New analysis shows that growing time
spent dealing with pupil behaviour and providing pastoral support
plays a significant role in teachers choosing to leave the
profession.
Drawing on newly available
data from the Department for
Education's (DfE) Working Lives of Teachers and
Leaders (WLTL) survey*, the research also
shows teachers who report good pupil behaviour in
their school and are well supported
to deal with persistently
disruptive behaviour, are less likely to
leave. Data from WLTL shows
teachers' and leaders' perceptions of pupil behaviour in their
school has worsened considerably since 2021/22. It also
highlights a substantial rise in the number of teachers reporting
that they spend ‘too
much time' dealing with behaviour
incidents - from 50 per cent in 2022 to 59
per cent in 2025.
The report by NFER, funded by the
Nuffield Foundation, recommends the Government
should further develop its approach for supporting
schools to improve pupil behaviour and meet
pupils' additional pastoral and learning needs. This should
be reinforced by improved external school support services
and backed with additional funding. A recent evaluation of the DfE's
Behaviour Hubs programme found that staff in participating
schools reported improvements
in pupil behaviour compared to the period before its
implementation, suggesting it
could be beneficial at the system level if implemented at larger
scale.
Findings from the
analysis, which explores the factors linked
to teachers' decisions to leave the
profession, also show that teachers feel they
spend too much time on lesson
planning.
NFER highlights
opportunities that school and trust leaders should
consider to improve this challenge. For
example, although recent research has presented a mixed
picture, some studies suggest that generative
AI tools such as ChatGPT can help improve their
teachers' planning workload. Also, access to existing
schemes of work and associated lesson
plans and opportunities for collaborative
planning have been seen as enablers for reducing
workload.
School leadership
support is also an important factor for retention. The
report highlights that feeling valued, involved in school
decision-making and supported with flexible working
opportunities is associated with
improved teacher retention.
The report recommends that
Government should put more focus on building positive, supportive
leadership skills in all
National Professional Qualifications
(NPQ) programmes for school leaders. This could
boost the relationship between teachers and
leaders in the school-decision making
process.
It also urges school leaders to
explore how teachers can be meaningfully involved and engaged in
the way the school defines its organisational development
priorities and makes decisions more
widely.
NFER Education Workforce Lead,
Jack Worth, said:
“Teacher retention remains a crucial issue for
education policy. Even small improvements can have a major impact
on teacher supply by reducing vacancies and the
pressure
on initial teacher training recruitment. Improving
teacher supply, particularly in secondary schools where
recruitment and retention challenges are most prevalent, can
ensure pupils receive the high-quality education they
deserve.
“Our research shows
that while increasing teacher pay is one way to
improve retention, there is significant scope
for cost-effective policies and practice
improvements that target non-financial factors
affecting retention. This could include improving
school leadership quality, utilising time-saving
tools in planning tasks to relieve workload
pressures and making dealing with disruptive pupil
behaviour a top school priority. These approaches could
be particularly important given the budget pressures facing
schools and Government.”
Dr Emily
Tanner, Programme Head at the
Nuffield Foundation said:
"This report identifies tangible ways to improve
teacher retention based on data-driven insights. This is part of
a wider programme of work aimed at understanding and
addressing teacher recruitment and retention challenges
in England."
Further key findings from the
report include:
-
Higher pay satisfaction is a
significant factor associated with improved
retention.
-
The impact of CPD on teachers'
practice is a significant
factor affecting retention.
-
Teachers stated intentions
to leave are not a reliable predictor of actual
behaviour. 86.2 per cent of teachers who said they were
considering leaving did not do so the following year, while
four per cent of those not considering leaving
did subsequently leave.
Further recommendations
for policymakers, schools and
trusts to consider:
-
Government should aim
to sustain levels of pay satisfaction by at
least maintaining the competitiveness of teachers' pay each
year (i.e. matching the growth in average earnings outside
teaching) and funding schools to deliver
it.
-
Government should produce guidance
around the Standards for Teachers' Professional Development to
emphasise how teachers can be given greater involvement
in setting their CPD goals
and activities.
ENDS℗ NOTES TO EDITORS
*The analysis is based on cross-sectional correlations, so should
be interpreted cautiously. The ‘effects' identified could have
causal implications, but only under strong assumptions. A key
assumption is that there are no confounding factors that could
also be influencing the relationship between the explanatory
factor and retention but are not measured and accounted for in
the modelling.