From education to employment

IN-SCHOOL EFFORT TO SOLVE TEACHER CRISIS AS SHORTAGE HITS 50,000

A REVOLUTIONARY new initiative is being launched in the classroom to ease the chronic shortage of teachers in Britain’s schools.

Schools are facing a growing crisis to attract and retain staff, with a potential shortage of 50,000 teachers in England in the next five years — that’s equivalent to 14 teachers needed for each secondary school.

A new scheme, called Tomorrow’s Teachers, will help schools identify future teachers among their own pupils and help nurture and train them to join the profession.

Pupils will be guided through a structured course that introduces them to teaching and allows them to gain relevant skills and experience back at their old school.

The programme aims to help recruit more ā€˜home grownā€™ talent into teaching and support regions that find it particularly hard to recruit. 

Award-winning Tes New Teacher of the Year Abed Ahmed, from Birmingham, said:

“I always wanted to work at the school I attended as a pupil so I could give back to my old teachers and my local community. I felt I had an advantage also going back as it would help me to relate to the pupils better. I acted as a real role model for those pupils. They knew I was the same as them, this was the most important thing.”

Latest figures show a worrying trend of a lack of teachers.  In 2017, 43,000 left the profession, that’s 10% of those in the state sector, a rate that has been fairly static for the last five years.

Over 20% of new teachers leave the profession within their first two years of joining and 33% leave within their first five years. 

Meanwhile, the number of secondary pupils is expected to climb from 3,191,780 in 2016 to 3,838,700 by 2024, an increase of over 20%.

This means that to stay in line with the average pupil-teacher ratio since 2005 (15.1 students per teacher), the number of secondary school teachers will have to rocket by 47,000, from 208,100 in 2016 to 254,822 by 2024 ā€“ an increase of 22.5 per cent.

Tes Global has engaged 15 ā€˜founding partner schoolsā€™ from all corners of the UK to help inform the development and feasibility of the programme. These include Passmores Academy & Harlow College in Essex, The Cabot Learning Federation in Bristol and The Education Alliance in Yorkshire.

Lord Jim Knight, Chief Education & External Officer at Tes said:

ā€œThe shortage of teachers could have devastating consequences for the next generationā€™s education.

ā€œIf every school in the country spotted a potential teacher from its student cohort each year, and then gave them the practical skills and support to get them on that career path, it could have a very positive impact.ā€

Angela Rayner MP, Shadow Secretary of State for Education said:

ā€œIf we donā€™t take action, the teacher recruitment crisis weā€™re facing will only get worse. I welcome anything we can do to encourage more young people to consider a career in teaching and hope students are inspired by Tomorrowā€™s Teachers to find out more about this rewarding vocation.ā€

The worst hit areas for teacher shortages predicted by 2024:
  1. London ā€“ short of 7,617
  2. South East England ā€“ short of 7,534
  3. North West England ā€“ short of 6,181
  4. East of England ā€“ short of 5,353
  5. West Midlands ā€“ short of 5,157
  6. South West England ā€“ short of 4,487
  7. Yorkshire & The Humber ā€“ short of 4,511
  8. East Midlands ā€“ short of 3,952
  9. North East England ā€“ short of 2,210
 

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