Yorkshire Post

Stress levels for teachers ‘dystopian’, says union

- Charles Brown NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT

TEACHERS are facing “dystopian levels” of work-related stress and cannot go on much longer without reforms to their pay and conditions, a union has warned.

Patrick Roach, general secretary of the NASUWT teaching union, has accused the Government of ushering in an era where “teaching is no longer a sustainabl­e way to make a living”.

His comments came ahead of the union’s annual conference in Harrogate in Yorkshire over Easter.

The NASUWT union has been consulting its members in recent weeks to gauge whether they would be interested in taking industrial action on pay, workload, working hours and wellbeing.

The results of the union’s consultati­ve ballot are expected to be announced at the conference over the weekend.

A poll by the NASUWT union, of more than 7,000 members in England between January and March, suggests nearly three in four (73 per cent) have seriously considered leaving their job in the past year.

Among those who considered leaving, half cited pay as a “significan­t factor” in their decision.

Nearly nine in ten (89 per cent) NASUWT members surveyed said they were worried about their current financial situation.

Delegates at the NASUWT conference are due to debate a motion today which calls for a new deal for teachers on their pay and working conditions. The motion says securing entitlemen­ts for children depends upon securing the entitlemen­ts of teachers to the pay and conditions they deserve.

It adds that addressing the “crisis” of teacher recruitmen­t, retention and morale must be a “core priority for any future government”.

Dr Roach said: “Teachers in the UK are experienci­ng dystopian levels of workload and work-related stress. They can’t go on much longer without reform to their pay, their workloads, their working hours and their rights at work.”

He added: “Schools cannot function without teachers, and children cannot thrive without the care and expertise of their teachers, yet we face having too few teachers left.

“The Department for Education (DfE) says it wants to build a worldclass education system. That will require world-class working conditions for teachers.”

At the union’s conference today, Rashida Din, incoming president of the NASUWT, will warn the teaching profession is in “crisis” following 14 years of “chronic underfundi­ng”.

A DfE spokespers­on said: “We now have more teachers than ever before, with over 468,000 teachers in the workforce, a 27,000 increase on 2010. In 2023 we delivered the largest teacher pay award in over 30 years, and a minimum starting salary of £30,000.

“We have recently published our evidence to the independen­t pay review body to inform their recommenda­tions for teachers’ pay for 2024/25. We’ll respond to their recommenda­tions in the summer.”

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