NASUWT-The Teachers’ Union’s latest polling
of teachers in England has found that excessive workload and
working hours are an escalating problem, whilst basic employment
rights are being ignored.
The NASUWT National Teacher Poll was conducted in January 2024.
7,000 teachers working in state-funded schools and academies in
England were questioned.
- 72% of respondents said their
workload had increased since the start of the academic year. 27%
said that their workload had stayed the same during the same
period.
- 65% of respondents said they had
raised concerns about their workload with their school. However,
72% said that no measures had been put in place by their school
to remedy concerns raised.
- Ofsted was rated as the biggest
driver of workload by 60% of respondents. School/employer
policies and procedures (50%), lack of funding (48%), specific
Government policies (39%) and lack of support for pupils’
behaviour and mental health (35%) were amongst the other highest
rated workload drivers.
- 60.4% of respondents report that on
average their working hours each week during term time was
between 50 hours and 69 hours. 20.9% of respondents reported
weekly average hours of 60-69 hours. 4.1% reported their average
working hours of between 70 hours and 79 hours per week.
- Only 10% of respondents rated their
working hours as manageable.
- Examining teachers’ contractual
rights, the poll found widespread evidence of basic working time
rights being flouted:
- 37% of respondents said they had
not been provided with a Directed time calendar. 81% said that
the Directed Time calendar had not been discussed with them and
that they had not been consulted on it.
- 30% of respondents said that they
were expected routinely (e.g. daily) to read and respond to
emails in the evening, weekends or during holidays
- 71% of respondents said they did
not get a guaranteed and uninterrupted lunch break. 10.8% said
they never got a lunchbreak. 13% rarely got a lunch break. And
46% said they had to supervise pupils or undertake other work
during their lunchbreak
- 89% of respondents said the
Government is not doing enough to address excessive workload and
high working hours.
The NASUWT National Executive has agreed that it will be
consulting members over the coming weeks to take forward its
campaigning, up to and including industrial action, to secure a
Better Deal for Teachers on pay, workload, working hours and
wellbeing.
NASUWT General Secretary Dr Patrick Roach said:
“Over the last year, we have heard many warm words but seen too
little action from the Government on the key concerns affecting
teachers and headteachers.
“There is increasing anger once again from our members about the
lack of progress being made by the Government on workload,
working hours, working conditions and pay.
“There is now a mountain of evidence that Ministers cannot
continue to ignore, showing how excessive workload pressures and
long working hours, driven by inadequate funding levels and a
high-stakes inspection and accountability system, are driving
teachers and headteachers to breaking point.
“NASUWT members welcomed the concessions we secured last year
from the Government to establish a Workload Reduction Taskforce;
but, as we said at the time, immediate action was also needed to
remove the daily grind of workload pressures which are damaging
the health and wellbeing of teachers. To date, the Government has
delivered nothing.
“The Education Secretary needs to demonstrate that she
understands the urgency of the situation and come forward rapidly
with robust measures that will have a significant and material
impact on improving teachers’ working conditions.
“We are also concerned that the limitations imposed on the pay
review body by the Education Secretary have removed any last
shred of confidence that the Government would be at least willing
to consider the need for a programme of pay restoration for
teachers.
“The Government appears to be content to stand by and allow
teachers and headteachers to work longer and harder for less, and
to watch as the profession is driven into the ground.
“In our latest National Teachers’ Poll, teachers reported being
denied their basic contractual rights, including having a
lunchbreak and time to switch off from work in the evening and at
weekends.
“It is not acceptable for Ministers to allow this situation to
continue.
“The Government has allowed employers greater freedoms and
flexibilities. But, the result is that many teachers are being
treated so shoddily that they are either being made unwell or are
quitting the job entirely.
“If the Government will not take the action needed, the NASUWT
will not hesitate to support our members in doing so.”