When English teacher Gareth Edwards broke his ankle, attempting a karate kick dance move at the school Christmas party, he was able to recuperate at home and teach classes remotely. Then, when the 59-year-old was contemplating early retirement last year, he was persuaded instead to go down to three days a week. Had his school, Thomas Gainsborough in Suffolk, not allowed him that flexibility, he 鈥減robably鈥 would have ended his career altogether. Last year, almost 40,000 teachers left state schools for reasons other than retirement. Because of his school鈥檚 flexibility, Edwards wasn鈥檛 one of those. Part of Unity Schools Partnership, Thomas Gainsborough is one of 10 ambassador schools and trusts (one for each region) appointed by the Department for Education to develop and provide advice to others interested in doing the same. Nationally, only around 20 per cent of secondary school teachers work part-time. At Thomas Gainsborough, it is more than a third (34 of its 100 teachers) – a rise of 15 per cent on last year. Assistant headteacher Alex Blagona, who leads the school鈥檚 flexible working programme, says that, given flexibility, 鈥渢he vast majority鈥 of staff will 鈥減ay that back in kind later down the line鈥. The school is also, literally, being paid back. The approach led to a 30 per cent drop in staff absences last year, helping to save 拢30,000 in supply costs. Paid leave was also down by 80 per cent. Thomas Gainsborough English teacher Gareth Edwards 鈥楴ot just being fluffy bunny鈥 Given the recruitment and retention crisis, schools like Thomas Gainsborough feel they have little choice but to be flexible. Just over one-third of teachers and leaders in 2023 (36 per cent) were considering leaving the state school sector over the next 12 months (excluding for retirement), up from 25 per cent in 2022. Eighty per cent of teachers leaving blamed the high workload, while 37 per cent cited lack of flexible working opportunities. 鈥淲e had to adapt, because teachers know the job market out there means they can find part-time work elsewhere,鈥 Blagona says. 鈥淪chools are now aware of the value of their teachers.鈥 Headteacher Helen Yapp has just allowed one of her heads of department to work from home on the day of our visit because absences elsewhere mean 鈥渟he had flogged herself to the bone鈥. 鈥淭hat was the human thing to do. We talk about trying to understand the invisible emotional backpacks people carry, but I’m not soft 鈥 I also don鈥檛 want her going off long-term sick. So, it’s not just about being fluffy bunny, it鈥檚 about being quite strategic.鈥 Yapp believes the parents of her pupils are unaware of its flexible approach. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 need to be as it doesn鈥檛 affect their child.鈥 However, 鈥渢hey would comment if we had long-term supply鈥. But there is nervousness about an apparent public perception of lazy teachers. The DfE鈥檚 flexible working group and leaders from its ambassador schools and trusts got together in London last month on the day that a news story broke about a Teach First report on attracting new teachers. Teachers were being 鈥渙ffered lie-ins鈥, the headline said. The framing of the story 鈥渟ent alarm bells鈥 through the group, Blagona says, because 鈥渢hat鈥檚 not the narrative we鈥檙e trying to push鈥. Thomas Gainsborough鈥檚 staff can spend their planning, preparation and assessment (PPA) time off-site so long as they are not required for cover duties. Several teachers start late on some days 鈥 so they can do school drop-offs, not sleep in. They also sometimes leave school early. Blagona currently has flexibility to work from home four mornings a week, which enables him to spend more time with his daughter and get a 鈥渕ental break鈥 from the hectic school environment. Thomas Gainsborough School head Helen Yapp Timetabling turmoils But Blagona says the school, which is the ambassador for the Eastern region, is facing 鈥渃hallenges鈥 in 鈥渂ringing other schools along with us鈥. 鈥淚t’s still that perception that the new age of hybrid working in the private sector isn’t one that really fits in with the educational picture.鈥 Two of the original ambassador schools have since pulled out of the programme. The DfE鈥檚 survey suggests a rise in cynicism around the feasibility of flexible working. Fifty-six per cent of teachers and leaders thought flexible working was incompatible with a teaching career, up from 51 per cent in 2022. Blagona says that among the participant schools he speaks to, 鈥渢he number one issue鈥 holding them back is timetabling constraints. Some tried offering all staff a free period on set days, which proved impossible. But he believes timetabling should not be a deterrent. 鈥淵ou have to be canny, it involves thinking outside the box as to how you allocate teachers,鈥 he says. The secret, Blagona says, is 鈥渂eing open with people, so there’s no special deals done behind closed doors to different members of staff鈥. Thomas Gainsborough deputy head Alex Blagona Job-share joy Thomas Gainsborough鈥檚 approach was born out of a 鈥渢ough pandemic鈥, after which a dozen staff announced their retirement plans. Its rural location 鈥 an hour鈥檚 commute from the nearest big town (Ipswich) 鈥 makes recruitment tricky at the best of times. The school 鈥渘eeded a plan to encourage people to join us鈥. It has been advertising flexible teacher roles, which helps to outweigh the negatives of a potentially long commute for those based further afield. Half the school鈥檚 part-time staff have changed their work patterns since joining, including six young mums and four teachers in job-shares. This is unusual for a secondary school; the DfE鈥檚 survey found only 1 per cent of teachers at secondaries in job-shares, compared with 12 per cent in primaries. Liliana Hurtado-Read, the school鈥檚 head of modern languages, job-shares with her husband Laurence. She almost quit after returning from her last maternity leave, finding the hours 鈥渜uite challenging鈥 given that one of her children has special needs and is partially home-schooled. Thomas Gainsborough head of languages Liliana Hurtado Read Now she teaches Spanish four days a week and Laurence takes over on the other day. They also share a tutor group, which 鈥渇eels like a family鈥. When there is a crisis at home, they 鈥渟tep in for each other鈥. Liliana says the job-share has allowed the couple to 鈥渃ontinue growing professionally and benefit from being with the children鈥. But 鈥渓evels of coordination and organisation鈥 in their household have to be 鈥渞eally high鈥, and they have 鈥渓ittle time together鈥 as a couple. 鈥淚t’s not an easy thing to do. You need to be able to give from both sides.鈥 Yapp says being flexible has meant 鈥渒eeping some of our better staff鈥. While experienced staff are more expensive to hold onto, it is a price worth paying. 鈥淚 don’t not balance my budget,鈥 she says. Wellbeing in work A common misconception of flexible working is that it costs schools more. The school was reluctant to get into the finer details of its budget, but said its staffing costs this year were 75 per cent of its total income, which has not changed significantly in the past two years. Government guidance says staff pay typically represents over 70 per cent of expenditure; anything over 80 per cent is 鈥渃onsidered high鈥. Thomas Gainsborough also receives around 拢50,000 for being a DfE ambassador school. Yapp believes the 鈥渋nterest in flexible working is growing鈥, but there is still a cultural stigma in secondaries where 鈥渋t’s too complicated not to work full time鈥. Mistakes have been made around staff not having 鈥減rofessional understanding that being able to work flexibly needs to fit both parties鈥. Since the pandemic, Blagona鈥檚 team has also become 鈥渞eally aware鈥 of staff 鈥減utting on a brave face and sometimes going into school when really they shouldn’t鈥 Part of maintaining wellbeing is understanding it’s OK not to be OK.鈥 Alex Blagona and Debbie Kwakkelstein Debbie Kwakkelstein, the school鈥檚 cover manager, recalls how a decade ago its teachers believed that 鈥測ou couldn鈥檛 just have one day off, because no one would believe you were sick. So they used to take two.鈥 She reassured them that she believed their reasons for absence, which helped bring about a cultural shift towards 鈥渓ots of one-day absences鈥 instead. 鈥淭hat saves us money in our cover output鈥 There鈥檚 a very good rapport of people helping each other.鈥 Kwakkelstein, 60, was herself feeling 鈥減ulled in all directions鈥, juggling caring responsibilities as a daughter and grandmother with her job, when she started mulling retirement this year. Blagona says the school saw her as a 鈥渧alued agony aunt鈥 with 20 years of 鈥減ersonal knowledge of staff and supply agencies鈥 they 鈥渄idn鈥檛 want to lose鈥. So, they struck a deal, reducing her responsibilities to finding cover in the mornings, rather than teaching cover herself, in return for a 50 per cent pay cut. Thomas Gainsborough School Blagona says the willingness to reduce hours 鈥渋s still rare in schools 鈥 Some would rather just see a member of staff go.鈥 But he believes that holding onto experienced staff for longer means they can 鈥減ass down knowledge鈥, to newer staff members, which 鈥渕akes them feel valued in school鈥. Meanwhile, Edwards鈥 new shorter working week has given him time for other pursuits. Yesterday he went dancing with a friend 鈥 hopefully avoiding any karate-kick moves. 鈥淚t does seem like I’ve got the best of all worlds now,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 have to keep the grin off my face sometimes, as I don鈥檛 want to look too smug.鈥