17-Jul-2008

NUT Executive agrees to ballot next term

The NUT Executive HAVE voted to hold a ballot for discontinuous strike action on pay next term. The ballot is due to start on October 6th.

Come along to the Classroom Teacher meeting on September 27th and discuss how we build to win the ballot – and to discuss the best strategy for winning the campaign.

10-Jul-2008

CLASSROOM TEACHER MEETING IN SEPTEMBER

CLASSROOM TEACHER NATIONAL MEETING

SEPTEMBER 27th 2008:

· How do we build national action on pay and workload ?
· Building support for Classroom Teacher

Exmouth Arms Pub near Euston station, 11 – 4.

The pub is on the junction of Starcross Street and Cobourg Street

A small victory in Lewisham

Last week, the Governing Body of Launcelot Primary School in Lewisham met to discuss a proposal that they consider becoming part of the nearby Knight's Academy - part of the expanding Haberdashers' Aske's empire. They are about to takeover another community primary school in the borough and are already looking for further schools to grab.

Governors heard first from Dr Liz Sidwell - Executive Head of the Aske's Academy Federation - and then from Martin Powell-Davies from the NUT. At the end of the meeting they voted NOT to continue talks with Aske's!

This small victory will encourage local campaigners - but there are major threats facing us. We have just found out that two secondary schools are in discussions with Goldsmiths College about setting up a Trust - despite the Education Department at Goldsmiths being kept in the dark (perhaps because many of the staff and UCU members are opposed to Trusts and Academies being used to break-up accountable community comprehensive education).

Martin Powell-Davies

Brighton Schools Not for Sale

People may remember how "Barrow Schools Not for Sale" launched a campaign against Academies which unseated the mayor and came within one vote of unseating his deputy.

Launched this week, the Brighton Schools Not for Sale campaign is fighting proposals to bring in an Academy at Falmer. They aim to alert teachers and the local community to the known dangers of academies and the loss of democratic control when religious sects or big businesses take over from elected local authorities.

They have a meeting on Wed 16th July at Moulsecoomb Leisure Centre at 4 pm. Any members who live in Brighton might like to go along, particularly those with experience of the anti-academy campaigns.

There is also an online petition
http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/FalmerAcademy

Contact brightonschoolsnotforsale@live.co.uk if you can help in any way.

07-Jul-2008

Workload and pay - Professor Galton's evidence

Have you ever felt that the introduction of PPA time has just seemed to be an opportunity for more of those “initiatives” which caused the workload crisis in the first place? “You must do this now, we've given you PPA time!”

Professor Maurice Galton's contribution to the National Education Conference was to explain his research on the effects of workforce reforms on schools. The most startling of which is that in fact teacher workload has increased rather than been reduced.

Time spent training and supporting Cover Supervisors has been one factor. While the government gets teaching on the cheap, valuable PPA time is eroded by this kind of activity.

The “Learning to Learn” and “Assessment for Learning” Framework is another. These changes require more time and different complex skills for teachers and are beyond the training of Cover Supervisors.

Teaching Assistants do a brilliant job but are often “glued” to a particular pupil and therefore cannot assist the teacher by lightening the workload.

And he quoted a statistic – concern about pupil behaviour in primary schools has increased; the number of classes being taken by Cover Supervisors or TAs in primary schools has increased. As one TA who was quitting the job put it, “The three days' training wasn’t quite enough!”

The whole of Galton's work is summarised in the Education Review.

During one of our strike meetings a teacher said that she had been ideologically opposed to striking when she started teaching but she was coming out this time because of the way teachers have been treated in the intervening thirty years. It is not just about pay.

Galton's findings are an indication that the union needs to take national action over workload as well as pay and he acknowledged this.