Teachers pay: the rationale for reform reform Marcus Bell - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

teachers pay the rationale for reform reform
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Teachers pay: the rationale for reform reform Marcus Bell - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Teachers pay: the rationale for reform reform Marcus Bell Director, Teachers & Teaching Department for Education Overview The old system What was wrong with it Ministers perspective The new system The new system


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SLIDE 1

Teachers’ pay: the rationale for reform reform

Marcus Bell Director, Teachers & Teaching Department for Education

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SLIDE 2

Overview

  • The old system
  • What was wrong with it
  • Ministers’ perspective
  • The new system
  • The new system
  • Some myth-busting
  • What does the future hold?
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SLIDE 3

The old system

  • National system of pay and conditions for all maintained schools
  • Four regional pay bands; Inner London, Outer London, London Fringe, Rest of

England and Wales

  • Four pay-scales or ranges for classroom teachers; main pay scale, upper pay

scale, advanced skills teacher pay range and excellent teacher pay range

  • System of 10 allowances, the main ones being Teaching and Learning

Responsibility (TLR) payments and SEN allowances

  • Near automatic annual progression on the main pay scale, national criteria for

access to the upper pay scale, biennial progression on the upper pay scale

  • Salary attached to a teacher not a post, so a teacher moving schools has a

guarantee of the same base salary in their new school

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SLIDE 4

What was wrong with it?

  • 1. Little correlation between teachers’ pay and local

labour market conditions

  • 2. Pay by seniority/length of service, not

performance performance

  • 3. Not enough scope for schools to reward the

highest performing staff

  • 4. Automatic progression a poor use of public

money in a time of austerity

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SLIDE 5

National pay is unfair – teachers’ pay compared to private sector graduate pay

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SLIDE 6

Pay by seniority? – Teachers’ pay by age

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The only way is up – distribution of full-time qualified teachers on the main and upper pay scales

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Ministers’ perspective

  • Teacher quality matters more than anything else
  • Schools should have more freedom
  • Labour markets work in other sectors, why not in

teaching?

  • What about academies?
  • Whitehall climate around “local pay”
  • Timing and the state of the economy
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SLIDE 9

The new system

  • Removal of all statutory spine points on the classroom teacher pay

scales

  • Removal of automatic pay progression, all progression to be justified by

performance

  • Removal of pay portability – schools no longer obligated when

appointing to match a teacher’s salary at their previous school

  • Advanced Skills Teacher and Excellent Teacher pay-scales abolished,

replaced by Leading Practitioner pay scale with less specific criteria attached

  • Simpler criteria for progression to the Upper Pay Scale
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SLIDE 10

Some myth-busting

  • New arrangements aren’t “payment by results”. Schools decide what

good performance is and how they want to reward it, not Government

  • Schools decide how far and how fast they want to change their

approach to pay

  • Deregulation doesn’t mean a “race to the bottom”. In Sweden,

teachers’ pay differentials narrowed

  • You can’t cut teachers’ pay!
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SLIDE 11

What does the future hold?

  • Some schools will make radical changes to pay and reward but many

won’t - at least not this year

  • Pace of change will be driven by:
  • Local decisions
  • Experiences of “early adopters”
  • Headroom in school budgets
  • Speed of recovery of graduate labour market
  • Regional economic differences and how quickly they widen