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: Britain
Britain: Government expands use of classroom assistants to
cover teacher shortage
By Liz Smith
29 November 2001
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Education Secretary Estelle Morris has announced the most far-reaching
changes affecting the conditions of teachers in England and Wales.
In a speech given to the Social Market Foundation, a pro-Labour
think-tank, Morris outlined changes based on the findings of a
study of teachers workloads by accountants Price Waterhouse
Coopers. These include a greater role for classroom assistants,
in which current restrictions will be lifted to allow them to
cover for teacher absences; supervise classes undertaking work
set by a teacher; invigilate tests; take charge of lunch time
activities; provide pastoral and other individual support to pupils.
An additional 20,000 classroom assistants will be required, as
well as an increase in the numbers of technicians whose responsibility
will be to administer Information Technology subjects.
According to the government, this will free teachers to give
them more time to plan and prepare lessons, and diminish the already
mounting administrative pressures they face.
However, the real reasons for the changes are twofold. Firstly,
to plug the haemorrhaging of teachers that has already lead to
a historic shortage of qualified staff. While some golden
helloslimited additional one-off payments of a few
thousand poundshave been provided to encourage new teacher
recruits in shortage subject such as maths, science and English,
staff shortfalls are increasing in secondary schools at a rate
that would require a minimum of 10,000 new teachers just to plug
the gap.
This situation is exacerbated by the fact that over the next
15 years more than 45 percent of presently serving teachers will
reach 60 and leave schools on retirement. It has also been identified
that at least 18 percent of staff are teaching subjects they are
not trained for.
Secondly, the proposals in no way reverse the creeping privatisation
of education, begun under the previous Conservative governments
and continued under New Labour.
Under the guise of raising standards, which has
become a by-word for the assault on the state education system,
Morris argues that professional development activities
are drawing teachers away from the classroom, meaning there is
an increasing reliance on supply (substitute) teachers. However,
rather than providing greater numbers of fully trained permanent
teachers, the government is proposing to extend the responsibilities
of non-teaching staff. Whilst there is a role for support staff
in schools, they are increasingly being used to cover over teacher
shortages, taking on responsibilities for which they lack both
experience and qualifications.
Immediately following Morriss speech, the press seized
upon remarks made by Nigel DeGruchy, general secretary of the
National Association of Schoolmasters Union of Women Teachers
(NASUWT). A public row ensued over DeGruchys comment, which
appeared to compare classroom assistants to pig ignorant
peasants. His remarks, taken out of context, saved the day
for the government by diverting attention away from the central
axis of its education proposals, which is to hand over extensive
responsibilities to lower paid unqualified staff.
The number of classroom assistants employed in state schools
has grown exponentially over the last 10 years. From 61,262 in
1997, the number has risen to 95,815 in 2001. There has also been
a parallel increase in technicians from 12,747 to 15,046, and
clerical staff from 35,082 to 41,285.
Labour took office in 1997 claiming that education, education,
education was its number one priority, promising to reduce
class sizes in primary schools to less than 30 children. Since
then, it has used the increase in support staff to advance the
disingenuous claim that they have reduced the pupil : adult
ratio in schools, which is not the same as the pupil : teacher
ratio.
However, the increasing use of classroom assistants also masks
the huge changes that have been made throughout the state education
system, and particularly with regard to children with special
educational needs (SEN). Throughout the 1980s and 90s, many special
schools which catered specifically for children with severe emotional,
behavioural and learning disorders, and provided a more therapeutic
environment, were closed as part of government cuts in the public
sector. Additionally many of the integrated resource units within
ordinary schools that had offered a more protective environment
for children with learning disabilities were also disbanded, putting
thousands of children with SEN into mainstream classes. The government
sought to justify this by arguing that placing these children
into the conventional education system encouraged social
inclusion. (This paralleled a similar move in mental health,
with specialist psychiatric units being closed in favour of the
mis-named care in the community.)
But without devoting the extra resourcesfor staff, facilities
and materialsthat teaching such children requires, it only
increased the burden on ordinary teaching staff and overstretched
school budgets.
It is under such conditions that there has been a huge growth
of classroom assistants, particularly in secondary schools. For
the most part, they are paid meagre wages for what in many inner
city schools is a very stressful job, and have worse working conditions
than other educational staff. Their pay ranges from £9,531
to £12,444, based on a 32.5-hour week, but many assistants
are only paid during term time. While 35 percent of classroom
assistants have a relevant professional qualification and 6 percent
have appropriate degrees, this leaves nearly 60 percent with little
or no experience or knowledge of the complexities of working with
children.
See Also:
Britain: Start of new term
sees education system near collapse
[13 September 2001]
The School Report: Why Britains
Schools are Failing a book by Nick Davies
[3 February 2001]
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