The government will launch a long-awaited apprenticeship route into teaching for non-graduates next year, it has been announced. The four-year course, which would see apprentices achieve a degree and qualified teacher status, will be piloted with 鈥渦p to鈥 150 trainee maths teachers from September 2025. Apprentices would spend 鈥渁round 40 per cent鈥 of their time studying and the rest of the time in the classroom, the Department for Education said. The government missed its secondary teacher recruitment target by 50 per cent this year. Planning for a route that does not require applicants to already have a degree has gone on behind the scenes for years. Without such a route, schools have limited ways to spend money they pay into the apprenticeship levy. Gillian Keegan But earlier attempts never came to fruition, in part due to opposition from former schools minister Nick Gibb, who left government in November. Education secretary Gillian Keegan said the teacher degree apprenticeship (TDA) would be a 鈥済ame-changing opportunity for schools to nurture and retain talent from the ground up, helping apprentices to gain the knowledge and skills they need to teach future generations”. 鈥淭he teacher degree apprenticeship will open up the profession to more people, from those who want a career change to those who are looking for an earn and learn route without student debt.鈥 Concerns route could ‘truncate’ training A postgraduate apprenticeship has existed for several years but requires applicants to already hold a degree. Government data shows 630 people achieved the qualification in 2021-22. ITT census figures show 962 applied for the course this academic year. The DfE said its teacher degree apprenticeship would offer a 鈥渉igh-quality, alternative route for people to become qualified teachers鈥, and would 鈥渄iversify the route into teaching so schools across the country can continue to recruit the teachers they need鈥. Paul Whiteman The department added it would 鈥減rovide a new route for teaching assistants who do not have an existing degree to train to become a teacher and continue their career progression in the classroom鈥. Paul Whiteman of the NAHT said his union was 鈥渟upportive of apprenticeships, but our view is that the threshold for entry onto teacher training should continue to include holding a degree鈥. 鈥淲e remain very concerned about any proposals that look to truncate degrees and teacher training, as this scheme does.鈥 Apprentices are paid on the job, but it is not clear what rate those on the degree apprenticeship route will receive. Trainees will spend 40% of time studying The apprentice minimum wage is just 拢5.28 for those in their first year, but trainees on the current postgraduate route into teaching are paid on the unqualified teacher pay scale, which starts at just over 拢20,000 a year outside London. The DfE said apprentices would spend 鈥渁round 40 per cent of their time studying for their degree with an accredited teacher training provider, gain qualified teacher status and all tuition fees are paid for, so trainees won鈥檛 be saddled with the student debt鈥. It is also not clear whether the government will expect the qualification to be offered only by universities, or whether other teacher training providers will be given degree-awarding powers. The department said it was 鈥渨orking with subject experts and the trailblazer group to co-develop how universities and schools offering the TDA can ensure secondary subject specialism is comprehensive and high-quality鈥. The courses also 鈥渕ust adhere to the ITT criteria, encompass all aspects of the ITT core content framework (CCF) and enable trainees to meet the teacher standards鈥. Pilot for maths trainees next autumn Ministers will launch recruitment to the pilot scheme in the autumn. It will see the government 鈥渨orking with a small number of schools and teacher training providers to fund up to 150 apprentices to work in secondary schools to teach maths鈥. Training providers 鈥渨ill bid to partake in the pilot and trainees will be recruited from this autumn and start their training the following year鈥. The teacher degree apprenticeship grant funding pilot will only include government funding for the training of one cohort. Degree apprenticeships are key to increasing and diversifying recruitment After that, schools will have to use levy funding. The DfE said providers and schools would also be able to 鈥渄evelop and run鈥 apprenticeship courses with their own funding from September 2025. The apprenticeship has been developed by a 鈥 panels of employers that draw up the standards that underpin courses. The group is chaired by the South Farnham Educational Trust, whose chief executive Sir Andrew Carter led the government鈥檚 review of teacher training in 2015. A spokesperson for the trust said the apprenticeship 鈥減resents an ideal opportunity for talented professionals without a degree to pursue their dream of teaching鈥. 鈥淭he opportunity to gain QTS and a degree through the new TDA would enable our Trust to invest in talented individuals early in their career and grow them into outstanding teachers of the future.鈥 But Geoff Barton, general secretary of the ASCL leaders鈥 union, said while the apprenticeship was a 鈥済ood idea in principle鈥, it was 鈥渦nlikely that teacher degree apprenticeships will provide anywhere near the number of qualified teachers required to solve the recruitment and retention crisis鈥. He added that he was 鈥渃oncerned about how realistic this will be in reality for many schools given the number of competing demands on them and the lack of sufficient staffing and funding in the education system鈥.
Nicholas Marshall 4 February 2024 I鈥檇 be interested to see how these students are able to teach A Level without a degree in Maths. Another stupid idea from people who have already helped to wreck the profession.
Rich 10 February 2024 They will be degree level as part of the apprenticeship Nicholas. It is a level 6 apprenticeship over 4 years. They may not be able to deliver a level maths but the demand for that is not the same volume as GCSE even with the mandatory requirement for maths up to 18. We need to remove the university snobbery, it鈥檚 not the institution but the knowledge that matters and surely embedding practical teacher training over 4 years has to be a good thing?