MPs demand tougher entrance requirements for teachers

Teaching applicants whould have a 2:2 or above, MPs argued.Teaching applicants whould have a 2:2 or above, MPs argued.

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Tuesday, 09, Feb 2010 12:01

By Ian Dunt

David Cameron's demands that Britain sets a higher bar on those coming into the teaching profession received support from an influential committee of MPs today.

The cross-party group of MPs on the children, schools and families committee said entry-level requirements for teacher training were too low and that "the bar must be raised".

The finding is very similar to official Tory policy on improving education in England and Wales.

David Cameron called for "brazenly elitist" policy towards recruiting teachers last month.

The Tories proposed that only those earning a 2:2 or above at university would be allowed to enter the profession – the same level recommended by MPs today.

"Only the best professionals with the best qualifications need apply," Mr Cameron said.

Labour's Barry Sheerman, chair of the committee, made a similar point this morning.

"Entry requirements should be raised, and there must be better support for teachers once they are in post," he said.

The committee also recommended that undergraduate programmes for those wanting to be secondary school teachers which attract the poorest qualified candidates should be discontinued.

"Teaching must be seen as an attractive career option for high achieving individuals," Mr Sheerman said.

The pressure on newly qualified teachers should be reduced, MPs said, and a culture of continuous professional development installed in the education sector.

"A failure to tackle the pressures faced by new teachers risks not only a dearth of teachers from the profession but also lasting damage to the educational experience of pupils," Mr Sheerman said.

"This must not be allowed to happen."

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  • "Of the four teachers who really inspired me and whom taught me most, two had virtually no qualifications. True one of the two who did was a doctor but that's beside the point. I do remember having a succession of well meaning, well educated teachers but on balance I would say the ability to impart knowledge seemed to have little in common with their academic qualifications. The worst teacher I had, who failed at least half his students was also a doctor. He was obviously intelligent, but an inability to communicate with students and a basic lack of any teaching strategy other than point repeatedly at the same equation, or mention without explaining the same 'universal' law over and over, saw most of the students who didn't enter his class already on A/B grades fail completely. This proposal seems little more than a cheap political 'it'll sound sensible in the pub' gimmick. Rather than do the more difficult exercise of setting up genuine qualitative targets and methods of assessment during training, then failing those who do not meet these they would rather take the easy path and delegate the responsibility back onto the education system itself; eventually creating a perfect feedback loop where education really only benefits gifted children from the middle and upper classes who want to study academic subjects. If this is such a great way of assessing entry we should surely do the same for parliament who routinely fail us, since there are less places and much greater responsibility the entry bar should be even higher surely? Only those with first class honours should be allowed to be MPs."

    Simon (Newcastle) Posted: 09/02/2010 08:50:35

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