The proposals in a consultation on
strengthening Qualified Teacher Status (QTS) and
improving career progression for teachers, launched
today, include a plan to boost the support and
mentoring available to new teachers. The overall period
before teachers gain Qualified Teacher Status could
also be extended to enable this, giving even greater
standing to the teaching profession and preparing
teachers for a successful career.
The consultation, which has been welcomed by education
experts after it was announced as part of the
Government’s plan to improve social
mobility, Unlocking
Talent, Fulfilling Potential, will also seek views
on how to develop the next generation of teachers to
become leaders in their field, without necessarily
taking on management responsibilities outside of the
classroom.
Today’s announcement builds on the £42 million
investment in teacher professional development
announced in the budget last month, and is part of the
ongoing work to provide high quality opportunities in
line with the best education systems to ensure teachers
are supported to deliver a world-class education for
all.
Education Secretary said:
Great teachers help unlock children’s talents, so
investing in them is vital if we want to drive school
improvement across the country.
We’re taking steps to make sure high-quality
professional development is a fundamental part of a
teacher’s career, whether they decide to move into a
leadership role or want to continue teaching the
classroom. These new measures aim to boost that
support from the moment they start their career.
I hope to hear from teachers about these plans and
work with them to make sure they have the support
they need to create opportunities for the pupils they
teach, wherever they are growing up.
To coincide with the publication of the consultation,
applications have also opened for schools to bid for a
share of the next round of the Leadership Equality and
Diversity Fund, worth over £1.8m over the next two
years. This fund will support teachers from
under-represented backgrounds – including women and
people from black, Asian and minority ethnic
backgrounds – to progress into leadership roles.
Under the current consultation proposals, the changes
to Qualified Teacher Status will become statutory from
September 2019, and will apply to teachers starting
their Initial Teacher Training from that point.
Teachers who complete Initial Teacher Training will
have the same pay, rights and protections as current
newly qualified teachers as it currently the case.
There will also be a renewed focus on the importance of
high-quality development opportunities for existing
teachers. Proposals include the expansion of
professional qualifications, creating guidance about
professional development entitlements, ring fencing
development budgets within the schools that need it
most and a new fund to encourage teachers to take
sabbaticals so they can gain expertise that can be used
in a school environment.
The consultation will be open until 9 March 2018 and
was designed with input from an advisory group made up
of experts – teachers and heads, academics and sector
leaders, unions, the Chartered College of Teaching and
the Teacher Development Trust.
Dame Alison Peacock, chief executive of the Chartered
College of Teaching said:
We are delighted that the government is looking at
ways to ensure that all teachers have access to high
quality professional development and mentoring
throughout their career. The proposals are also
focused on giving the teachers the status and
recognition for expertise that they so much deserve,
through the strengthening of QTS and the development
of progression routes that enable them to stay in the
classroom.
Along with a sustained focus on teacher workload,
these proposals have the potential to begin to
address the retention challenges facing the teaching
profession.
We would encourage all teachers and school leaders to
respond to the consultation, and have their say in
shaping this important policy area.
David Weston, CEO of Teacher Development Trust said:
These proposals represent a positive step forward for
teacher professional development and reflect the
Secretary of State’s clear commitment in this area.
Society’s expectations of teachers continue to rise,
so it is right that we make greater provision for
early career development.
We particularly want to welcome moves to strengthen
the capacity of our school system to design and
deliver great CPD for teachers. Government appears to
recognise that it needs to do more than merely
deliver ‘CPD ready meals’ to schools, it needs to
invest in training the ‘CPD chefs’ in those
organisations to get sustainable, school-led
improvement.
Many teachers will welcome more opportunity to
progress whilst staying in the classroom. This work
needs to complement the existing work of
organisations like the Chartered College of Teaching
and not conflict with the progress already made in
these areas.
We’ve long argued for more support for headteachers
to ensure they know how to spend their precious CPD
funds. As such, it is important that any badging
scheme introduced needs to be fair and evidence
based. By focusing on recognising all excellence in
provision, the scheme should not unfairly
disadvantage smaller providers nor school-to-school
support methods.
Paul Whiteman, general secretary of the National
Association of Head Teachers said:
We’ve been calling for government to tackle the
recruitment and retention crisis in teaching for four
years. The proposals for the reform of QTS are a
welcome step in the right direction in strengthening
the status of the teaching profession. There is an
urgent need to both recruit and retain new teachers,
and to focus on wider career development that will
support career longevity. Properly resourced, this
has the potential to make teaching an attractive
profession. It forms one element of a desperately
needed programme of measures to resolve the
recruitment and retention crisis faced by schools.
We are broadly in favour of the proposed two-year QTS
and welcome the Department for Education’s
confirmation that pre-QTS teachers would be paid on
the qualified teacher scale. This must be accompanied
by structured core Continuing Professional
Development to ensure continuity and development
between Initial Teacher Training, Pre-Qualified
Teacher Status and QTS. It’s vital that it leads to
the development of professional skills and
competencies, as well as high-quality mentoring;
protected development time for teachers in the PQTS
period for schools.
Schools cannot deliver the extended QTS period
without the additional funding to deliver it,
including training for mentors and release from
curriculum time.
The consultation also speaks encouragingly of
professional development for existing teachers, which
again we welcome. But government must ensure that all
schools have the budget to deliver these improvements
for the profession as a whole. Focusing only on areas
of challenge will not deliver the government’s
ambition.
These announcements follow the recent confirmation of a
number of other measures to recruit and retain more
great teachers. This includes:
- The commitment to invest £42million in a Teacher
Development Premium pilot to enable teachers and
leaders working in areas of greatest need to access
high quality professional development, and drive school
improvement – offering some teachers up to £1000 to
spend on career development;
- The introduction of the new, strengthened national
professional qualifications for school leaders, as well
as a £10million fund to encourage take-up up in the
areas that need it most;
- The department-funded Chartered College of
Teaching’s new Chartered Teacher Status, which lasts 14
months and will begin in January with a pilot cohort;
- Naming the 25 areas across England selected to run
a pilot programme to reimburse student loan repayments
for modern foreign languages and science teachers at
the start of their careers. For a teacher on £29,000,
the new student loan repayments pilot and the increased
student loan repayment threshold of £25,000 will mean
£720 cash in pocket. This is the equivalent of an
approximate £1,000 increase in salary per year; and
- Naming the projects that will receive a share of
the £75 million Teaching and Leadership Innovation
Fund. These projects will help provide tailored
training opportunities for teachers on both managing
challenging pupil behaviour and developing leadership,
so they can make the most of their talent in the
classroom.