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Teachers' strike about much more than money

Author
Stuart Whitaker,
Publish Date
Tue, 14 Mar 2023, 4:16pm
Teachers and principals from the Te Puke district are joining their colleagues across the country in strike action. Photo / Stuart Whitaker
Teachers and principals from the Te Puke district are joining their colleagues across the country in strike action. Photo / Stuart Whitaker

Teachers' strike about much more than money

Author
Stuart Whitaker,
Publish Date
Tue, 14 Mar 2023, 4:16pm

Teachers and principals from Te Puke will join 50,000 of their colleagues in strike action on Thursday.

Last week, the Post Primary Teachers鈥 Association (PPTA), covering secondary and area school teachers, and the New Zealand Educational Institute (NZEI), covering primary and kindergarten teachers, made the decision to strike.

NZEI members rejected a second offer from the Ministry of Education to settle their collective agreements.

They want the Government to increase staffing and funding to schools and kindergartens so teachers can better meet the needs of children, and to improve current pay offers in order to attract and retain people in the teaching profession.

Te Puke Intermediate School principal Jill Weldon says the ministry鈥檚 second offer had 鈥渓ittle discernable difference鈥 from the first. She says parts of the collective agreement are archaic and society, children, expectations on teachers and teachers鈥 workloads have all changed.

鈥淭here are some critical pieces of [the teachers鈥 concerns] in terms of resourcing that they are not making any effort to address,鈥 she says.

鈥淩eally, they seem to be focusing on pay, but even then, not at a rate of inflation.鈥

Jill says the other issues relate to resourcing and time for teachers to be able to teach and for leaders to lead.

The current agreement is impacting the classroom and students鈥 learning, she says.

鈥淭ake us as an example - at intermediate, we get staffed on one teacher to 29 kids. Twenty years ago, 29 kids, that was manageable. Now we鈥檝e got [a roll of] 450 kids and more than half of our school is on our support register for learning, behaviour or health.鈥

That averages around six students in each class.

鈥淭hey want [teachers] to teach literacy and numeracy, but also manage the health, the behaviour, the wellbeing, the anxiety of [students].

鈥淭hen they say, 鈥榃hy are we not performing? And why are we not reaching the standards of literacy and numeracy that we used to?鈥 Well, holy hell, how can we?鈥

Fairhaven School teacher Trish Hunt says children鈥檚 needs are becoming more complex.

听鈥淲e鈥檝e had Covid for three years, our children鈥檚 emotional needs are way more complex and we鈥檝e been under-resourced as a teaching profession for many, many years. But like the good old number-eight wire [mentality], we just keep going because that鈥檚 the nature of us as teachers. We just make do with what we鈥檝e got, but we don鈥檛 want to make do now because we can see that the children that we鈥檙e trying to teach are failing because they are not getting the resources and the extra support they need in class.鈥

She says her classroom is really busy and it is complicated to manage behaviours and learning needs.

鈥淎t the moment, [students are] sinking below the paddling line because we are not able to meet their needs - we are one person in a room with 28 children that have lots of learning needs, so the children that don鈥檛 need all those specific acts of teaching and intervention - they miss out too because they鈥檙e not being extended.鈥

There is also concern teachers are leaving the profession, and it is not an attractive career.

Te Ranga School acting principal Aimee Kennedy says teaching is not a good option for school leavers.

鈥淢y friends, who are highly effective people, wouldn鈥檛 give teaching a second glance because it鈥檚 very widely known what the conditions are like and the pay we get for the conditions we put up with - it鈥檚 not a sustainable option for people.

鈥淗ighly skilled people who would make good teachers are not choosing teaching because they could get a different three-year degree and get paid, entry-level, $20,000 more - it鈥檚 not a good option for people leaving school at the moment. We need to make it an attractive option.鈥

鈥淲e鈥檙e not able to retain our good teachers,鈥 says Trish. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e not remunerated for all the responsibility that you have and all the hours that you do - you feel like you鈥檙e failing your tamariki because you can鈥檛 do everything. You are everything to everybody, and you run out of steam.鈥

Teachers are also reluctant to take on leadership roles.

鈥淲hen you talk to all your senior management, they have no aspirations to be a principal because of the things they see,鈥 says Fairhaven School principal Paul Hunt.

Teachers feel there is a misconception about the number of hours they work.

鈥淭he nine-to-three job - that perception is out there until someone steps foot on school grounds, or is married to a teacher, or is invested in or connected with someone in the profession,鈥 says Te Puke Intermediate School deputy principal Stephen Knightly.

鈥淭hen they see ... and hear about what the conditions are like, or what a day is like, and [teachers say], 鈥楽orry, I鈥檝e got paperwork to do鈥 at 11pm at night - that鈥檚 when people in the community start saying, 鈥業鈥檇 never want to do that鈥.鈥

Paul says the profession is salaried, so however many hours teachers work, the amount they are paid doesn鈥檛 change.

On Friday, Ministry of Education employment relations and pay equity general manager Mark Williamson told the听Bay of Plenty Times听the offer that NZEI members had rejected so far provided 鈥渟ignificant increases鈥.

鈥淔or example, teachers at the top of the scale would earn $96,820 after eight years teaching.鈥

He said primary teachers were also offered improvements to many of the conditions that NZEI has been looking to address.

鈥淲e set aside over $380 million so that pay parity can be maintained for all registered early learning teachers. We have sought to resume bargaining urgently to avoid disruption to our learners, their families, employers and communities.鈥

In terms of negotiations with the PPTA, Williamson said there were still 鈥渟ome outstanding issues鈥.

鈥淲e have now approached the Employment Relations Authority to seek facilitated bargaining urgently. We hope the PPTA has the same urgency.鈥

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