Schools North East Logo

News

Government failure on teacher numbers adds to pressure on schools

The Public Account Committee report says there is a growing sense of crisis for schools in England struggling to retain and develop teaching workforce.

A variety of factors have contributed to the growing sense of crisis for schools in England struggling to retain and develop their teachers.

Particularly worrying is that the number of secondary school teachers has been falling since 2010 and more teachers have been leaving the profession for reasons other than retirement since 2012.

Many teachers have cited heavy workloads as a reason for their departure. At the same time pupil numbers are rising and the Department for Education expects schools to make significant savings from using their staff more efficiently.

Department gave insufficient priority to teacher retention

The Department should have been able to foresee this situation and take action to address it. By its own admission, the Department has given insufficient priority to teacher retention and development.

It has got the balance wrong between training new teachers and supporting the existing workforce, with spending on the former 15 times greater than on the latter.

The Department has a disparate collection of small-scale interventions but these are inadequate to address the underlying issues.

Significant variation in teaching vacancies across country

In addition, the quality of teaching and the level of teaching vacancies vary significantly across the country. However, the Department does not seem to understand the reasons for the variation or the different challenges that schools in different regions face.

The failure of the Department to get to grips with the number of teachers leaving puts additional pressure on schools faced with rising numbers of children needing a school place and the teachers to teach them.

Committee Chair, Meg Hillier MP, said: “A crisis is brewing in English classrooms but Government action to address it has been sluggish and incoherent.

It should have been clear to senior civil servants that growing demand for school places, combined with a drive for schools to make efficiency savings, would only build pressure in the system.

Instead they seem to have watched on, scratching their heads, as more and more teachers quit the profession.

Government must get a grip on teacher retention and we expect it to set out a targeted, measurable plan to support struggling schools as a matter of urgency.

There are other troubling trends. In 2015/16 school leaders filled only around half of their vacancies with sufficiently qualified and experienced teachers.

There are significant regional variations in vacancy levels and the quality of teaching also varies across the country. There is not enough good quality, continuing professional development available.

There is a real danger that, without meaningful intervention from Government, these challenges will become an intractable threat to children’s education.”

Read the North East angle on the Evening Chronicle.

Similar News

11
Apr

Gosforth Group Academies shine bright in latest performance tables

Exciting news from within the Gosforth Group Multi Academy Trust! The recently-released preliminary performance…

Read story
04
Apr

Uniting schools to tackle absenteeism: A national effort to keep pupils in class

A group of schools leading the way in improving attendance is joining forces to…

Read story
04
Apr

New school-based nursery places are a great step forward—but we need much more investment in early years education

The government’s announcement of 300 new school-based nurseries is a welcome step towards improving…

Read story