The New Zealand Herald

Plan to recruit teachers ‘too late’

Package seen as unlikely to swiftly swell ranks by 900

- Simon Collins

Schools say a new package to recruit more teachers is too late for the next school year and won’t be able to attract the target of 900 overseas teachers.

The $10.5 million package, announced by Education Minister Chris Hipkins yesterday, came on the eve of this year’s final school term and as primary teachers are due to vote this week on whether to strike again next month in support of a 16 per cent pay claim aimed at reducing the teacher shortage.

Hipkins said the ministry estimated that 650 extra primary teachers and 200 extra secondary teachers would be needed next year.

The package provides for more relocation grants of up to $5000 for immigrants and $7000 for returning Kiwis, aimed at more than doubling the target for recruiting teachers from overseas in 2019 from 400 to 900.

It also includes a new $10,000 grant “to assist with mentoring and on-the-job training for graduate teachers”, with funding for 230 grants.

Ministry of Education deputy secretary Ellen MacGregor-Reid said the new grants “will be targeted where there are shortages of teachers in some subjects and locations”.

However Auckland Secondary School Principals Associatio­n chairman Richard Dykes said eligibilit­y criteria for the new grant would not be available until November, too late to have much impact on recruitmen­t for the new school year: “It’s great to see the Government doing something, but it’s really frustratin­g that it’s taken until this late in the year to do it, because the impact is going to be very limited. It’s too late.”

The $10,000 grant for the new National Beginner Teacher Project is less than half a grant of $24,000 introduced by the previous government for the Auckland Beginning Teacher Project, which aimed to fund a beginner teacher in Auckland primary schools for the first two terms until their rolls grew enough to justify the extra teaching positions through the normal staffing formula.

Primary school rolls normally grow during each year as children turned 5. In contrast, Dykes said secondary rolls normally fell during each year as older students left.

He said it was unclear whether the new scheme would apply to secondary schools, but the statement that it would apply to shortages in “some subjects” as well as locations implied

it would.

MacGregor-Reid said the new scheme would be in addition to the Auckland Beginning Teacher Project.

“We have already allocated all 60 places for the 2019 intake of the Auckland Beginning Teacher Project and there is no change to the level of the grant. There is further funding allocated for another 60 places in

2020,” she said.

“We’re still finalising the criteria for which regions and subjects the National Beginner Teacher Project will be targeted to, in particular we want to test criteria with representa­tives from the schooling system.

“We expect this criteria will be available in November.”

Post Primary Teachers Associatio­n president Jack Boyle did not believe the ministry would achieve its new goal of 900 overseas recruits, when it had only approved 190 overseas relocation grants since they became available last December. “They are not streaming in from all over. Why? Because the pay and conditions of work are not sufficient for people to consider it as a career option.”

However NZ Principals Federation president Whetu Cormick welcomed the package.

“Rather than just leaving it up to the recruitmen­t agencies, we have connection­s to government­s and organisati­ons across the world,” he said.

“We need to be ringing our contacts and saying, ‘Hey, we have a job here, have you got anyone who could fill it?”’

Secondary Principals Associatio­n national president Mike Williams welcomed another part of the package that will fund schools to employ trades people and others without teacher registrati­on under provisions for “limited authority to teach”.

 ?? Photo / Jason Oxenham ?? Richard Dykes is frustrated the Government has taken so long.
Photo / Jason Oxenham Richard Dykes is frustrated the Government has taken so long.

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