The latest data on ITT applications, published by the DfE before the holiday break, revealed that just three subjects accounted for 49% of applicants to secondary ITT courses. Initial teacher training application statistics for courses starting in the 2022 to 2023 academic year – Apply for teacher training – GOV.UK (apply-for-teacher-training.service.gov.uk) The data are for applicants up to the 3rd December 2021.
| Subject | Total | Percentage |
| Art and design | 378 | 3% |
| Biology | 552 | 5% |
| Business studies | 283 | 2% |
| Chemistry | 509 | 4% |
| Classics | 62 | 1% |
| Computing | 309 | 3% |
| Design and technology | 243 | 2% |
| Drama | 352 | 3% |
| English | 1537 | 13% |
| Geography | 385 | 3% |
| History | 1057 | 9% |
| Mathematics | 1385 | 12% |
| Modern foreign languages | 568 | 5% |
| Music | 191 | 2% |
| Other | 564 | 5% |
| Physical education | 2832 | 24% |
| Physics | 307 | 3% |
| Religious education | 231 | 2% |
| 11745 | 100% |
Source: DfE
English (13%); Mathematics (12%) and Physical Education (24%) together accounted for 49% of applicants, with PE accounting for nearly a quarter of the overall total!
So far, the TV advert being aired on one of the Freeview Channels doesn’t seem to be making a big impact in drawing in applicants in many subject areas, with most subjects recording in the region of 1-3% of the total.
The good news is that Physics applicants accounted for three percent of the total, but that is a third of the percentage of applicants for history. So, there is a long way to go to reach the totals needed to fill vacancies in September 2023 and January 2024 when these applicants will be job hunting.
Visit http://www.teachvac.co.uk for teaching posts across England in both State & private schools
In the run up to Christmas, the BBC ran a story about the likelihood of ex-teachers helping out in the classroom if the covid pandemic lays low large numbers of teachers in January. Covid: Doubts that ex-teachers will return by January – BBC News REC The Recruitment and Employment Confederation expressed the view that a backlog of DBS checks might hamper any return to the classroom even if ex-teachers were willing to do so.
The BBC story didn’t consider the many PE and history teachers that graduated from ITT in the summer and are already BDS checked and have not found a teaching job. An emergency scheme to offer them temporary employment ought to have been put in place already to ensure time wasn’t wasted, but the DFE doesn’t seem to be able to manage the market in such a manner. Of course, in former times, local authorities would have taken such action, but they have neither the cash nor the motivation to do so these days.
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