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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, January 14, 2001 |
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Attracting good teachers
AS the new year began, some schools announced that, because of a
shortage of teachers, they might have to introduce a four-day
week. The Graduate Teacher Training Registry, the body which co-
ordinates recruitment to training courses, has reported that 16
per cent fewer graduates had applied for such courses compared to
this time a year ago.
As an immediate reaction, the Government has announced proposed
spending of œ32 million to help the most hard pressed schools.
Last year, it introduced training salaries for graduates
undertaking postgraduate teacher training. It had some effect on
recruitment, but the estimate is that 12 per cent of those
graduating from British universities would need to be attracted
into the teaching profession if the demand for new secondary
school teachers is to be met. Furthermore, the problem is not
limited to secondary schools; in primary schools too, there is a
shortage of good teachers, though it is not so acute.
The implications are serious, and the problem is long term. Not
only are people not being attracted into the teaching profession;
many good teachers are leaving it. Money is part of the cause,
particularly for people deciding not to embark on a teaching
career. Employment is a market, and at the moment, there is a
buoyant demand for able people.
Talk to teachers even superficially, however, and you quickly
discover that money is not the only cause. The other day, for
example, I asked an experienced teacher now working as the
administrator of a charity (at a salary much the same as she
would get in teaching) if she missed her old profession. "Not at
all," was the answer, "I am glad to be free of the hassle."
It is a common reaction. For years teachers have been faced with
an increasingly onerous proliferation of bureaucratic demands on
their time. They have been subjected to inspections - which no
good teacher objects to - carried out under the auspices of a
body, OFSTED (the Office for Standards in Education) whose
recently departed head seemed to be often openly contemptuous of
teachers. They have had to take on board a multiplicity of new
policies introduced by politicians.
Many of the politicians in charge of education during the past 20
years have been, to put it kindly, from the less impressive end
of the political spectrum.
In short, teachers feel that they are not valued. I say "feel"
because this remains true, in spite of the fact that the present
Government has been taking steps to remedy the situation. It is
not a problem susceptible to a simple solution. Money, clearly,
is part of the solution - and not just starting salaries. What is
needed is a pay structure that offers good teachers a standard of
living comparable with that in other professions. Really good
teachers are not in it just for the money. The same is true of
nurses, and doctors, and academics. Nevertheless, adequate
financial rewards are important; it is not realistic, or right,
to take the position that people with a sense of vocation should
be penalised.
At least as important, in the case of teachers, is public
recognition that what they are doing is not just worthwhile, but
crucial to the continuing success of the country. That is no
exaggeration; indeed, in our knowledge-based society, it is truer
than it ever was. Denigration of the kind practised by Mr. Chris
Woodhead, the former head of OFSTED, is deeply damaging, and
deeply stupid. (It is significant that in BBC Radio Four's
"Today" programme list of heroes and villains, on which listeners
were invited to vote, Mr Woodhead came top on the list of
villains.)
As I write, Mr. Gordon Brown, the Chancellor of the Exchequer
(Finance Minister) is pledging the Government to create full
employment in all regions of the country over the next five years
- with jobs that are skilled, and well paid. Like most political
pledges, this one must be treated with some scepticism,
particularly in the run-up to a general election. However, the
aim is good and, if the economy continues strong, it may be
achievable.
The closer it comes to being achieved, the more competitive the
employment market will become, and the wider will be the choice
of attractive, and often well paid, career possibilities open to
graduates. If we take the importance of maintaining a vibrant and
adequately staffed teaching profession seriously, introducing
policies which will attract good people into it, and encourage
them to stay, becomes even more urgent.
BILL KIRKMAN
The author is an Emeritus Fellow of Wolfson College, Cambridge.
E-mail him at wpk1000@cam.ac.uk
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