PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Teaching must be made more attractive as a profession to tackle shortages

2024-10-23
(Press-News.org) Teaching needs to be made more attractive to a wider pool of graduates to tackle shortages in the profession, according to new international research comparing 18 countries.

The worldwide comparison led by Durham University, UK, shows that the level of pay relative to other graduate professions, lack of resources and poor student behaviour all play a part in recruitment and retention issues.

Popular quick-fix strategies used across the world to attract and retain teachers, such as bursaries, scholarships and performance-related pay, do not work, according to the research.

The study found that much more emphasis must be put into targeting those with the potential to be teachers but who may currently not be interested, as opposed to merely offering current teachers more of what they want.

This should include raising the profile and prestige of the profession, increasing pay, and providing schools with better resources. These measures could also help with retention of teachers.

The study, by academics at Durham, Birmingham and Warwick universities, is published in Research Papers in Education.

The researchers analysed data from 18 countries across the world on areas such as teachers’ pay, working conditions, and teaching practices. These factors were considered in the context of wider educational policy, cultural factors and economic conditions. This included how countries plan for teacher supply, location of schools, legal status of teachers, how valued teachers are and salaries of graduates in other professions.

Research has shown that 35 out of 43 education systems in Europe have a shortage of teachers despite years of investment in recruiting and retaining teachers. International organisations, such as the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) have called for this issue to be addressed urgently.

Lead author, Professor Stephen Gorard, from the School of Education at Durham University, said: “The shortage of teachers is a major problem for many countries despite years of investment in recruiting and retaining teachers. Our findings suggest that there are some key factors governments should focus on which include pay, resources and student behaviour.

“It’s also important to look beyond those who are already planning to enter the profession or are currently working as teachers and make the job more attractive to graduates overall.”

In England, the situation is particularly serious for secondary schools because the pupil population has grown, and recruitment to initial teacher training has failed to meet its intake targets for several consecutive years. Teachers in England also have more teaching hours than in many other countries which the study shows can impact on recruitment and retention.

The study found that only 25 per cent of teachers in England think that they are valued by society and only 10 per cent feel they are valued by policymakers. The study shows that countries, such as England, France and Japan, where teachers are less valued are significantly more affected by teacher shortages.

In countries like Singapore, South Korea and Finland, teachers are more appreciated by the government and the public, and these countries do not generally report major issues with teacher supply.

Professor Gorard added: “Our analysis showed that it’s more effective for recruitment and retention to increase teachers’ pay rather than use funding for temporary incentives or bonuses which have been shown not to work. Funding could also be used to increase classroom resources which would be a cheaper solution than providing temporary measures.

“One priority area to tackle is the abuse and intimidation of teachers by students, as policymakers could implement policy and changes in practice without the need for a major financial commitment.”

In this study, the researchers used a new approach to pinpoint which wider factors also play a role in countries suffering from teacher shortages or not, which has not been done before. It shows that teacher shortages are influenced by population density, the general employment level of graduates and the pay of graduates who are not in teaching in any given country.

Dame Alison Peacock, CEO of the Chartered College of Teaching said: “Teaching is the most wonderful and influential profession. Unfortunately, teacher shortages are worsening in this country and internationally, and I firmly believe that the growing lack of trust in and respect for our profession is at the heart of our recruitment and retention crisis. When so few teachers feel valued by society or by policymakers, it's hardly surprising that those who could teach don't see it as an attractive career choice. 

“This new research highlights an important piece of the puzzle that so far has often been neglected in government initiatives and one that we believe is core - the need to raise the status of the teaching profession, empowering professionalism through addressing teacher pay and working hours, reducing disrespectful behaviour, and finding creative new ways to support professional development. The evidence here should underpin conversations between policymakers, academics and the profession, in order to create sustainable change.” 

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Airbnb rentals linked to increased crime rates in London neighborhoods – study

2024-10-23
Latest research has revealed a “positive association” between the number of properties listed as Airbnb rentals and police-reported robberies and violent crimes in thousands of London neighbourhoods between 2015 and 2018. In fact, the study from University of Cambridge and the University of Pennsylvania suggests that a 10% increase in active Airbnb rentals in the city would correspond to an additional 1,000 robberies per year across London.* Urban sociologists say the rapid pace at which crime rises in conjunction with new rentals suggests that the link is related more to opportunities for crime, rather than loss ...

UK budget 'blindness' risks handing green economy future to China, report argues

2024-10-23
A new report by researchers from the University of Cambridge and the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) argues the UK government should invest in green infrastructure now or watch productivity lag behind China, the United States and other countries already running away with the benefits. Is reaching net zero a growth and prosperity plan? by former Head of Economic Forecasting at the UK Treasury, Dimitri Zenghelis, says the government’s self-imposed rules on infrastructure investment must be modernised to spur the innovation needed for UK prosperity. The ...

Marri trees a lifeline for many native bee species in biodiversity hotspot

Marri trees a lifeline for many native bee species in biodiversity hotspot
2024-10-23
New Curtin-led research has revealed Marri trees are critical to the survival of more than 80 species of native bee in Western Australia’s South West region, which is one of the world’s most biologically rich but threatened biodiversity hotspots.   Lead author Dr Kit Prendergast, Adjunct Research Fellow from the Curtin School of Molecular and Life Sciences, said the study identified the Marri (Corymbia calophylla), which is native to the South West and was named a ‘near threatened’ species in 2019, as a crucial supplier of food for native bees and supporter of the region’s ecosystem.   “The findings that these trees support at ...

Treatments used for HER2-positive breast cancers could help patients with rare gastrointestinal cancer

Treatments used for HER2-positive breast cancers could help patients with rare gastrointestinal cancer
2024-10-23
Barcelona, Spain: Drugs designed to target HER2-postive breast cancer could also benefit some patients with bile duct cancer, according to results of a patient trial to be presented on Thursday at the 36th EORTC-NCI-AACR [1] Symposium on Molecular Targets and Cancer Therapeutics in Barcelona, Spain. Bile duct cancer is rare, treatment options are limited, and the survival rates are low.   The trial also suggests that a wider group of breast cancer patients – those with HER2-mutated breast cancer – could be treated with these ...

Little-studied RNA might be key to regulating genetic disorders like epilepsy, autism

Little-studied RNA might be key to regulating genetic disorders like epilepsy, autism
2024-10-23
Study focused on ‘Goldilocks Gene’ CHD2 that causes autism and epilepsy Deletion of long non-coding RNA CHASERR produces too much CHD2 protein in the cell, leaving patients wheelchair-bound, nonverbal and with intellectual delays Patient’s dad from study: ‘We intuitively understood this was a lot bigger than just Emma’ ‘It is mind-boggling that we only know what 1% of the human genome does’ CHICAGO --- When a gene produces too much protein, it can have devastating consequences on brain development and function. ...

UB researchers show why cannabis policies should shift to a harm reduction, health promotion approach to safeguard public health

UB researchers show why cannabis policies should shift to a harm reduction, health promotion approach to safeguard public health
2024-10-23
BUFFALO, N.Y. — Millions of Americans use cannabis to treat a plethora of health conditions. They are rarely under a health care provider’s supervision and their access to quality information about the substances they are consuming and their potential risks is limited at best. A paper published today in the American Journal of Public Health, the official journal of the American Public Health Association, by University at Buffalo researchers calls attention to this concerning and potentially dangerous situation, which they say is a result of a policy environment historically driven by politics, not science. The paper explains why there needs to be a shift in cannabis ...

Live well, think well: Research shows healthy habits tied to brain health

2024-10-23
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 4 P.M. ET, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2024 MINNEAPOLIS – In middle-aged people, having risk factors like blood pressure, blood sugar and cholesterol that are not well-controlled combined with not following certain healthy habits including exercise, diet and sleep, are linked to a higher risk of stroke, dementia or depression later in life, according to a study published in the October 23, 2024, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. These results do not prove that not having healthy habits increases the risk of these conditions, ...

Could poor sleep in middle age speed up brain aging?

2024-10-23
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 4 P.M. ET, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2024 MINNEAPOLIS – People in early middle age who have poor sleep quality, including having difficulty falling or staying asleep, have more signs of poor brain health in late middle age, according to a study published in the October 23, 2024, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. The study does not prove that poor sleep accelerates brain aging. It only shows an association between poor sleep quality and signs ...

Fossils unveil how southern Europe’s ecosystem changed through Glacial-Interglacial Stages

Fossils unveil how southern Europe’s ecosystem changed through Glacial-Interglacial Stages
2024-10-23
Fossils from more than 600,000 years ago reveal how Southern Europe’s animal community shifted between warm and cold climate fluctuations, according to a study published October 23, 2024 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Beniamino Mecozzi from the Sapienza Università di Roma, Italy and colleagues. The Notarchirico site has long been valued as a source of information on the Early-Middle Pleistocene, with fossils stretching from around 695 thousand to 614 thousand years ago. The authors of the present study examined mammalian fossils at the site and how they might ...

Your ability to balance on one leg may be a reliable indicator of neuromuscular aging, with men and women showing significant declines over the decades

Your ability to balance on one leg may be a reliable indicator of neuromuscular aging, with men and women showing significant declines over the decades
2024-10-23
Your ability to balance on one leg may be a reliable indicator of neuromuscular aging, with men and women showing significant declines over the decades ### Article URL:  https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0310764 Article Title: Age-related changes in gait, balance, and strength parameters: A cross-sectional study Author Countries: U.S., Taiwan Funding: AR-K25AG068368 RJP-Robert and Arlene Kogod Professorship in Geriatric Medicine KRK-W. Hall Wendel, Jr. Musculoskeletal Professorship The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. END ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Epic voyage to uncover what causes tsunamis

USC Stem Cell mouse study sheds light on the secret to maintaining a youthful immune system

Suicide risk highest on Mondays and New Year’s Day

Gene signature shows promise to improve survival for breast cancer patients

Investigation finds “unexplained” millions in drug industry payments to the NHS

Maternal antibodies interfere with malaria vaccine responses

Teaching must be made more attractive as a profession to tackle shortages

Airbnb rentals linked to increased crime rates in London neighborhoods – study

UK budget 'blindness' risks handing green economy future to China, report argues

Marri trees a lifeline for many native bee species in biodiversity hotspot

Treatments used for HER2-positive breast cancers could help patients with rare gastrointestinal cancer

Little-studied RNA might be key to regulating genetic disorders like epilepsy, autism

UB researchers show why cannabis policies should shift to a harm reduction, health promotion approach to safeguard public health

Live well, think well: Research shows healthy habits tied to brain health

Could poor sleep in middle age speed up brain aging?

Fossils unveil how southern Europe’s ecosystem changed through Glacial-Interglacial Stages

Your ability to balance on one leg may be a reliable indicator of neuromuscular aging, with men and women showing significant declines over the decades

Most young adults in the UK consider non-consensual condom removal during sex to be wrong and a violation of consent, with almost 9 in 10 seeing it as a form of sexual assault, per survey of 18-25-yea

Under climate change scenarios, 30-44% more land in Ethiopia might become suitable for growing arabica coffee by 2080, although some cultivated areas might also become unsuitable, per modelling study

Cockroaches and maggots might be able to turn an invasive seaweed into a high quality compost, finds a new experimental study which provides hope for the environment and the circular economy

Implantable device may prevent death from opioid overdose

Half of young adults support prison time for non-consensual condom removal

‘Paleo-robots’ to help scientists understand how fish started to walk on land

Study: Robotic automation, AI will speed up scientific progress in science laboratories

Paleontologists discover Colorado ‘swamp dweller’ that lived alongside dinosaurs

Repeated COVID vaccines enhance mucosal immunity against the virus

MD Anderson expands arts experience program to enhance healing and well-being for patients

Students at Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) face barriers to medical school admission, study finds

Symbiosis in ancient Corals

Researchers receive grant to study invasive autumn olive

[Press-News.org] Teaching must be made more attractive as a profession to tackle shortages