Commenting on the NFER's Teacher Labour Market in England
Annual Report, which makes the case that the recruitment and
retention crisis in teaching "shows no signs of abating",
Daniel Kebede, General Secretary of the National
Education Union, said:
"This report by the NFER highlights beyond a shadow of a doubt
that the teacher recruitment and retention crisis cannot be left
unaddressed. This is clear to everyone except the Government,
whose wilful neglect of the causes of this problem are now well
and truly coming home to roost.
"Underpaid, overworked and under-supported teachers in
under-resourced schools are facing unprecedented levels of
challenge and many are voting with their feet and either leaving
the profession or choosing not to enter it.
"This exodus from the profession will not be solved without fully
funded above inflation pay increases to reverse the real term pay
cuts since 2010. Attacks on teacher and school leader pay since
2010, including huge real terms cuts against inflation, have
severely damaged the competitiveness of pay as well as the living
standards of teachers and school leaders. Recruitment
targets are set to be missed yet again by wide margins,
exacerbating the teacher shortages that already exist across the
school system.
"Unless we improve teachers’ work-life balance we won’t make the
profession an appealing one to enter and stay in. And we won’t do
that unless we tackle teachers’ sky-high workload.
"The lack of school funding adds further salt to the wound with
schools and colleges having to do more and more with less and
less. External support services have also been cut back to the
bare bone with mental health support for families and children
either non-existent or run down to such woefully inadequate
levels that children wait for months if not longer to get any
support.
"Teaching is one of the best professions in the world but unless
this and any future Government addresses teacher pay, workload
and school funding we shall only see the teacher recruitment and
retention crisis deepen. Our children, young people and society
deserve so much better.”