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Teachers shun retention payments to move out of schools that need them most

By Alex Crowe

Schools in regional Victoria are struggling to hire and retain teachers despite state government incentive payments of up to $50,000 to take up hard-to-fill classroom roles.

The Allan government’s $244 million scheme to grow and improve the workforce is showing mixed results in its first six years, with more than 20 per cent of teachers paid lucrative incentives to move to regional Victorian schools leaving after just two years.

About half of the teachers who received incentives had left after three to four years, Education Department data shows.

The government paid $6.7 million to 250 teachers – or $26,800 each on average – to move to schools in rural and remote areas struggling to find staff in 2022.

Of 200 teachers who received $5.29 million in government incentives in 2020 and 2021, almost a quarter no longer work at public schools.

Of 200 teachers who received $5.29 million in government incentives in 2020 and 2021, almost a quarter no longer work at public schools.Credit: iStock

The teachers who filled the positions were offered an additional $10,000 annually for two years to stay beyond their contract, but a fifth of them were not employed by the same school by 2024.

The targeted financial incentives, designed to help schools outside Melbourne suffering from chronic teacher shortages, ask educators to commit to a minimum of two years.

Annual retention payments are paid after the second, third and fourth year of employment.

Bairnsdale Secondary College teacher Matt Kell raised concerns about the program in a submission to the Victorian government’s inquiry into the state school system.

Kell said the program doesn’t solve the problem it “just moves it” and in some cases causes jealousy.

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“Long-standing staff are seeing teachers with a lot less experience getting a large bonus for moving,” he said.

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Kell said the teacher shortage had become so insidious in Bairnsdale that even jobs offering the $50,000 incentive failed to attract applicants.

“Public education is on the brink of collapse in the regions. We are by far the largest support network for these kids, and I worry for their futures because this will get worse before it gets better,” he said.

Of the 200 teachers who received $5.29 million in government incentives in 2020 and 2021, almost a quarter no longer work at public schools.

Monash University professor of education Jo Lampert said other industries and non-government schools poached teachers from the schools where they were most needed. “Teachers are getting calls all the time from “better schools” offering them jobs for better salaries,” she said.

Lampert, who has worked with governments on developing pathways into teaching for about 20 years, said most initiatives focus on getting people into the workforce.

“Schools are very hard place to be right now. It’s a systemic problem”: Professor Jo Lampert.

“Schools are very hard place to be right now. It’s a systemic problem”: Professor Jo Lampert.Credit: iStock

She said schemes like the targeted incentive program got teachers where they were needed, but retention was a problem.

“We notice that teachers might only be staying two years, even with these incentives,” she said.

Lampert said the Queensland government offered incentives for four-year commitments to teach in remote areas, to try to tackle the retention issue. She said the teacher shortage was a combination of a retirement-age workforce, poor pay, increasing workload and poor wellbeing. “Schools are very hard place to be right now,” Lampert said. “It’s a systemic problem.”

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A Victorian government report on teaching from 2022 forecast a shortfall of more than 5000 teachers by 2028, largely driven by demand outpacing supply in the secondary school sector.

While there is no national database on teacher-attrition rates in Australia, academics estimate 30 to 50 per cent of teachers leave the profession within the first five years.

Sara Amos left the industry two years ago due to the workload of public school secondary teachers. Amos, from Surrey Hills in Melbourne’s east, said 60-hour weeks were common, and that workload increased during assessment periods.

“I don’t want to not be a teacher,” she said. “I am currently not a teacher because I wanted to start a family and I couldn’t juggle a young family and the workload.”

Amos said the time required to plan, mark and support students outside the classroom was impossible to achieve during a 38-hour week. “You have about 150 students that you’re looking after every week, and you are trying your utmost to challenge and support in your classroom,” she said.

Sara Amos with son Heath (six months). Amos says of 10 close friends who had all taught together, only three are still teaching.

Sara Amos with son Heath (six months). Amos says of 10 close friends who had all taught together, only three are still teaching.Credit: LUIS ENRIQUE ASCUI

“But there has to be some give because you will run yourself dry and, unfortunately, that is what happened with me.”

Amos said of 10 close friends who had all taught together, only three remained teaching. She said increased funding would allow schools to hire specialists to work with kids who needed extra support, and a database of curriculum resources would give teachers more hours in the day. “Unfortunately, I’m not seeing any big changes in the immediate future,” Amos said.

The Education Department is currently advertising more than 1400 teaching and non-teaching jobs in state schools. Bonuses are available for teachers willing to move to towns with hard-to-fill positions at schools, including Shepparton, Horsham and Kyabram. A three-bedroom house in regional Victoria has a median price of $535,000 compared with a three-bedroom house in Melbourne at $807,500.

Education Minister Ben Carroll said the Labor government had a number of initiatives to get more Victorians to pursue teaching careers. Carroll pointed to Victoria’s free teaching degrees, financial incentives for hard-to-staff roles, paid placements for students training to be teachers and employment-based degrees.

He said there were an extra 1700 teachers employed in the Victorian workforce in the past year.

“Being a teacher is the most important job in the world, and we are helping kids across Victoria get a world-class education with our targeted financial incentives program,” he said.

But Australian Education Union Victoria Branch president Meredith Peace said school staff had been filling the gaps by taking on mounting workloads, leaving many burnt out and driving some to quit the profession.

“Encouraging more people to join the profession is part of the solution, but the state government needs to do more to keep existing teachers in the workforce,” Peace said.

“Retention payments, addressing workloads and full funding for public schools are some of the many solutions the state government can implement right now to recognise their efforts and encourage them to stay in the profession.”

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Original URL: https://www.smh.com.au/link/follow-20170101-p5kfgi