Sunday Express

Heads give us all a lesson in how to earn a fortune

- By Matthew Davis

A RECORD number of top teachers are taking home six-figure salaries with some on more than £200,000.

Latest figure from the Department for Education (DFE) reveal there are 1,177 senior staff at academies being paid £100,000 per year or more, with another 581 at council-funded schools being paid a similar bumper salary. Four academy chiefs receive more than £200,000 a year.

Teachers now on six-figures are at an all-time high in England at 1,758 – a rise of 16 per cent in two years.

Academy schools, where the funding comes direct from government, have the lion’s share and have seen a 161 rise in two years. Council schools have had an increase of 82.

Classroom teachers are paid on average £37,192, while head teachers get typically £71,655.

However, academy teachers get around £1,000 less than their local authority colleagues.

But academy heads in primaries get an extra £1,500 and those in secondarie­s £1,000 more. Some 505 on bumper salaries were executive head teachers, often responsibl­e for a number of schools.

In 2014 the School Teachers’ Review Body said heads could receive up to £132,685 in exceptiona­l circumstan­ces, rising to £141,250 in inner London.

But the maximum pay for heads in charge of “multiple very large schools” should be £106,148 or £113,000 in central London.

This followed in 2010 the then education secretary Michael Gove saying heads should not earn more than the £142,500 salary of the then

PM David Cameron. There are 109 now paid more than £142,000.

Christophe­r Mcgovern, of the Campaign for Real Education, said: “Most people will be amazed that head teachers can earn more than the Prime Minister.

“We do need a well-paid teaching force but salary should be performanc­e-related.

“Our school system is one of the most expensive in the world to finance but we languish mid-table when it comes to performanc­e on internatio­nal league tables.”

Kevin Courtney, of the National Education Union, called for a consistent framework. He added: “Many leaders deserve a pay rise as much as their classroom colleagues, but some, particular­ly in the academy sector, are getting wholly unjustifia­ble pay.”

The DFE said we needed the best people to lead schools but with academies “we are continuing to challenge high pay where it is neither proportion­ate nor directly linked to improving pupil outcomes”.

‘Some are on wholly unjustifia­ble salaries’

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