New South Wales Teacher Shortage Under Microscope

New South Wales Teacher Shortage Under Microscope
Teachers and principals strike for fairer workloads and wages under the slogan #MoreThanThanks in Sydney, Australia, on Dec. 7, 2021. Supplied/NSW Teachers Federation
AAP
By AAP
Updated:

The brain drain of New South Wales (NSW) teachers leaving the profession or not being attracted to the job in the first place is the focus of a new parliamentary inquiry.

The probe comes about a month after thousands of NSW public and Catholic schoolteachers walked off the job and protested in Sydney’s CBD, demanding better pay and conditions.

The teachers’ unions want a pay rise of five to seven percent, but the NSW government is offering three percent.

NSW Teachers Federation president Angelo Gavrielatos and NSW Independent Education Union of Australia secretary Mark Northam will appear before the inquiry on Thursday.

Education Minister Sarah Mitchell has defended the government's public sector wages policy, calling it the most generous in the country, this is despite school teachers protesting their pay and condition since May. Teachers protesting along Macquarie St towards NSW Parliament in Sydney, Australia on May 04, 2022. (Photo by Jenny Evans/Getty Images)
Education Minister Sarah Mitchell has defended the government's public sector wages policy, calling it the most generous in the country, this is despite school teachers protesting their pay and condition since May. Teachers protesting along Macquarie St towards NSW Parliament in Sydney, Australia on May 04, 2022. Photo by Jenny Evans/Getty Images

Education Minister Sarah Mitchell has defended the government’s public sector wages policy, calling it the most generous in the country.

Apart from better pay, teachers say the chronic staff shortage is due to a lack of career and financial incentives, leading to unmanageable workloads.

A Monash University report published in June found that more than half of Australian teachers surveyed were planning to quit the profession, with some describing their workload as excessive and unsustainable.

Monash University report published in June found that more than half of Australian teachers surveyed were planning to quit the profession, with some describing their workload as excessive and unsustainable. A teacher holds gets ready for the NSW strike for fairer workloads and wages in Sydney, Australia, on Nov. 7, 2021. (Supplied/NSW Teachers Federation)
Monash University report published in June found that more than half of Australian teachers surveyed were planning to quit the profession, with some describing their workload as excessive and unsustainable. A teacher holds gets ready for the NSW strike for fairer workloads and wages in Sydney, Australia, on Nov. 7, 2021. Supplied/NSW Teachers Federation

The study surveyed 2444 Australian primary and secondary school teachers across the country.

One of the researchers, Fiona Longmuir, will also be present at the inquiry.

She recommended reducing teachers’ workloads and increasing awareness of the complexity of set tasks to help stem the brain drain.

“Teachers don’t mind hard work,” she said.

“But they do feel overwhelmed by the ever-increasing administration and standardisation being thrust upon them, which is arguably not benefiting students.”

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