Threads / International Qualified Teacher Status (iQTS) / We have significant concerns about the negative impacts of …
Committee Material Published 17 May 2024 ↗ View on Parliament

We have significant concerns about the negative impacts of subject specific teacher shortages. These include compromising the quality of teaching where subjects are being taught by teachers without subject expertise and the reduction of subject provision where schools do not have sufficient specialist teaching capacity. We also heard that lack of specialist teachers can have an adverse impact on take up of certain subjects. This is evidenced by modern foreign languages having the lowest take ...

We have significant concerns about the negative impacts of subject specific teacher shortages. These include compromising the quality of teaching where subjects are being taught by teachers without subject expertise and the reduction of subject provision where schools do not have sufficient specialist teaching capacity. We also heard that lack of specialist teachers can have an adverse impact on take up of certain subjects. This is evidenced by modern foreign languages having the lowest take up by pupils when compared to other English Baccalaureate (EBacc) subjects. Out of the 86.2% of pupils who entered four of the five EBacc components 88.9 Type: conclusion | Number: 39 | Response status: accepted Government response: Whilst there has been some progress since the previous government published the 2019 recruitment and retention strategy, there are shortages of qualified teachers across the country and there is much more to do to meet our goal to ensure every child is taught by a gre