
What’s happening overseas?
Other countries are seeing Omicron-fuelled teacher shortages. In England teachers have been told to combine classes due to staff shortages.Colchester school appeals to parents to fill teacher shortage | BBC News https://t.co/q9v75HgKWb
— School News (@schoolsontap) January 17, 2022
???????? The French government will recruit 3,300 contract workers and provide 5 million FFP2 masks to schools, it announced Thursday after teachers went on strike Thursday ???????????? pic.twitter.com/Hvuc1t7gAk
— FRANCE 24 English (@France24_en) January 14, 2022
Hi, so that teacher shortage everyone's been talking about… pic.twitter.com/SloJXC9bWA
— Tanner Delpier (@tdelpier) January 12, 2022
Australia’s teacher shortage
Australia’s teachers suffer from poor professional status. A lack of respect, problems with recruitment, poor pay (relative to other professions), high workload, conflicting demands and now the pandemic, have conspired to create a perfect storm. A range of data and reports suggest the scale of the emerging teacher shortage will be serious. Low completion rates of teacher degrees (fewer than 60% of those who started the degree) alongside rising child and youth demographic trends mean many schools, particularly those in rural areas, will find things even more difficult over the next few years. Reports from the New South Wales education department, accessed by the NSW Teachers Federation, show more than 1,100 full time secondary and special education teaching positions were unfilled in 2021. That’s a lot of classrooms without a teacher. The documents also reportedly say the state’s public schools will “run out of teachers in the next five years”. Meanwhile, states struggled to find casual and relief teachers to fill the pandemic exacerbated shortages in the past two years.There are more than 1100 unfilled primary, secondary & special education positions in country and city schools.
— Unions NSW (@unionsnsw) October 7, 2021
We can’t fix the shortages without fixing the workload and salaries problems that have reduced the attractiveness of the profession. Teachers deserve #morethanthanks pic.twitter.com/UQRhOuQFSq
Members at Drummond Memorial Public School in Armidale wallked out this week in response to the state-wide staffing crisis and the NSW Government’s inability to appropriately staff their school. #MoreThanThanks pic.twitter.com/6soQ2hwDmk
— Teachers Federation (@TeachersFed) October 15, 2021
We need a national plan
A large volume of research documents the high and increasing workload of Australian teachers. In NSW, before the pandemic, teachers reported working an average of 55 hours per week and principals an average of 62. With the pandemic increasing teacher workload, short staffing in schools will ratchet that up another notch. Unlike many countries, including England, Australia doesn’t have a strategic plan to recruit and retain teachers. The NSW Teachers Federation commissioned an independent inquiry in 2020 into the work of teachers and principals, and how it’s changed since 2004. After reviewing international evidence and local data, the final report made a range of recommendations to “recognise the increase in skills and responsibilities, help overcome shortages and recruit the additional teachers needed to cope with enrolment growth”. The key recommendations included:- increase teacher salaries by 10 to 15% to bring them on par with other similarly educated professions
- increase lesson preparation time
- improve promotions and career structure
- increase number of school counsellors
- reduce curriculum and administration workload.