In this time when history had gained a new relevance in our lives, I thought I would use the time available to me to look back at teacher recruitment in the 1990s. it would be interesting to look at recruitment in 1952, but the world of education has changed so much since then that the numbers really wouldn’t mean a great deal. In those days most teachers that were trained did so through the Certificate route and most only studies for two years. Graduate teachers were mostly untrained and in selective and independent schools. However, I was lucky to attend a state primary school where the headteachers was a physics graduate. How rare was that. W. W. Ashton an interesting character and a rarity in the primary sector of the 1950s.
The following data is taken from the pay review body Report of February 1996 (5th Report of STRB Table 27) I have selected 1994-95 to put alongside 2021-22, as that year marked the high point in recruitment during the five-year period between 1991-92 and 1995-96.
A couple of caveats. The 1994-95 numbers included recruitment in Wales, and the 2021-22 numbers don’t include Teach First and are based on August offers. The table can be updated once the ITT census appears at the end of 2022 as there will be late acceptances and some offered places earlier in the year might not actually start the course. Even with these caveats, there seems to be a story to tell.
| SECONDAY SECTOR SUBJECTS | 19945-95 Number recruited | 2021-22 August offers excludes Teach First | Change 2021-2022 on 1994-1995 |
| MOD LANGS | 1915 | 770 | -1145.00 |
| DESIGN/TECHNOLOGY | 1951 | 806 | -1145.00 |
| SCIENCES | 2950 | 1922 | -1028.00 |
| MUSIC | 586 | 286 | -300.00 |
| GEOGRAPHY | 744 | 596 | -148.00 |
| RELIGIOUS ED | 511 | 388 | -123.00 |
| MATHEMATICS | 1888 | 1857 | -31.00 |
| ENGLISH & DRAMA | 1994 | 1969 | -25.00 |
| PHYSICAL ED | 1379 | 1535 | 156.00 |
| HISTORY | 935 | 1127 | 192.00 |
| TOTAL | 14853 | 11256 | -3597.00 |
Even taking off a number for the recruitment in Wales and adding in possible Teach First recruitment, the comparison shows the decline in interest in teaching in the secondary sector. The numbers are not matched against perceived need as defined in the DfE’s Teacher Supply Model but are nevertheless useful in showing the changing interest in teaching. Physical Education and history teaching are more attractive than in 1994-95, although there may have been a more rigorous cap on applications at that time than currently, so there may have been interested applicants that could not be offered places. For that analysis, the percentage of offer to total applicants will need to be investigated.
Maths and English are at similar levels with offer this year to recruitment in 1994-95 and with swap between the removal of Wales recruits and the addition of Teach First to the totals may well be ahead this year of the 1994-95 total.
For the other six subjects in the table, the picture is very different with savage reductions across the languages and for the design, technology and IT areas. Even if Art as a subject was added to the design/technology total that would still leave a significant shortfall this year.
The number for the sciences is an interesting case. In 1994-95 recruitment was to ‘science’ courses. Nowadays, there are separate totals for each science. This shift while welcome in some respects has meant the opportunity to over-recruit in some sciences is more difficult than previously where there are likely to be shortfalls in other science subjects. The move was a good idea but the need for flexibility of recruitment as the year progresses may still be important.
In 1994-95, the employment-based routes were still in their infancy, and university-based courses were the main route into secondary school teaching.
The question for the new government still remains as to how to reverse the trend in recruitment in so many subjects and once again make teaching a career of choice?