the support and
resources available from their local faith communities. SACRE
reviewed the outcomes and success of the Roadshows to date to
further promote their reach in 2025. SACRE has also carried out a
Primary and Secondary School Questionnaire to support a review of
RE and collective worship provision across the local authority, the
outcomes of which have been used in evaluating the current Agreed
Syllabus. SACRE are also hearing from young people from different
faith groups to help inform the Agreed Syllabus review.
Background
SACREs have
their origins in the 1944 Education Act when the government
established local education authorities to maintain schools. One of
their responsibilities was to establish a ‘conference’
to produce an agreed syllabus. Such a conference was to be
established each time a local education authority believed that it
needed the syllabus to be reviewed. A local education authority
could also establish a ‘Standing Advisory Council on
Religious Education (SACRE)’ if it thought it was appropriate
in its local context. These SACREs were not mandatory and not all
local education authorities had one.
SACREs were
later reformed and reconstituted by the Education Reform Act of
1988, when they became permanent bodies with legal powers. The
first SACRE meeting to be held in West Sussex was in
1983.
Contact
information: Karen Hammond
(External Advisor) on 07717 776696. Email:
karenhammond2018@gmail.com