Over on this thread we're talking about the gender pay gap in education.
I'd be interested to hear from those of you working within this sector.
Have you read the BBC article?
Over on this thread we're talking about the gender pay gap in education.
I'd be interested to hear from those of you working within this sector.
Have you read the BBC article?
In reply to Sarah Trueman:
Anecdotal observation: not too long ago I supported a family friend who had been in my opinion wrongly treated when she tried to continue flexible (part time) working as a primary school teacher in order to care for her increasingly-frail mother. The Head Teacher of her school had flatly refused to allow her to continue as part time and (as they tend to do) the school governing body took her word as gospel and rubberstamped all her decisions.In reply to David:
We have many part time teaching staff and I wonder if it's easier to manage at secondary level. I do think leaders struggle more with the "how will we manage this person" rather than can we make it work? We only have a handful of part time middle leaders and none at senior level. Having recently completed my Level 7 qualification we came across an exam question about the barriers of flexible working at senior level. I argued (sorry discussed!) then, and will continue to do so, that organisations need to see the bigger picture of the opportunities that flexible working can bring. I'd rather have a high-performing leader for a part of the week than full time if that's all that was possible. Obviously not just a problem in schools.In reply to Sarah Trueman:
Interesting point Sarah. Surely the answer to "how will we manage this person working flexibly" is "in the same way as you would when they work standard hours" i.e. focus on outputs and performance and treat them as the responsible adult they are.In reply to Anna:
The primary school (actually academy since 1 April) that I am a governor at has a high number of part time and job share teachers. We have had an informal policy (encouraged by me) of accepting a request as long as we have the ability to create a job share partnership to fit the hours a teacher wants and someone to partner them with.In reply to Jacqueline:
Really interesting Jackie. Real life case studies like this are so helpful in moving the agenda forward.In reply to Anna:
Hi AnnaIn reply to Kimberly:
Feel free to rant Kimberly. It's good to get things out in the open otherwise nothing changes. And just to respond to your points:In reply to Jacqueline:
Really interesting, Jackie - especially the flexibility enabling teachers to cover for each other.In reply to David:
Found that aged OFSTED Study. Not sure if there's been further published research in the past few years but then this was the only relevant thing I could find:
It might be useful still to counter any arguments from reactionary etc Head Teachers and the like that part timers and job sharers are not able to be wholly effective teachers
In reply to Anna:
Just for information there's also this one: Return to Teach which states it supports teacher retention by offering flexible teaching: https://returntoteach.co.uk/In reply to Anna:
Nice link, Anna :)Visit the main CIPD website
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