NewsBite

Advertisement

This was published 1 year ago

‘We have a retention crisis’: $40,000 pay rises pledged for top NSW teachers

By Lucy Carroll and Christopher Harris

Top-performing teachers in NSW will receive pay rises of up to $40,000 under a Coalition plan to keep educators in the classroom, but only about one per cent will be eligible for the super salaries.

Six hundred public school teachers will earn salaries of up to $152,000 as part of a NSW election pledge, designed to stop them abandoning classroom positions and to lift student outcomes.

High-achieving public school teachers will earn salaries of up to $152,000 under a Coalition election pledge.

High-achieving public school teachers will earn salaries of up to $152,000 under a Coalition election pledge.Credit: iStock

Premier Dominic Perrottet said the government was investing $100 million in “future-proofing education”.

“This is seismic reform that will modernise the teaching profession and ensure we have the best teachers in our classrooms to benefit students for generations to come,” Perrottet said.

About 200 public school teachers will receive the higher salaries this year, and an additional 600 teachers will be eligible over the next four years under the election commitment. The pay will be linked to time spent mentoring new teachers, helping with lesson plans, and developing resources for other teachers and schools.

Loading

Salaries for NSW public school teachers start at $75,791, but hit a maximum of $113,042. Highly accomplished or lead teachers receive a salary of $120,322. Principals have flagged concerns that private schools are snapping up teaching graduates with salaries of $10,000 to $50,000 above what state schools offer.

Education Minister Sarah Mitchell will tell The Sydney Morning Herald Schools Summit on Tuesday that rewarding excellence in teaching is part of long-term career structure reform for those working in state schools.

“Can you pay an excellent teacher more? And, importantly will that approach work to lift student results? And the answer, according to research and consultation, is yes,” Mitchell said.

Advertisement

Based on the NSW Education Department’s latest data there are about 70,000 full-time teachers. Teachers eligible for the highest salaries will be identified by the department and individual schools, or drawn from a pool of “highly accomplished” or “lead” (HALT) teachers.

Data released late last year shows young teachers in NSW are quitting lucrative permanent positions at the highest rate in 13 years, with one in nine now leaving the profession within five years.

“Can you pay an excellent teacher more? The answer, according to research and consultation, is yes”: NSW Education Minister Sarah Mitchell.

“Can you pay an excellent teacher more? The answer, according to research and consultation, is yes”: NSW Education Minister Sarah Mitchell.

Australian Catholic University’s Jessica Holloway, who has studied teacher pay and evaluation, said the teaching profession is facing a workforce crisis as fewer graduates apply for teaching degrees.

“Rather than focus on a few teachers, we need to think more broadly about the teaching profession and whether current salaries across the board should be increased to have the effects that we want. This is improved retention, conditions for teachers and better student outcomes,” Holloway said.

The first cohort of 200 teachers eligible for higher pay will be drawn from schools across NSW including Temora High, Woollahra Public, Girraween Public and Asquith Girls High.

Loading

The University of Melbourne’s John Hattie, who is leading advice on NSW teacher salary reforms, said the program is starting with 52 schools. It will build up so that about 10 per cent of teachers are eventually eligible for the highest salaries.

“We have a retention crisis and this is the time to make the reforms. This has been trialled before and failed, and this time we want to get this right. Starting this way will allow to program to grow in ways that fits with the purposes and aim,” Hattie said.

NSW has a program that allows public school teachers to be promoted into HALT positions, but just 310 teachers in NSW have been accredited under the specialist system. The highly accomplished teachers will form part of the “talent pool for potential selection” for the higher salary positions.

Loading

President of the NSW Teachers Federation, Angelo Gavrielatos, said while the announcement could result in additional pay for a “small fraction of the teaching service”, it leaves more than 90 per cent of teachers with a wage cut in real terms.

Late last year, the Industrial Relations Commission handed teachers a real wage cut of 6 per cent over two years.

“This performance pay announcement is not located within any industrial agreement, and is nothing more than a distraction by a desperate government responsible for the teacher shortage,” he said.

Education program director at the Grattan Institute, Jordana Hunter, said the roles should be seen as the “pinnacle of the expert teacher career path”.

“It makes sense to start at a smaller number, to make sure we build out the roles over time.”

The Morning Edition newsletter is our guide to the day’s most important and interesting stories, analysis and insights. Sign up here.

Most Viewed in National

Loading

Original URL: https://www.theage.com.au/national/nsw/we-have-a-retention-crisis-40-000-pay-rises-pledged-for-top-nsw-teachers-20230220-p5clyw.html