Westminster Education Forum

For booking-related queries or information on speaking please email us at info@forumsupport.co.uk, or contact us: +44 (0)1344 864796.

Next steps for teacher recruitment and retention in England

priorities for the new government | promoting teaching as a profession | incentives & use of funding | staff well-being & working conditions | professional development | standards & inspection

Morning, Wednesday, 27th November 2024

Online


This conference will consider next steps for teacher recruitment and retention in England.


It will be a timely opportunity for stakeholders and policymakers to discuss priorities for the direction of policy under the new Government, looking at professional development, staff well-being, workloads, and teaching standards. It comes with the allocation of £1.2bn in additional funding for a teacher pay award and reform of the Ofsted school inspection process.


Delegates will assess what will be needed if the Government’s ambition to recruit 6,500 new teachers is to be achieved, including the impact of financial incentives in recruiting and retaining teachers so far, and potential options for their expansion by the new Government. Those attending will look at priorities for utilising and channelling £2.3bn increased funding to support teacher recruitment next year, announced in the Budget.


The agenda includes a focus on teacher retention, with DfE statistics published in the last Parliament showing recruitment targets in key subjects had been missed. Attendees will look at latest thinking on tackling issues that may contribute to teachers leaving the profession, looking at workload challenges, pupil behaviour, and the scope for flexibility within the profession as the Government announces plans to enable working from home in free periods for marking.


Further sessions consider the likely impact on the profession of reform to the Ofsted grading system announced in September 2024, replacing single-word judgements with a report card system. Delegates will consider the impact of inspection reform on workforce well-being and mental health, as well as workload implications of the inspection process.


We are pleased to be able to include keynotes sessions with: Sue Lovelock, Director, Teacher Workforce, DfE; and Jack Worth, Lead Economist and School Workforce Lead, NFER.


Overall, sessions in the agenda look at:

  • recruitment and retention:
    • examining the effectiveness of financial incentives - new approaches to tackling teacher shortages in key subjects and developing subject specialists
    • improving diversity when recruiting teachers for schools in need of improvement - next steps and best practice for supporting teachers
  • promoting teaching as a career:
    • the impact so far of the Every Lesson Shapes a Life campaign - options for its expansion
    • increasing the effectiveness of campaigns to promote the teaching profession and advance recruitment - learning from best practice in other professions
  • staff well-being:
    • supporting mental health - strategies for managing and reducing workloads - tackling fatigue and burnout
    • developing supportive organisational cultures - improving support for early career teachers - the impact of flexible working
  • professional development:
    • improving the impact of CPD - the future of National Professional Qualification funding - scope for professional autonomy
    • designing whole-school strategies - management and implementation of flexible working - what can be learnt from other professions
  • quality and accountability:
    • the potential impact of reform to the Ofsted inspection process - prioritising teacher well-being during the inspection process - implications of a report card system on staff
    • considering the Curriculum and Assessment Review and its potential impact on the workforce

All delegates will be able to contribute to the output of the conference, which will be shared with parliamentary, ministerial, departmental and regulatory offices, and more widely. This includes the full proceedings and additional articles submitted by delegates. Those due to attend include officials from DfE; Ofsted; HoC Library; NAO; DE, NI; DfE, NI; and the Welsh Government.



Keynote Speakers

Sue Lovelock

Director, Teacher Workforce, Department for Education

Jack Worth

Lead Economist and School Workforce Lead, National Foundation for Educational Research

Keynote Speakers

Sue Lovelock

Director, Teacher Workforce, Department for Education

Jack Worth

Lead Economist and School Workforce Lead, National Foundation for Educational Research

Chairs

Mark Sewards MP

Member, Education Select Committee

Caroline Voaden MP

Member, Education Select Committee

Speakers

Darren Northcott

National Official, Education, NASUWT

Sinéad McBrearty

CEO, Education Support

Gareth Conyard

CEO, Teacher Development Trust

Kulvarn Atwal

Headteacher, Highlands Primary School, Essex

Dr Timo Hannay

Founder, SchoolDash

Darren Morgan

Headteacher, Kings Road Primary School, Manchester

Chris Shepherd

Strategic Lead, Recruitment and Retraining, Institute of Physics

Patrick Garton

Director, Oxfordshire Teacher Training

Andrew O’Neill

Headteacher, All Saints Catholic College, London

David Baker

PhD Research Student, Faculty of Education, University of Cambridge

Lesley Birch

Hub Strategic Lead, Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Teaching School Hub; and Deputy CEO, Meridian Trust

Lynne Birch

Hub Lead, Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Teaching School Hub

Rachele Newman

Director, Initial Teacher Education, University of Southampton

Sally Thomas

Senior Policy Manager, School Systems, School Effectiveness, and Improvement, National Education Union

Dr Gordon Carver

UK Managing Director, Etio

Dr Victoria Cook

Education Research Project Specialist, Chartered College of Teaching