The House of Commons Education Select Committee held its first oral evidence session this morning as part of its inquiry into recruitment and retention. The Committee discussed with representatives of the teacher and further education professional associations their views on the present state of affairs with regard to recruitment and retention.
It was not a surprise to hear all the witnesses explain that the present situation in both schools and colleges represented a crisis, and that there was no solution in sight. Interestingly, nobody mentioned the effects of any downturn in the economy on teacher recruitment – not even evidencing what happened at the start of the covid pandemic when interest in ITE increased sharply. There was also no mention of teaching as a global career and the growth of UK private schools overseas as a source of jobs for teachers.
Pay, working conditions and morale all came up, and were cited as areas where the DfE needed to take action. The fact that all four professional associations are in dispute with the DfE was mentioned, but the lack of the STRB Report received relatively little consideration.
Two issues discussed in detail were the question of school leadership and how attractive it is. There was the usual discussion about how to keep good teachers in the classroom and some statements about teachers not wanting to become head teachers. There was also a discussion about how teaching behaves in relation to ‘protected’ groups in society.
Talking the first issue on leadership, it is interesting to look at the recent data from the School Workforce Survey on deputy and assistant heads working in the primary school sector in the under 49 age groups and specifically, for assistant heads, the under 39 age groups.
| AH | DH | ||
| FEMALE | 25-29 | 388 | 99 |
| 30-39 | 4352 | 2571 | |
| 40-49 | 3954 | 4123 | |
| 8694 | 6793 | ||
| MALE | 25-29 | 111 | 43 |
| 30-39 | 1108 | 962 | |
| 40-49 | 674 | 888 | |
| 1893 | 1893 | ||
| NON-G | 25-29 | 1 | 0 |
| 30-39 | 0 | 2 | |
| 40-49 | 0 | 0 | |
| ALL | 25-29 | 500 | 142 |
| 30-39 | 5460 | 3535 | |
| 40-49 | 4628 | 5011 | |
| 10588 | 8688 |
There were around 6,000 assistant heads in the primary sector under the age of 40 in November 2022. That ought to be sufficient to provide candidates for deputy headships, at least at the national level.
There are somewhere around 1,500 primary headships advertised each year. With less than 4,000 deputy heads under the age of 40 that means schools will need to draw heavily on the 5,000 primary headteachers in their 40s for many vacancies. This does leave the ratio of candidates to vacancies worryingly low, especially as the recruitment round progresses, and good candidates are appointed to vacancies. I think that there is a matter for concern here that the NAHT were wise to draw the Committee’s attention to in oral evidence.
As to minority groups, there is work to be done here to encourage men, ethnic minorities and those with disabilities to take up teaching as a career. Here are a couple of links to my blogs on the topic written in past years
‘We need more black headteachers in our schools’ | John Howson (wordpress.com)
This is an area where clearly the DfE seems to be paying less attention than in the past. Perhaps, it shows a consequence of the lack of a dedicated unit on teacher supply, training and professional development.
Such a unit might have helped the DfE create a coherent policy to solve the current staffing crisis in our schools and colleges that should have caught nobody unawares.
The issue of lack of diversity within leadership positions is a problem not only on the grounds of equity and representation (a good enough reason in and of itself) but also in terms of recruitment needs.
With recruitment to senior positions coming under pressure and with the demographic of the UK changing we need to be able to draw candidates from a all backgrounds.