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School teacher trainers reveal ITTECF mentor workload doubts

ITT providers lack confidence government will achieve key targets through its new teacher training framework, survey suggests

Lucas Cumiskey

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Nearly half of school-based teacher training providers doubt mentor workload will be reduced though the new teacher training framework, and a third don鈥檛 think it will cut unnecessary repetition, a survey has suggested.

However three-quarters of respondents to a poll by the National Association of School-Based Teacher Trainers (NASBTT) said they backed the (ITTECF) in principle.

The Department for Education announced in January that the core content framework and early career framework would be combined into the ITTECF.

Ministers pledged changes alongside the new framework would lesson mentor workload and cut out unnecessary repetition between the two.

But just 21 per cent of NASBTT members who responded think the new framework will help slash workload for mentors. Nearly half said it wouldn鈥檛 make a difference. 

In January, schools minister Damian Hinds admitted mentor workload is 鈥渢oo high鈥, as he unveiled a new 鈥渓ead mentor role鈥 and said Early Career Framework (ECF) mentors will have their training shortened from two years to one year.

teacher retention
Damian Hinds

But Jo Palmer-Tweed, chief executive at Essex & Thames Education and chair of The East of England Regional Network for Initial Teacher Training (ITT), said: 鈥淐apacity at schools is probably at an all-time low 鈥 and a lot of what鈥檚 been implemented relies on expertise in schools which isn鈥檛 necessarily there, and relies on capacity in school which definitely isn鈥檛 there.

鈥淎ttempting to make sure every trainee has a consistently excellent experience is really tough because we鈥檙e having to train the mentors before they can mentor the trainees.鈥

Doubts over pledge to axe ‘unnecessary repetition’

Hinds also pledged that merging the two frameworks would get rid of 鈥渁reas of unnecessary repetition between ITT and early career training鈥 鈥 one of the criticisms of ECF and Core Content Framework (CCF). 

While 40 per cent of providers think it will help, a third think it won鈥檛.

While the survey was based on just 77 responses, this makes up a large proportion of NASBTT鈥檚 200-odd members.

Leaders said unresolved issues around delivering the new framework from September included mentoring capacity, workload related to mapping and reshaping curriculum content, time pressure and potential for continued repetition.

Emma Hollis, NASBTT chief executive, said it is 鈥渆ntirely understandable that ITT providers are not fully confident that the government will achieve its targets through the new framework鈥.

Emma Hollis
Emma Hollis

But there was some optimism. Nearly two-thirds of respondents think the new framework will improve content to help teachers support pupils with special educational needs. And more than half think it will create a more coherent journey for those joining the profession.

Will teaching apprenticeships boost recruitment?

Providers were also surveyed on the new non-graduate apprenticeship, due to be piloted next year.

Concerns raised included the costs to schools and length of time apprentices would spend in school without qualifying, the additional strain on mentoring and school capacity, and the competition for existing routes into teaching. 

Some 28.5 per cent said they did not think it would boost recruitment, versus 27.5 per cent who said it would help. Only 6.5 per cent think it will aid retention. 

鈥淚t is almost impossible to navigate your way through the apprenticeship policy and red tape, and until it is simplified significantly it is generally overly complex and too expensive for providers to run effectively鈥, Hollis added. 

A DfE spokesperson said: “It is encouraging to see this level of support for the new initial teacher training and early career framework, and we will continue to listen to feedback from providers and school staff.

鈥淭he Teacher Degree Apprenticeship will help schools recruit the skilled workforce they need by expanding opportunities for people from all backgrounds to earn while gaining the same high-quality, subject-specialist degree and qualified teacher status as those who have gone down other initial training routes.鈥

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