Wednesday 11 December 2024
Select a region
News

Assistant Minister denies teacher recruitment "crisis" ahead of protests

Assistant Minister denies teacher recruitment

Tuesday 04 July 2023

Assistant Minister denies teacher recruitment "crisis" ahead of protests

Tuesday 04 July 2023


Politicians this morning responded with shock as an Assistant Education Minister denied there was a "crisis" in education recruitment and retention ahead of tomorrow's teacher strikes over pay and conditions.

Up to 400 members of the NEU are due to walk out on Wednesday, while members of the NASUWT and NAHT headteachers’ union are refusing to take on any additional duties after all three unions rejected a 7.9% pay increase.

While members of all three unions have cited challenges in recruiting as a key pressure on their sector – Constable Richard Vibert shared a different perspective as he was questioned in the States Assembly this morning.

Stating that teachers were being "successfully recruited and retained" in the island, the Assistant Education Minister went on to cite the "attrition rate" for Jersey teachers as 3.6% in the last year compared to the UK's attrition rate of 9.4%.

An attrition rate measures how many people leave an organisation. It calculates the number of employee departures divided by the number of employees and is normally expressed as a percentage.

Mr Vibert added that "most businesses would be proud" of having an attrition rate of 3.6%.

Vibert_Richard.jpg

Pictured: Constable Richard Vibert, Assistant Education Minister.

But Constable Simon Crowcroft said: "It's astonishing to hear the Minister speak of pride and success when teachers are about to strike in the Royal Square."

The St. Helier Constable and former teacher added: "There is a mismatch between what's going on in Government and what's going on in the classrooms."

At the States Assembly yesterday, Deputy Rob Ward read a quote from Carl Howarth, President of the Jersey branch of the National Association of Headteachers (NAHT), which stated that the island "is facing an unprecedented crisis in recruitment and retention within education".

Adrian Moss, the Joint District and Branch Secretary for the NEU, has also previously described the situation as a "crisis", telling Express that "good, experienced teachers [who] are leaving the profession and moving to other skilled roles with their post-graduate qualifications and high work ethic are not being suitably replaced" in Jersey schools.

However, Constable Vibert told the Assembly that the Education Department is not facing "an unprecedented crisis" in recruitment and retention.

Deputy Sam Mézec commented on the "complete differences" between the Minister and those in the teaching profession, questioning whether the Minister thought that teachers were "living in a fantasy land".

Mr Vibert told the Assembly that there are currently 18 teacher vacancies in Jersey, with seven roles being currently advertised.

He also informed Assembly members that the Island currently has 88 more teachers compared to 2019.

The Island also offers a teacher graduate scheme with 18 new trainees being recruited to teaching roles in the last year, according to Mr Vibert.

Deputy Geoff Southern questioned how many of the new trainees had been retained in their roles.

The Assistant Education Minister admitted that he didn't know exactly how many teachers had been retained from the scheme, despite adding that "the majority of teachers had been retained".

Follow Express for updates...

READ MORE...

Teachers latest: Can strike be avoided... or are we "out of goodwill"?

Pay row escalates as Jersey headteachers say “enough is enough”

LIST: Which schools are affected by strike action?

Disruption expected as Jersey teachers cut back on cover in pay row

Teachers to vote on strike action after Gov "unwillingness" to negotiate

Sign up to newsletter

 

Comments

Comments on this story express the views of the commentator only, not Bailiwick Publishing. We are unable to guarantee the accuracy of any of those comments.

You have landed on the Bailiwick Express website, however it appears you are based in . Would you like to stay on the site, or visit the site?