Nearly nine in 10 local authorities have seen a rise in teacher recruitment vacancy rates since 2010, new analysis from the Trades Union Congress (TUC) shows. The news comes as new polling also reveals that nearly two-fifths of education staff have already taken steps to leave their profession to get a job in another field, or are actively considering it. In other words, the teaching profession is in a state of crisis.
Teacher recruitment crisis, made by the Tories
Teacher vacancies have increased in nearly nine in 10 (86%) English local authorities since 2010, according to new TUC analysis.
The analysis of official data shows that just one in 14 local authorities (7%) have seen an improvement in teacher recruitment.
The growth in vacancies coincides with England having one of the worst pupil-to-teacher ratios in the OECD.
According to the latest Department for Education data there were 2,100 teacher vacancies across England in November 2023 – compared to just 355 in November 2010.
The South East and East of England are the worst affected regions, with all of their local authorities reporting increases in teacher vacancies since 2010.
Missed targets
Department for Education figures show that ministers have consistently missed their teacher recruitment targets.
In nine out of the last 10 years the Conservative government has failed to recruit its target number of teachers. And in some subjects, ministers have massively under-recruited.
In 2023 alone, ministers missed their own targets for:
- Physics teachers by 83% – recruiting just 17% of their target number.
- Science teachers by over a half (56%) – recruiting just 44% of their target number.
- Maths teachers by over a third (37%) – recruiting just 63% of their target.
The only subjects where the government has met, or exceeded, its teacher recruitment targets are history and physical education.
Retention crisis
The TUC warns that the teacher recruitment crisis in English schools is being exacerbated by huge rates of staff turnover.
A third of newly qualified teachers are leaving the profession during the first five years. And many experienced staff are also quitting.
New TUC polling shows that two-fifths of education workers (38%) have already taken steps to leave their profession to get a job in another field, or are actively considering it.
As a result of recruitment and retention failures, pupil-to-qualified teacher ratios have increased since 2010. For schools overall, the ratio has risen from 17.6 to 18.5. And in secondary schools, the ratio has risen from 15.4 to 17.2.
Pay cuts and workloads are hampering teacher recruitment
The TUC says that the recruitment and retention crisis has been worsened by excessive workloads and multiple years of real-terms pay cuts.
TUC analysis for this release shows that the value of teachers pay has been cut by £172 per week (18%) between 2010 and 2023.
And TUC analysis for Work Your Proper Hours Day (23 February 2024) found that teachers are more likely to do regular unpaid overtime than any other profession.
40% of teachers do unpaid overtime on a regular basis, compared to 13% of workers across the economy.
The average amount of unpaid overtime by teachers is 11 hours per week, which adds up to 5.5 million hours of unpaid overtime by teachers every week.
‘Crumbling classrooms and a crisis in recruitment’
TUC general secretary Paul Nowak said:
Every child deserves a good education. But the Conservatives have left us with crumbling classrooms and a crisis in recruiting and retaining the teachers we need.
Everyone can see the huge pressures on schools. After years of deep pay cuts and soaring workloads, teachers are being driven out of the profession.
We can’t go on like this. We need a government that will treat teachers well and invest more in our schools so that every child can flourish.
National Association of Headteachers (NAHT) general secretary Paul Whiteman said:
The government has failed to hit its recruitment targets – and this is damaging our children’s education.
Teachers and leaders are managing alarming gaps in every part of education. This is fuelled by a collapse in graduates going into teacher training, more recently qualified teachers quitting, and experienced teachers preferring to leave the profession rather than take on the responsibility of the leadership.
To attract and retain top talent, teaching must become a competitive profession with better pay, improved conditions, and reduced workload. Our children’s education depends on it.
A profession, decimated
National Education Union (NEU) general secretary Daniel Kebede said:
This is the true legacy of 14 years in power – a profession decimated by high workload and persistent real terms pay cuts, and a government with no answers.
Teachers now top the polls for unpaid overtime hours. This is not a badge of pride. Gillian Keegan must accept that the reasons why staff are so stretched, and given to finding work elsewhere, is precisely because of the disregard this government has for education.
The Autumn Statement and Spring Budget were golden opportunities to change their approach to education. It speaks volumes that no funding was forthcoming to fix a recruitment and retention crisis of their own making.
NASUWT General Secretary Dr Patrick Roach said:
This government has allowed the teaching profession to be driven into the ground and they have now run out of time to fix the problems they created.
Change can only come from a new government that is committed to delivering a new deal for teachers and for children’s education.
We need a government that is committed to working urgently to deliver a national workforce plan which will restore morale and raise the status of the profession.
Featured image via Pressmaster – Envato Elements