Yesterday, in this blog, I wrote that music courses preparing new teachers for our schools had the highest conversion rate of applicants to offers for any subject. By June this year, some 63% of candidates have been offered places. This compares with just 27% of candidates applying to become a business studies teacher. This data comes from the DfE’s monthly updates on recruitment into these courses.
I also pointed out that the 325 candidates offered places by June this year, of the 565 that have applied, meant that the DfE’s target for new entrants of 565 was unlikely to be met ,making 10 missed targets in the last 11 years.
Music ITT recruitment
| Recruiting year | June | September | difference | ITT census | Target | % filled |
| 2014/15 | 310 | 360 | 50 | 353 | 481 | 73% |
| 2015/16 | 340 | 370 | 30 | 357 | 399 | 89% |
| 2016/17 | 290 | 310 | 20 | 295 | 393 | 75% |
| 2017/18 | 250 | 310 | 60 | 300 | 409 | 73% |
| 2018/19 | 240 | 320 | 80 | 312 | 392 | 80% |
| 2019/20 | 360 | 480 | 120 | 469 | 385 | 122% |
| 2020/21 | 390 | 420 | 30 | 386 | 540 | 71% |
| 2021/22 | 228 | 287 | 59 | 292 | 470 | 62% |
| 2022/23 | 201 | 230 | 29 | 216 | 790 | 27% |
| 2023/24 | 288 | 378 | 90 | 331 | 820 | 40% |
| 2024/25 | 326 | 565 |
The table shows that the only time the DfE target for music was met was during the initial covid year, when there was a surge of applications for teacher preparation courses. Even in that year, the 469 trainees recorded at the time if the ITT census in the autumn would not have been enough to meet the target for this year of 565.
Between June and September new offers made have ranged from 120 in the covid year to as low as 20 in 216/17. Based upon last year’s figure of 90 new offers, and assuming this year is a little better and that 100 new offers are made, would mean a figure of around 426 offers by September, still more than 100 adrift of the target for this year that has been set at a more sensible level of 565 compared with the targets for the previous two years.
In passing, it is worth recording that adding shortfalls into future targets is not a helpful exercise, especially as all schools start the year fully staffed. Doing so also makes the percentage of target filled number misleadingly low, as with the 27% of the 2022/23 recruitment round.
Collecting this data together isn’t just of interest to data watchers. There is a serious issue here that is also linked to the cutbacks in university courses currently underway.
Imagine a scenario where the civil servant in charge of teacher supply and training meets his opposite number in charge of universities over coffee one lunchtime this summer. ‘I have just seen the data on ITT music offers and we risk not hitting our target again this year’. ‘Bad luck’, the other replies, ‘but if universities cut music courses, won’t that make it even more difficult for you in future years?’ ‘You cannot let that happen, as we need graduates for teaching’. ‘Sorry, universities are free agents, and music courses are not in fashion right now.’ ‘What shall we do?’ ‘Perhaps we can write a joint paper for the PS mentioning apprenticeships’ ‘Good idea, job done.’ ‘After all music is an important export industry, and we mustn’t let it go the way of design and technology in our schools.’
Last week I attended a concert in Dorchester Abbey where in the course of a week pupils from 41 primary schools came together to sing their hearts out. We must ensure that music is available to all of them when they transfer to secondary schools.