Last week the DfE published the Postgraduate ITT targets for 2022/23. Postgraduate initial teacher training targets, Academic Year 2022/23 – Explore education statistics – GOV.UK (explore-education-statistics.service.gov.uk) There must have been a collective sigh of relief across the ITT sector following the announcement, because, although some changes in the targets have been announced, including some reductions in overall targets, the outcome is not likely to have more than a marginal effect on providers except in Chemistry.
The full list of changes is shown in the table below
| subject | number 21/22 | number 22/23 | difference |
| Total | 31030 | 32600 | 1570 |
| Primary | 10800 | 11655 | 855 |
| Total | 20230 | 20945 | 715 |
| Modern Languages | 1505 | 2140 | 635 |
| Design & Technology | 1475 | 1825 | 350 |
| Computing | 840 | 1145 | 305 |
| Others | 1980 | 2240 | 260 |
| Geography | 745 | 945 | 200 |
| English | 1980 | 2100 | 120 |
| Physics | 2530 | 2610 | 80 |
| History | 780 | 850 | 70 |
| Classics | 40 | 30 | -10 |
| Religious Education | 470 | 450 | -20 |
| Physical Education | 1010 | 980 | -30 |
| Biology | 820 | 780 | -40 |
| Drama | 330 | 290 | -40 |
| Art & Design | 580 | 530 | -50 |
| Music | 540 | 470 | -70 |
| Business Studies | 725 | 635 | -90 |
| Chemistry | 1080 | 885 | -195 |
| Mathematics | 2800 | 2040 | -760 |
As the DfE noted in their announcement ‘It is also important to note that recruitment to postgraduate ITT in 2022/23 has not been limited for any subject except physical education. Therefore, although targets for certain subjects may have decreased compared to last year, this does not necessarily mean there will be fewer trainees recruited as a consequence – recruitment can exceed targets.’
This statement, of course, raises the question of why have targets? The answer is complicated, and has been a matter for debate for many years. I assume that The Treasury wants some idea of both how the DfE will spent its cash on schemes it operates, and what the drawdown of student loans could be at its maximum. Both are legitimate questions for government to ask. For a number of years, I was part of a group that discussed these targets before they were released, in those days in the autumn as recruitment to the round was about to start. Now, I read them at the same time as everyone else.
The DfE commentary also notes that adjustments have been made for under-recruitment in certain subjects.
‘A key driver of whether the 2022/23 targets have increased/fallen for specific secondary subjects is the extent to which those targets have been adjusted to build in the impact of recruitment being below target in the two previous ITT rounds before 2022/23.
An example of a subject where such an adjustment has been made is modern languages. In the previous two ITT rounds, recruitment for modern languages was below target, so we have increased the 2022/23 target for modern languages to account for this previous under-recruitment. This is the first time we have made such an adjustment for the subject, leading to modern languages having the largest percentage increase in targets this year.
For some subjects, the impact of previous under-recruitment against targets can be offset by other factors. A good example of this is mathematics, where we have seen a decrease in the 2022/23 target compared to last year’s target. Whilst the 2020/21 and 2021/22 PGITT targets for mathematics were not met, the impact of this under-recruitment was more than offset by increases in the numbers of PGITT trainees, returners, and teachers that are new to the state-funded sector being recruited. Furthermore, there was an increase in the proportion of mathematics trainees entering the workforce immediately after ITT.’
This comment from the DfE suggests that retraining courses for serving teachers in subjects such as mathematics might now be considered when calculating targets. It would have been interesting to have seen the worked example for mathematics in order to see which of factors was important in reducing the total to a number close to that for English. Certainly, TeachVac has recorded lower demand for mathematics this year than might have been expected.
Interestingly, in the list of factors affecting the calculation of the targets, the DfE focus on factors affecting inflows. It is not clear the extent to which the changing global marketplace for teachers affects ‘outflows’ and whether any pause due to the effects of covid may have only been a temporary reduction in the number of teachers departing these shores?
The issue of including the effects of under-recruitment in the current targets is an interesting one. Schools start each September fully staffed, so there is a risk that by including the shortfall from previous years in the new target the supply is inflated to a point where a proportion of trainees won’t find a teaching post. It would be interesting to see if these are mostly likely to be trainees with student loans not training through an employer managed route. The DfE will have that data. Inflated targets can also lead to places being provided in parts of the country where there are not jobs. This was a consequence of using this methodology in the 1990s.
At the present time, this consideration of whether to include a previous shortfall in the current target is merely an academic discussion in most subjects, since 2022 will most likely again see courses fail to hit even these revised targets where they have been lowered, except perhaps in Chemistry and possibly mathematics, both subjects where over-recruitment is permitted.
However, the methodology used in calculating targets via the Teacher Supply model (TSM) process may become more important for providers in coming years as pupil numbers stabilise and funding comes under pressure, especially if large salary increases to cop with high inflation are not fully funded by government.
There will be tough times ahead in the ITT world. Will schools want to stay involved and what will be the collective views of Vice Chancellors towards the DfE and ITT?
Even though the rise in Physics targets indicates the new unpublished model considers prior under-recruitment, the DfE’s calculation, of individual targets for the separate sciences, appears at odds to data in the School Workforce Census.
They have clearly stated in their methodology for these targets that “the demand for individual secondary subjects is based upon the current split of teaching time across subjects as recorded within the School Workforce Census”. (https://explore-education-statistics.service.gov.uk/find-statistics/school-workforce-in-england)
In the most recent set of SWC data, there were approximately 624,800 hours of “All sciences” being taught in 2020/21. Only 157,800 hours in KS3-5 were identified as specifically Biology, Chemistry or Physics lessons with the vast majority (74%) of the hours therefore related to a combined science approach.
If the new model is published, it would be interesting to recalculate for the three separate sciences targets by introducing a component towards combined science hours as well as specialism hours. I doubt if there would be such a drop in Chemistry and Biology targets
Mark, Thanks for the insight. I was surprised at the change in the Chemistry target.
John Howson