Acute shortages of highly-qualified teachers in priority subjects
and most disadvantaged schools
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England faces a growing challenge to recruit sufficient
teachers. Staff/pupil ratios have risen from 15.5 in 2010 to 17
in 2018, and in priority subjects such as maths and science,
around half of teachers have left their posts within five
years.
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In shortage subjects, including maths and physics, only a
minority of teachers possess a relevant degree. Less than half
of GCSE maths teachers have a maths or science degree – for
graduates with these degrees, the average pay is higher in
other jobs.
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Schools teaching poor children particularly struggle to
attract teachers with degrees in maths and science. Outside
London, fewer than 1 in 5 (17%) physics teachers in the most
disadvantaged schools have a relevant degree versus 52% in the
most affluent non-London schools. In maths, fewer than 2 in 5
(37%) have a relevant degree in disadvantaged schools, versus
51% in the most affluent schools.
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Areas with the lowest proportions of teachers with a degree
in shortage subjects are Portsmouth, Hampshire, Newham,
Barnsley and Doncaster.
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The government should consider rolling out a more ambitious
scheme to give additional pay supplements in shortage subjects
such as maths and sciences, particularly for those teaching in
the most disadvantaged schools.
A new report by the
Education Policy Institute (EPI), published on Thursday, August
30, assesses the state of the teacher labour market in England.
The new research considers the latest trends in the profession,
and examines the latest figures on how the quality of
teachers varies across different subjects, areas in the country,
and at different levels of school deprivation. This is crucial,
given children’s school attainment and life chances are greatly
impacted by the level of teacher quality.
The teaching profession faces increased uncertainty in the years
ahead, with shortages developing in many areas. Ensuring that
there are enough teachers in schools across the country, and
enough highly-qualified individuals in these roles, will be a
huge domestic policy challenge for the government.
Key findings
Teacher shortages and other pressures
- Pupil numbers have risen by around 10 % since 2010 – while
teacher numbers have remained steady. This means
that pupil-to-teacher ratios have risen from around 15.5 in
2010 to nearly 17 by 2018.
- Teacher training applications are down by 5%, while training
targets have been persistently missed in maths and science.
- Exit rates have also increased, and are particularly high
early on in teachers’ careers. Only 60% of teachers remained in
state-funded schools five years after starting. For
‘high-priority’ subjects like physics and maths, this 5-year
retention drops to just 50%.
- Teacher pay has declined by about 10 % in real-terms since
2010 – but the recent announcement of pay rises of up to 3.5
% from September 2018 will halt this real-terms decline.
- With many able to earn more outside of teaching, England
faces a great challenge recruiting new graduates. In maths,
average graduate salaries are £4,000 above those of teachers.
Highly-qualified teachers: variations by subject
Levels of teacher quality in secondary schools vary considerably
depending on the subject:
- Maths and most science subjects in particular struggle to
attract highly-qualified teachers – with as little as half of
teachers holding a relevant degree. Under 50% hold a relevant
degree in maths and physics. These subjects, with the lowest
proportion of highly-qualified teachers, are also those with the
greatest recruitment and retention problems.
- Languages also struggle to secure teachers with relevant
degrees: just 40-50% hold one.
- Conversely, subjects that have a greater proportion of
highly-qualified teachers include those that have significantly
less pressure on recruitment and retention – such as biology
(78%) and English teachers (67%).
Highly-qualified teachers: London and the rest of England
There are stark differences in how highly-qualified teachers are
represented in the most, and least deprived schools in England
(at KS4). The socio-economic gap is much greater outside of
London:
- In areas outside of London, just over a third (37%) of maths
teachers and just under half (45%) of chemistry teachers in the
poorest schools had a relevant degree. In more affluent
schools outside of London, the proportions are far higher for
maths (51%) and chemistry (68%).
- Shortages of highly-qualified teachers in these poorer
schools appear to be the most severe in physics. In the
worst-off schools outside of London, fewer than 1 in 5 of physics
teachers (17%) have a relevant degree. In more affluent
schools outside of London, the figure rises significantly to just
over half (52%).
In London, differences in how highly-qualified teachers are
represented are far smaller:
- In maths, the proportion of teachers with a degree
ranges between 40-50% for all schools, regardless of
deprivation level - while in chemistry, it remains above
60%.
- There are also a much greater proportion of
highly-qualified physics teachers in the capital – with
between 40-50% holding a relevant degree, regardless of
school deprivation level.
Highly-qualified teachers in local authorities
The research also locates large disparities in teacher quality
across local authorities:
- The proportion of teachers with a relevant degree
is high in London and the South East of England, as well as
areas such as Bath and North East Somerset, Rochdale, and,
Darlington.
- The proportion of teachers with a relevant degree is low
in South and West Yorkshire, the Welsh Borders, the fringes of
Birmingham, East Anglia, and the South Coast.
- Areas such as Portsmouth, Hampshire, Newham, Barnsley and
Doncaster have the lowest proportions of teachers with a degree
in shortage subjects.
Tackling teacher shortages: introduce financial incentives
- There is strong evidence that providing salary supplements to
teachers in some subjects would alleviate
shortages - such as in maths and science.
- Schools in England are able to make such payments already -
however, they would have to be drawn from existing budgets, which
would present financial challenges.
- The government should therefore consider a national salary
supplement scheme, centrally funded and directed by the
Department for Education.
- Bonus payments of £5,000 for maths teachers are currently
being trialled – yet this programme is limited in scope, and the
pilot process may be lengthy. It also fails to target many local
authorities that are the most in need of highly-qualified
teachers.
- Given the scale and severity of shortages in the teacher
labour market, and the known links between teacher quality and
pupil outcomes, the government should introduce salary
supplements in hard-to-staff areas and subjects without delay.
, Executive Chairman of the
Education Policy Institute (EPI), said:
“This report demonstrates that the government faces a
significant challenge to recruit enough teachers – particularly
in subjects such as maths and sciences. It must already be a
concern that as little as half of GCSE maths teachers don’t have
a maths or sciences degree.
“Of particular concern is the unequal access to
subject-qualified teachers for more disadvantaged schools outside
London. In maths, physics and chemistry poor children are much
more likely to be taught by teachers who don’t have relevant
degrees. We need to make it more attractive for some of our best
qualified teachers to teach in our most challenging
schools.”
Luke Sibieta, report author and Research Fellow at the Education
Policy Institute (EPI), said:
“The teacher labour market is suffering from a number of
severe shortages, especially with graduates, who are often able
to earn much more in other roles. Many priority subjects such as
maths and science are failing to attract enough highly-qualified
professionals. Our research finds that in some parts of England,
just 1 in 5 physics teachers have a relevant
degree.
“There is strong evidence that these pressures can be
alleviated by targeted salary supplements. Policy-makers have
begun to consider this potential solution, yet so far proposals
have been far too modest, and exclude many of the areas most in
need.
“The government should therefore rollout a more ambitious
scheme which offers incentives to teachers in a greater number of
shortage subjects, covering more areas. This is critical if we
are to relieve some of the growing strains in the workforce, and
protect pupil outcomes.”
ENDS.
Notes to editors
- We refer to ‘highly-qualified’ teachers as those holding
a relevant degree.
- We use the Department for Education (DfE) definition of a
‘relevant degree’. For example, in physics this would include
physics, engineering, or astronomy – but not biology or
chemistry. See DfE’s ‘Qualification subject
mappings’ for the full list of subjects.
- The DfE defines ‘high-priority’ subjects
as maths, physics, chemistry, and languages. These are
considered ‘high-priority’ for DfE recruitment purposes.
- ‘Other subjects’ include English, biology, geography,
history, art & design, design & technology.
- Subjects such as computing are excluded due to small sample
sizes.