Teachers will strike next year if they don’t get a proper pay rise, union bosses warn

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/teachers-strike-pay-rise-union-labour-school-funding-b2880906.html

Posted by tylerthe-theatre

21 Comments

  1. So they are going to go on strike then. Good for them, you honestly couldn’t pay me enough to be a teacher in this country these days.

  2. ReligiousGhoul on

    > My, My 40k earners, your shoulders are looking awfully “broad” this Spring

    A PAYE piggy’s work is never done after all

  3. Increase wages significantly but move all teachers to defined contribution pension schemes so you eventually phase out current ones over next 40 years or so

  4. BlindStupidDesperate on

    Successive governments seem to regard teachers as little more than baby sitters, who exist solely to occupy the children of the UK long enough to allow their parents to be economically active.

    I see the level of pointless admin, box ticking, assessment, late night working, government targets, uninformed criticism and political kickings that my wife (a secondary school teacher) has to put up with and I wonder how anybody sticks with teaching as a profesion.

  5. Tiny violins for the teachers. NO ONE gets pay rises that even meet inflation, you’re not special

  6. Competitive-Step-270 on

    Honestly, as a teacher, why the hell wouldn’t you go work for a private school? No doubt get paid so much more, better behaved kids (on average), better facilities?

    Obviously not every teacher can do this, but if you are good, surely it’s the obvious move? It certainly beats waiting around for the government to decide you deserve an extra 2% pay

  7. Fairway_Wanderer on

    Why spend all that time training to get a job you know is poorly paid, and then moan about how poorly paid you are?

  8. ZookeepergameThis617 on

    I’m a doctor on strike, we deserve pay restoration but teachers (and nurses) deserve it even more!

    Solidarity!

  9. Will we?

    Maybe ask us first, mate.

    I ain’t voting yes and I ain’t going on strike

    Maybe concentrate on actually helping decent honest teaching staff when they need you.

    I’ve seen them go to the ends of the earth for the minority of shirkers trying it on, but every honest and decent member of staff I’ve ever seen be treated genuinely badly the union has basically been “sucks to be you”

  10. School Trusts are to busy lining the pockets of administrators and creating high paying jobs to actually pay teachers well.

    The Trust I work for hasn’t been able to keep staff for more than 9 to 12 months. HR claim its the lack of decent teachers but if you pay cheap, you get cheap.

    Our administrators earn up to 85k for doing a job no one knows nothing about. Our headteachers are all on 60 to 80, and one is on 110k because they where former CEOs of other trusts that joined by merger. Funnily enough, they are the longest serving staff at each school.

    I say do it. Its about time schools actually remembered the main reason they exist is to teach, not run businesses.

  11. Confident_Drop8326 on

    Teacher pay is joke. Especially outside london. I wonder whether I can take my kids on holiday while the strike is on thou 🤔. Two birds, one stone

  12. Teachers get plenty of money. Especially when you take into account how much time they have off.

    Combine that with the gold plated pensions, and they’re really doing quite well.

  13. Buttermyparsnips on

    We’re borrowing 150 billion a year and we’re not at war nor have the banks collapsed. What are we paying them with exactly

  14. BeautyAndTheDekes on

    To be fair, when people say “Tax the Rich” they aren’t talking about the £125k earners. They’re talking about the multimillionaires and billionaires who are dodging paying tax in the first place.

    I personally think we should have more tax bands, with a wider spread.

  15. Angelsomething on

    wild there is still this pervasive idea that vocational careers like teaching and social care don’t deserve competitive compensation. wild that a bartender makes more than a teacher or the nurse that looks after your loved ones.

  16. thecheeseboiger on

    Essentially, the workload has increased (SEND/admin) but it’s still crammed into the same hours it was 40-50 years ago. 

    In part because there is more admin and also because of trusts taking over most mainstream schools due to *educational research* which said they promoted better outcomes for students. They don’t, as it turns out but the government planned to make every school a trust school ten years ago before quietly abandoning that notion.

    And now, the workload has shot up and compensation for that work has declined. It’s also become much less fulfilling to be in this profession.

    And as a bonus: schools in trusts can now get orders and financial decisions made by crusty, incompetent, middle-aged types who have never taught in their lives.
    They’re usually referred to broadly as HR. Ask your local teacher what they think about those swine.