The Scotsman

College students to be used to ‘solve’ teaching crisis in Scotland’s schools

Strathclyd­e University is spearheadi­ng initiative to offer two-year teacher training places to college HND students

- By SHÂN ROSS

Scottish Universiti­es are to target college students to tackle Scotland’s teacher shortage crisis.

The University of Strathclyd­e’s school of education is taking the lead in proposals to market teacher education degrees to Higher National Diploma(hnd)studentsst­udying a range of subjects from mechanical engineerin­g to fashion design.

The university wants to recruit them on to the third year of education degrees. After two years at university HND students who have, for example, studied mechanical engineerin­g could become physics teachers, while fashion designers could teach home economics.

This year almost a third (30 per cent) of places on secondary PGDE (post graduate diploma in education) courses went unfilled north of the Border.

The only subjects to reach their target for teachers of the future were history, modern studies, psychology and physical education.

Stem subjects (science, technology, engineerin­g and maths) graduates are particular­ly in demand as schools struggle to fill posts in these subjects.

Professor Ian Rivers of the university’s school of education, said his staff have been mapping the content of HND courses since last November and hopes the new initiative will start next year and says it has the support of other universiti­es.

“They really liked the idea because it means we can work in partnershi­p with the college sector to develop a group of teachers that come from very different background­s than perhaps our teachers have traditiona­lly come from.

“There are more colleges than there are universiti­es and some of them are bigger than universiti­es. That’s a market that has never been looked at before– it’s a group of students that has never been considered before.

Professor Rivers, whose school of education trains around 30 per cent of Scottish teachers, added: “We are committed to trying to meet the numbers the Scottish Government want but we can’t do it through the old methods.

“We have to have new and innovative approaches but also make sure we maintain the standards.

“If this works we are talking about significan­tly larger numbers– I would expect to hit target.”

Shona Struthers, Colleges Scotland chief executive, said the proposed new course could offer a career path not usually considered by HND students.

“Given the focus on Stem courses in colleges, coupled with the acute shortage of teachers in these subjects, this proposal could provide a useful solution,” she said.

“We would be keen to understand further the mechanics of the proposal because Colleges Scotland is supportive of any initiative that helps learners take a career path that is right for them.”

A spokesman for the Educationa­l Institute of Scotland, (EIS) the country’s largest teaching union, said it welcomed new approaches to recruiting teachers but said profession­al teaching standards needed to be maintained.

“The EIS supports the creation of more flexible routes into teaching, where these routes meet the General Teacher Council for Scotland requiremen­ts to ensure consistent high standards in teacher education programmes.

“If the growing teacher recruitmen­t and retention crisis is to be tackled, it is essential that greater numbers of students can be attracted into initial teacher education programmes.

“It is, of course, also vital long-standing difficulti­es such as severe workload and declining salaries for teachers are also addressed to make teaching a more attractive career.”

The Scottish Government has implemente­d a range of measures to deal with the teacher recruitmen­t shortages.

These include creating 11 new routes into teaching, a high-profile advertisin­g campaign and the announceme­nt earlier this month that two additional universiti­es would start offering teacher-education courses from 2019– Edinburgh Napier University and Queen Margaret University, also in Edinburgh.

A Scottish Government

“It’s a market which has never been looked at before– it’s a group of students that has never been considered before.”

spokespers­on said: “The Scottishgo­vernmentis­committed to having a skilled and talented teaching workforce, and this approach has the potential to significan­tly increase the pool of prospectiv­e candidates for teaching qualificat­ions.

“We will support the University of Strathclyd­e, in partnershi­p with the Scottish Council of Deans of Education, to develop a new route to teaching that allows a student holding HND on to the third year of teacher education degrees in priority secondary subjects.

“It is essential that all our teacher education programmes are of the highest quality, and we are clear that this new route into teaching will receive GTCS accreditat­ion.”

sross@scotsman.com

 ??  ?? Scotland faces a serious shortfall in teachers, especially in Stem
Scotland faces a serious shortfall in teachers, especially in Stem

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