The DfE’s evidence to the STRB (pay review body for teachers) contains some useful information about the state of the teaching profess, and changes over the past decade and a half since the DfE moved the teacher census from January to November each year. Much has remained the same, across the whole time period. But, before delving into the past, it is worth looking at the table for offers on secondary subjects for 2025 that I created for an earlier post, but now with the data from Table FD4-FD6 of the STRB evidence Evidence to the STRB: 2026 pay award for teachers and leaders – GOV.UK
Interestingly, the DfE doesn’t seem to have included the offers against targets that might have help the STRB to see where shortfalls are likely once the ITT census is published in December.
| Subject | Target2025/26 | % increase Sept on June | accepted Sept 25 FD6 DfE to STRB | over/under target |
| Total Secondary | 19,270 | 26% | 16843 | -2,427 |
| Primary | 7,650 | 34% | 9880 | 2,230 |
| Chemistry | 730 | 49% | 909 | 179 |
| Biology | 985 | 36% | 1397 | 412 |
| Mathematics | 2,300 | 35% | 2617 | 317 |
| Design & Technology | 965 | 33% | 678 | -287 |
| Art & Design | 680 | 33% | 902 | 222 |
| Geography | 935 | 33% | 981 | 46 |
| Classics | 60 | 32% | 42 | -18 |
| English | 1,950 | 31% | 1760 | -190 |
| Drama | 620 | 30% | 273 | -347 |
| Business Studies | 900 | 29% | 235 | -665 |
| Music | 565 | 28% | 343 | -222 |
| Religious Education | 780 | 28% | 418 | -362 |
| Others | 2,520 | 25% | 360 | -2,160 |
| History | 790 | 23% | 936 | 146 |
| Modern Languages | 1,460 | 21% | 1428 | -32 |
| Physics | 1,410 | 19% | 1313 | -97 |
| Physical Education | 725 | 17% | 1491 | 766 |
| Computing | 895 | 5% | 761 | -134 |
As I suggested in my previous post, despite the renewed attraction of teaching for new graduates, there are still some subjects that won’t meet their target. Interestingly, the target for recruiting primary teachers is likely to be massively exceeded this year. Whether all those trainees will find jobs next summer is an interesting question.
With the continued shortfall against targets, where do schools find their staff from, and are they appropriately qualified? The answer to the second part of the question seems to be it depends on whether the school is in Pupil Premium decile 1 or decile 10. (Table D7) The data in this table suggests that schools in decline 1 have higher teacher wastage rates; higher percentages of unqualified teachers; higher percentages of teachers with less experience of teaching and a higher percentage of lesson taught by teachers not seen as qualified in the subject they are teaching. None of this is very surprising, but if the government wants to do something to level up outcomes, then they should pay attention to these percentages.
As to where schools find their teachers to ensure they are fully staffed if there are shortfalls in the numbers emerging from training, there has been a shift in the number of teachers coming from the old dominions, and an increase in those from other members of the Commonwealth. I will discuss these changes in more detail in another blog, as well as trends in recruitment for Europe.
Finally, it is worth noting that the secondary school teacher population expressed as Full Time equivalents (FTEs) barely changed between November 2010 and November 2020, increasing by just 265 FTEs, from 218,736 to 219,001. By contrast, the primary teacher FTEs in the same period increased from 196,258 to 215,632 by November 2024, although this was below the 225,537 FTEs recorded in November 2020, before pupil numbers began to fall.