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Australia: State Labor government moves to dismantle public
school staffing system
By Erika Zimmer
28 February 2008
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Under the guise of effecting gradual amendments to the way
that the states 60,000 public schools teachers are hired,
the Labor government in the Australian state of New South Wales
(NSW) is preparing to abolish the state-wide system of staffing
schools, a move that will overturn teachers fundamental
working conditions and further widen the gap between rich and
poor schools.
On February 4, Education Minister John Della Bosca announced
that from the end of the second term in 2010, the staffing system
will be augmented by local selection, with school
principals able to select the teachers they hire.
At present, teachers considered qualified to work in NSW public
schools are placed on a central employment list. Those at the
top of the list who meet the criteria that schools require to
fill their vacancies are appointed without any involvement from
principals.
This system, which underpins job security, provides for transfers
to ensure the supply of qualified teachers to isolated rural districts
and schools in socio-economically disadvantaged areas. Teachers
working for at least three years in such hard-to-staff schools
accumulate points that entitle them to apply for a transfer to
a school they prefer.
The education department fills vacancies according to a formula:
first on the list are suitable teachers with priority, i.e., those
in overstaffed schools, teachers returning from maternity
or other leave, compassionate transfers and transfers for years
of service in isolated or hard-to-staff schools. After the department
has exhausted that list, new teacher applicants at the top of
a waiting list are hired.
The government insists that the two methods of recruiting teachers
can co-exist, with principals free to employ teachers from the
departmental list or opt for local selection. Initially teachers
will continue to be employed by the education department and receive
centrally determined salaries and benefits, regardless of which
of the states 2,200 public schools they work in. It requires
no great leap of imagination, however, to foresee the next major
stepif one accepts the argument that principals need to
be able to hire teachersthat is expanding principals
budgetary powers, giving them the right to vary teachers
pay and conditions as they see fit.
A message posted to teachers by the departments director-general
Michael Coutts-Trotter claims that the change will mean no job
losses and no loss of tenure. This worthless assertion flies in
the face of logic: how can principals be given the power to hire
without the power to fire? No doubt the fact that up to 40 percent
of NSW teachers are due to retire in the next six years has played
some part in the government temporarily delaying proposing measures
explicitly giving principals the power of dismissal.
In truth, the move represents a thinly-veiled step toward an
agenda overwhelmingly rejected by teachers in the past: the introduction
of fixed-term contracts for all teachers with salaries tied to
so-called performance.
Repeated attacks on state-wide staffing
The current staffing system has long been the target of both
Liberal and Labor governments who have seen it as a barrier to
their devolution agenda, in which principals function as managers
rather than educators and schools themselves, rather than governments,
are responsible for making ends meet.
In 1989, the former Liberal government instituted a system
of local selection in which principals hand-picked teachers. The
notion of flexible staffing was introduced, giving
principals the ability to alter the mix of teachers at their school.
The measure met with widespread opposition from teachers and was
shelved by the incoming Carr Labor government in 1995.
The retreat, however, was purely tactical. The issue emerged
in 2000 with the publication of a government report recommending
that individual principals be given the power to hire and fire.
That year was marked by bitter industrial disputation as the Carr
government sought to implement a new award which freed
teachers working conditions from restrictions
so that public education could compete in the education
marketplace. The award agreement finally stitched up between
the NSW Teachers Federation (NSWTF) and the government extended
school opening hours, strengthened the teacher assessment review
process and introduced the category of temporary teacher.
In 2004, the Carr government introduced legislation making
the continued employment of school principals conditional on meeting
a battery of benchmarks determined by the Education Departments
director-general. By linking employment to a schools performance
in statewide tests, the laws accelerated the re-imposition of
narrow, test-centred teaching methods. They also placed pressure
on principals to exclude students requiring the most attention,
such as those with learning or behavioural difficulties, and to
victimise teachers who failed to meet performance indicators.
Moreover, by effectively scrapping principals security of
tenure, the measures set a precedent to be used against all teachers.
The following year, the NSWTF signed an agreement with the
government to open up the staffing system to partial local selection.
The agreement gave principals the option of accepting a teacher
from the departments employment list or themselves interviewing
the five teachers at the top of the list, and choosing the one
they deemed the most suitable. The NSWTF helped introduce a scheme
designed to trial a process for later expansion.
A pro-business agenda
To defend teachers working conditions, including statewide
staffing and security of tenure, means to challenge the proposition
that chronically-underfunded public schools must be forced to
compete in an education marketplace.
There is no question that schools in isolated regions must
be able to compensate staff with generous housing, travel and
locality allowances. However the vast majority of hard-to-staff
schools have been the victims of severe funding shortages, combined
with an increasingly cut-throat struggle between schools for enrolments.
After a generation of pro-market reforms there
is now a vast chasm between schools in better-off areas and in
socio-economically disadvantaged regions with the latter comprised
of high concentrations of students from poor families, those with
English language difficulties, indigenous students and disabled
students. The latest measure will only widen the gulf. Well-resourced
schools, and those whose parents can donate or raise funds, will
inevitably benefit at the cost of poorer communities.
The government claims to be acting in response to local pressure
for individual schools to have more control over staffing. In
reality, the entire shift is driven by Labors pro-business
agenda. It consists of reducing spending on education and all
other essential social services, and imposing a user pays
framework in which parents feel compelled to pay for their own
childrens education, either by sending them to private schools
or by fund-raising for their chosen public school. All the time,
public education is being eroded, while billions are poured into
increasingly wealthy private colleges.
More broadly, education is being subordinated to the narrow
employment needs of the corporate establishment, and teachers
are being disciplined to accept this process, and meet the related
performance indicators, or lose their jobs or prospects of promotion
or transfer.
Mindful of the intense hostility of teachers to the dismantling
of long-held conditions, the NSWTF claims to oppose the governments
latest staffing measure and has foreshadowed industrial action.
However, the union has no intention of carrying out a serious
struggle. In fact, the government is so confident that the union
will fall into line again that Education Minister Della Bosca
told ABC radio he expected the changes to be finalised by the
end of Term 1 on April 11, 2008.
Teachers should review the record not only of the Labor and
Liberal governments but also the teacher unions in imposing the
running down of public education. The record demonstrates that
the NSWTF has no principled opposition to the underlying free
market processes. Teachers need to consider the fundamental
political questions raised. Widening education inequality can
be addressed only by developing a mass movement against the dictates
of the corporate profit system and their implementation by Labor
and Liberal governments alike.
See Also:
Australia: Victorian teachers' union blocks
discussion on strategy to oppose government attacks
[26 February 2008]
Australia: Victorian teachers face fight
with Labor governments over pay and conditions
[13 February 2008]
Australia: Labor's
"education revolution" to deliver for business
[14 December 2007]
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