Claire Pannell reckons she might be the only person in the country with her job title. While many trusts have a director of governance, she can鈥檛 find any that also have their own 鈥済eneral counsel鈥 鈥 the joint roles that she fills at . Maintained schools call on local authority legal departments when they get into hot water, while trusts tend to use specialist law firms. Pannell says having that in-house expertise means she can be 鈥減roactive鈥 in 鈥減reventing legal challenges from happening鈥, rather than firms on retainers who are normally 鈥渁lways firefighting鈥. She was appointed a family law judge this year (aged just 40, it鈥檚 also likely she鈥檚 one of the country鈥檚 youngest), providing a rare and overarching perspective of the justice and education systems. A legal mind also gives her 鈥渃omplementary skills鈥 that come in handy: Pannell also acts as Anthem’s data protection officer and company secretary. She鈥檚 also transforming the trust鈥檚 governance systems to give pupils a seat at the table. Pannell at Lambs Lane primary school with best friend Penny and favourite primary teacher Miss Ellen age 8 Fighting for education Pannell has a crisp English accent, refined mannerisms and exudes a bold sense that the world is her oyster. She puts her drive and ambition down to having had to 鈥渇ight for education鈥 herself. Her dad was a forklift driver (both parents left school at 13) and her education at Ryeish Green secondary 鈥渨asn鈥檛 good at all鈥. But the school, in Reading, Berkshire, was shut by the council in 2010 and replaced by Oakbank 鈥 now one of the 16 schools Anthem runs across Thames Valley, London and the East Midlands. Pannell has returned there in her current role, but she says the corridor from the headteacher鈥檚 office evokes 鈥渂ad memories of being bullied鈥. She recalls how the school only offered two A-levels when she attended. Pannell and her friends had to persuade the local college to send a tutor so they could take A levels in sociology. They also got involved with extra-curricular activities including young enterprise competitions which 鈥渨e just kept winning鈥. 鈥淭hat gave me this drive to keep aiming higher than people expected of me.鈥 One of Claire Pannells backpacking adventures Snakes in a classroom After studying law at Bristol University, Pannell landed a job for law firm specialising in education. Aside from being asked tricky questions by mostly independent school clients 鈥 such as whether snakes could be kept in a classroom (鈥測es, apparently鈥) 鈥 Pannell carved out a role providing immigration advice for education visa applications. But she wasn鈥檛 motivated by 鈥渆arning money for the partners鈥, and she wanted a career where the 鈥渕oral purpose was clear鈥. So, in 2012 Pannell moved to the charity Education Development Trust (previously CfBT Education Trust), which until last year sponsored Anthem. Pannell was EDT鈥檚 senior education consultant and solicitor, a role which meant she could indulge her love of travelling (the list of countries she鈥檚 backpacked around is impressive). There were trips to the Middle East and projects replicating Ofsted inspections overseas, a girls鈥 education project in Kenya, and tours of schools in Malawi. One school was just a 鈥渢iny shack鈥, with the headteacher鈥檚 office a 鈥渃hair in the grass 鈥 so peaceful, under a beautiful mango tree鈥, she fondly remembers. It was 鈥渆ye-opening鈥 to discover 鈥渉ow much of a privilege education can be. It’s a whole other ballgame when girls can’t go to school legally, or practically if they have their period.鈥 Malawi Headteacher office Changing the Anthem The travelling element became less attractive after Pannell became a mum and she switched to working just with UK schools. But after around six years as head of legal, she decided to fulfil a lifelong dream of becoming a judge 鈥 which she now does on unpaid leave throughout the year alongside her general counsel role. One of the key skills she must hone is 鈥渏udgecraft鈥濃 the art of decision-making. It鈥檚 something Pannell already does 鈥渙n a low level everyday鈥. But she also became governor of two schools (Lime Hills and Hans Price academies in Cabot Learning Federation) to get decision-making experience on complaints panels and disciplinary committees. Her judge training has made her acutely aware of the 鈥渦nconscious bias鈥 governors on exclusion panels have as 鈥渃ritical friends鈥 of heads and in 鈥渟upporting the school鈥. She made a training pack for governors to foster awareness of that. She鈥檚 also summarised lengthy legal exclusions guidance into a 鈥渃hecklist鈥 for heads to 鈥渢ick through 鈥 All the law around it is so prescriptive 鈥 they鈥檙e not lawyers and can鈥檛 read all that鈥. Claire Pannell with her daughter SEND legal pinch point But the biggest 鈥渓egal pinch points鈥 that trusts face are around providing pupils with SEND support. 鈥淗eads want to do so much more, but the funding鈥檚 not there鈥. The 鈥渞idiculous鈥 CAMHS waiting list also throws up 鈥渓ots of legal risks鈥 because 鈥測ou’ve got disability discrimination if you’re not making reasonable adjustments鈥. Parents鈥 complaints have been 鈥渁bsolutely skyrocketing鈥 since Covid, but Pannell has been able to 鈥渢ake some of the pain out鈥 of the process for heads. Most schools have three complaint stages 鈥 the last being a panel including an external representative. It is in trusts鈥 interests to avoid reaching that point, so Pannell added another pre-panel stage as an 鈥渁dditional opportunity to resolve the complains in house鈥. She鈥檚 also created a trust-wide complaints handling network, with each school having their own coordinator (given legal training in complaint resolution) feeding up to a national complaints lead. Every complaint is 鈥渓ogged with timeframes, and responses are templated鈥, meaning they are 鈥渞esolved much lower down the scale鈥. Only around four a year now get to the panel stage, compared to 鈥渢hree to four a week鈥 at another similar sized trust she knows of. Claire Pannell Reimagining governance Pannell has also put her legal skills to good use by 鈥渞eimagining鈥 Anthem鈥檚 governance structures. As trusts鈥 governance is still based on the maintained school model, she believes there鈥檚 a 鈥渄isconnect鈥 that 鈥渓eads to confusion, with people not understanding their responsibilities and loads of duplication鈥. 鈥淵ou’ve got governors squirreling away reviewing outcomes without necessarily being educationalists, and reviewing budgets without being accountants. 鈥淎nd who’s listening? That information might connect into the head, but then it’s stuck there in a MAT [multi academy trust] where lots of the infrastructure sits above them.鈥 Pannell started by rebranding governors as 鈥榗ommunity council members鈥, a 鈥渞eally controversial鈥 move to some who 鈥渓iked having 鈥榞overnor鈥 on their CV鈥. She held a consultation on what the remits for the new councils should be, and four emerged 鈥 community; celebration (of successes); panels; and SEND, inclusion and safeguarding. Claire Pannell 鈥楴eed to listen to pupils more鈥 Anthem is also training up volunteer 鈥榗hampions鈥 to take on roles as 鈥渆xperts鈥 in safeguarding, climate change, SEND and inclusion and staff issues. Two of the champions will be pupils, named 鈥淭imi champions鈥 after the pupil who came up with the idea. Timi, a St Marks Academy pupil, brought a roomful of education leaders 鈥渢o tears鈥 after being invited by Anthem to speak about the personal challenges he overcame. Afterwards, he 鈥渢apped Mohsen on the shoulder鈥 and told him, 鈥測ou need to listen to students more鈥. A termly forum will link Timi Champions from across schools, with training provided for them to understand 鈥渉ow trusts and schools work鈥. While most of the forums will be online, plans are afoot to hold the first one in person at the Houses of Parliament. The champions will, after gathering feedback from other pupils, give each issue discussed a RAG [red/amber/green] rating to be fed into a dashboard. This isn鈥檛 a token gesture, but a 鈥済enuine way we can hear the student voice鈥. Pannell compares the potential impact to the effect that doing extracurricular activities had on her at school. 鈥淚t can really elevate pupils to see what else is going on.鈥 Claire Pannell