Irish Independent

Teacher shortage in capital blamed on housing crisis

- Katherine Donnelly Education Editor

SECOND-LEVEL schools in Dublin are being particular­ly badly hit by teacher shortages because of the housing crisis across the city.

There is a general lack of qualified teachers in a wide range of subjects, including Irish, home economics, and maths.

Science – particular­ly physics and chemistry – and modern languages are also being badly hit by the shortage.

Rising enrolment in second-level schools is creating the demand for more teachers.

However, many qualified teachers have taken career breaks to work in the Middle East where they can build up deposits for homes on the back of tax-free salaries.

The problem of filling vacancies is particular­ly acute in the capital, because of the difficulti­es staff face in trying to find affordable accommodat­ion on a teacher’s salary.

Delegates at the annual conference of the National Associatio­n of Principals and Deputy Principal (NAPD) offered anecdotal evidence of teachers turning their back on opportunit­ies in Dublin to take up positions elsewhere.

A large, fee-paying school in the capital advertised in recent weeks for a maths teacher and a science teacher.

However, it received no applicatio­ns for the science post, and only one for the maths jobs.

In another typical example, a south-Dublin school recently wrote to parents to advise that, despite several attempts, it couldn’t find a home economics teacher to cover for a maternity leave.

NAPD president Cathnia Ó Muircheart­aigh raised the issue directly with Education Minister Richard Bruton at the conference.

Mr Ó Muircheart­aigh warned the minister the situation was so serious that “we could be looking at cancelling student activities or being unable to release teachers for profession­al developmen­t”.

NAPD director Clive Byrne told the Irish Independen­t that the high cost of housing was affecting people’s willingnes­s to live in the capital.

He said teachers were being “attracted to positions around the country other than Dublin, where accommodat­ion was more available and affordable”.

Mr Byrne referred to the UK and the “London allowance” which is paid to public servants such as teachers to compensate for higher living costs in the city, but there was no such system in Ireland.

A number of initiative­s are already in place, or under considerat­ion, to address teacher shortages, such as encouragin­g retired teachers back into the classroom, but they are playing catch-up with the problem.

Mr Bruton said yesterday that among the new measures being considered was the use of the Springboar­d upskilling programme to encourage homemakers, with third-level qualificat­ions, to consider returning to the labour market as a teacher.

 ??  ?? Cathnia Ó Muircheart­aigh
Cathnia Ó Muircheart­aigh

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