After three months of record numbers of vacancies for teachers being recorded by TeachVac www.teachvac.co.uk April saw something of a slowdown in the pace of advertised vacancies. No, there wasn’t an overall decline compared with the record set for April in 2022, but the rate of increase, as the table makes clear, was less then during the first three months of 2023. Nevertheless, the monthly total of 8,557 was a new record for the period since 2018, the year when TeachVac first started analysing monthly trends in vacancies.
| 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | |
| January | 3582 | 4818 | 6497 | 2079 | 6269 | 7807 |
| February | 3010 | 4174 | 6318 | 3896 | 4628 | 9056 |
| March | 4215 | 6185 | 6811 | 6039 | 10516 | 12289 |
| April | 4777 | 6022 | 4432 | 5110 | 8461 | 8557 |
| May | 6327 | 7845 | 4375 | 6741 | 14211 | |
| June | 2223 | 3296 | 1886 | 2795 | 5968 | |
| July | 612 | 908 | 580 | 705 | 1812 | |
| August | 377 | 390 | 287 | 315 | 794 | |
| September | 1772 | 2718 | 1956 | 2960 | 4711 | |
| October | 2569 | 3745 | 2232 | 3131 | 5106 | |
| November | 2305 | 2897 | 1977 | 3392 | 5063 | |
| December | 1382 | 2090 | 1214 | 2177 | 3112 |
There may have been special factors restricting the number of vacancies in April this year. The holiday period always has an effect on the April vacancy numbers and this year there may have been an effect due to the industrial action affecting many schools.
The interesting question is what will vacancies be like during May in 2023? Traditionally, May is the peak month for classroom teacher vacancies in the secondary sector. It is too early to predict what will happen in 2023, and the effect of the coronation and the extra bank holidays in addition to the hardening of the industrial unrest in the profession might affect the profile of vacancies this month.
Nevertheless, schools do need to be fully staffed for September, and there are fewer new entrants than in recent years, as this blog has pointed out in recent posts. Should serving teachers decide to quit, in greater numbers than last year, for whatever reason, then vacancies will remain buoyant. But, should the effect of the cost-of-living crisis and increased rents and mortgages in particular deter teachers from leaving, especially if they think that in doing so, they might miss any one-off payment for back pay, then perhaps the 14,000 recorded vacancies of May 2023 might not be bettered this year.
Within the overall national picture there are examples to be found of both significant increases such as for IT teachers in London, although that was balanced by a decrease in demand for such teachers from schools across the South East. Maths teachers were in demand in the North Wet, but not in the North East during April, and Science teachers were wanted in the Yorkshire and The Humber region, but less so in the West midlands than in April 2022.
Demand for primary classroom teachers was weak in April. Leaving aside the special circumstances of April 2020, the recorded vacancies were the lowest seen since before 2018 across England as a whole, with demand across the South East being especially weak this April.
Anyone interested in more granular data by local authority or other filter is welcome to ask for a special report from TeachVac www.teachvac.co.uk Prices are reasonable and include a breakdown by state and private schools as well as by academies and maintained schools.