红桃影视

Skip to content

‘It’s more than just pay’: School teachers on why they are striking

On the picket lines: Schools Week reporters spoke to teachers about why they are taking industrial action - here's what they had to say ...

Schools Week Reporter

More from this author
6 min read
|

Schools Week reporters spoke to striking teachers across England today to find out why they had taken industrial action.

Despite pay being a big issue, it was not the only reason teachers were striking. One teacher said working eight hours on a Sunday to get up to speed on lesson planning was “not unusual”.

Others are worried about recruitment struggles, with schools having to increasingly rely on non-specialist teachers for some shortage subjects.

And general funding shortages – meaning textbooks are “falling apart” and teachers have to pay for basic things like pens – was another big concern raised on picket lines.

Here’s what striking teachers told reporters Freddie Whittaker, Amy Walker and Tom Belger…


鈥榃e鈥檙e having to work longer and do more鈥

Fiona Stuart, science teacher, Archway School, Stroud

鈥淥ne of the main reasons we鈥檙e striking is because of the impact [underfunding and pay] is having on the education of students. Because there aren’t enough teachers in terms of retention and recruitment. That’s then directly affecting the education of kids.

鈥淭he recent pay rise that did go through had to be funded by schools, which again, then directly impacted on the kids because that was coming out of school budgets. I’ve been in education for 25 years, and I’ve seen the increase in workload, I’ve seen the lack of life outside the school. People are having to work longer and longer hours and are having to do more.

鈥淎nd we’re often not having fully qualified members of staff. Staff are having to teach outside their specialism more and more. Again, it all leads back to the impact on the education of children.鈥


鈥楴ot unusual to spend 8 hours marking on a Sunday

Jeremy Taylor, head of history, Bishop Thomas Grant school, Streatham

鈥淚t would not be unusual for me to spend the best part of seven or eight hours on a Sunday afternoon, Sunday evening marking students work – that’d be fairly standard. 

鈥淚t would not be unusual for me to be still in my office at 6.30pm on a Friday night, when the school finishes at 3.15pm because I’m trying to get Monday and Tuesday lessons all planned as head of department, I’ll be catching up with admin and paperwork.

鈥淏ut there’s a bigger picture here as well, which is that schools are really struggling to recruit stuff. So when I started teaching in 1999, it was not unusual for 100 history teachers to apply for a job and you’d shortlist six.

“Now, if a history job gets advertised, you won’t even get six people applying for it, let alone six on a shortlist. You might be lucky to get a shortlist of two or three. One will get a job before the interview, one will drop out and then you’re in a position where you can’t even hold a competitive interview.鈥


鈥業鈥檓 getting more money working in retail鈥

Sandrine Baker, art teacher, Bishop Thomas Grant school, Streatham

鈥淎s a newly qualified teacher, obviously I’m in the classroom by myself. It’s a lot, and especially with the whole marking and everything you don’t get – there’s just so much. And I’m going home and I’m still working. 

鈥淚 can understand why so many newly qualified teachers leave. I鈥檓 a very resilient person, and very well supported in my department. If you didn’t have that, I could have left too.

鈥淚 know some of my ECT [early career teacher] cohort from other schools in Birmingham, the level of stress they’re under, some of them are still considering [the job] because they’ve done part-time jobs in retail before and they were like ‘I’m getting more money doing retail’.鈥


‘It’s hard to do a hard job when you’re also worrying about money’

Antonia Debbonaire (left), primary school teacher, Bristol 

鈥淭he pay rise is coming out of schools鈥 budgets so it鈥檚 squeezing schools even further. And it鈥檚 not in line with inflation, so it鈥檚 not a pay rise, it鈥檚 a pay cut, and it鈥檚 really affecting lots of teachers.

“Teachers are using food banks. And it’s really hard to do a really hard job when you’re worrying about money and how you’re going to survive and all of that. So there needs to be some respect given to teachers and dignity. We should be paid properly. 

鈥淟ots of people are struggling, and we鈥檙e seeing it with the children that we teach and we’re not being able to give them what they need.”


鈥榃e鈥檙e using textbooks that are falling apart鈥

Alyson Knight, maths teacher, Archway School, Stroud

鈥淲e鈥檙e using textbooks that are falling apart, and you can鈥檛 attract people into the profession anymore. So that means we can鈥檛 get specialist teachers into the department, and that creates problems particularly for the children.

鈥淭here’s a reason why teachers aren’t coming into the profession, and they’re not staying there. People forget it鈥檚 actually quite strenuous teaching 32 15 to 16-year-olds.

鈥淎nd it鈥檚 not just about teaching a subject. It鈥檚 about helping them with their special needs, their anxiety, making sure you鈥檙e doing it at different levels. And yet your pay isn鈥檛 reflecting that.

“And people are coming out of university and looking at teaching or something else, where they can earn half as much again, get private health insurance, and don鈥檛 need to drive to work.鈥


‘I’m having to buy basic things like pens for pupils’

Sam Davis, (pictured left), textiles teacher, Bishop Thomas Grant, Streatham

鈥淢e and my colleague art teachers are actually buying materials regularly, so that we can give kids what they need.

“I鈥檓 a textiles teacher so it鈥檚 fabric or buying threads. I’m buying pens. It’s just absolutely basic things that we do not have the funding for.

鈥淎 lot of people might say we only work so many weeks a year and we have so many hours a day, but the reality is that we’re taking work home with us or we’re staying late.

鈥淚 think what all of these strikes are raising is that there is something that has gone fundamentally wrong with the way things are being funded generally. And the cost-of-living crisis is real and it is affecting people’s lives. It’s affecting people across the board.鈥


鈥楿sing non-specialist teachers is short-changing kids鈥

Mark Richards, history teacher, Archway School, Stroud

鈥淢y biggest concern is recruitment of young teachers. Also, the scarcity of new science teachers and maths teachers is a big concern, because a lot of non-specialist teachers are teaching maths and science, which is definitely short-changing the kids.鈥


‘We need to retain staff and make sure no services are lost’

Daniel Hapgood (right), maths teacher in Greenford, west London

鈥淔or me it鈥檚 about pay to retain staff and making sure no services are lost 鈥 the offer is unfunded so schools are reducing them.

“You can see those most worried about losing pay striking are ECTs 鈥 they鈥檙e most likely to leave. That鈥檚 a huge issue, and about workload too. I鈥檓 thinking about future year groups, not just current ones.鈥

Share

Explore more on these topics

No Comments

Featured jobs from FE Week jobs / Schools Week jobs

Browse more news