Teachers March against Government Plans – 2013

Westminster

Teachers March against Government Plans - 2013
The protest reached a peak outside the offices of the Department for Education

Teachers March against Government Plans: Teachers found Education Minister Michael Gove’s plans for education hard to believe and impossible to swallow and came out in force in a march to a rally in Westminster to protect education on Thursday 17th October 2013. The march brought traffic in Central London to a halt for some hours and was almost a mile long as it moved from Malet Street to Marsham Street past the Education Ministry in Great Smith Street.

Teachers March against Government Plans - 2013

Gove wanted to totally deregulate teachers’ pay and conditions, which would allow all schools to set their own pay levels, working hours and holiday dates. Getting rid of the national agreements would lead to chaos and at school level, waste much time and effort in bureaucracy. Even schools which are ‘academies’ and are not required to follow the statutory guidelines have mostly chosen to do so, and the guidlines still apply to those staff working in academies who are subject to TUPE protections.

Teachers March against Government Plans - 2013

National pay negotiations lead are fairer and prevent much pointless competition between schools to attract the best teachers and avoid contention between management and staff.

Teachers March against Government Plans - 2013

Both the NUT and the NASUWT unions supported a day of strike and this rally and march by striking teachers from London and the South and some London boroughs reported over 40% of schools completely closed, with less than 10% able to work normally.

Teachers March against Government Plans - 2013
Christine Blower, NUT General Secretary, blows her whistle

I taught full-time in education for thirty years, almost ten years in a large comprehensive and later in a sixth form and community college before taking early retirement to concentrate on being a photographer and writing about photography rather than teaching it (and other subjects.) Few outside the profession realise how stressful it can be – or the long hours involved. Most only think of the long holidays and the early end of most school days.

Teachers March against Government Plans - 2013

The teachers wanted Gove to carry out the long overdue valuation of the Teachers’ Pension scheme and to withdraw the threat to make teachers work until they are 68, and his proposals for Performance Related Pay.

I met the front of the march as it came down Whitehall and past Downing Street where it got very noisy with teachers shouting, with many were clearly very angry with the government’s proposals which they feel wreck our education system.

I kept at the front of the march to photograph it in Parliament Square where it passed Big Ben at noon before going on to the Department for Education, there were far too many on the march to get inside the hall for the rally and those not in the front section stopped here to make their vews clear.

They condemned Gove for not listening to teachers or educationalists and ignoring any opinion or research that doesn’t support his own views – or gets in the way of his plans to monetise and privatise our state education system.

But although the marchers were united and noisy in their opposition to Gove, angry and disgusted with his intentions, it remained an peaceful protest. Many of them had come withy their children – whose schools were shut for the day.

I had other things to do and had to walk to my next destination, as the bus services were completely disrupted with many roads jammed with traffic. At Aldwych I did get on a bus, but got off it five minutes later as it had only moved a few feet. An hour later when I was on my way home traffic on Kingsway was still moving at less than walking speed in both directions.

More on My London Diary at Teachers March against Government Plans.


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Teachers March for Education – Westminster 2013

Teachers March for Education: On Tuesday 25th June 2013 teachers from the London area marched through central London today past the Department for Education to a rally. They shouted ‘Gove Must Go!‘ and called for the government to cease attacks on teachers and stop undermining our education system.

Teachers March for Education - Westminster 2013 Gove Must Go!

I should declare a personal interest. I spent 30 years as a full-time teacher, beginning in secondary education where I worked for almost 10 years in a rather unruly 2000+ comprehensive school before moving to a sixth-form and community college. Over the years I taught a wide range of subjects from science and photography with some computer training, business studies with a little personal and social education thrown in as well as setting up and managing a school computer network and then setting up a Cisco Networking Academy. Add pastoral work as a form teacher or group tutor, some careers advice and exam administration and I had a pretty wide experience of what was still for most of my time, the chalk face.

Teachers March for Education - Westminster 2013 Gove Must Go!

And of course, as well as teaching photography I also was a photographer, though my activities were then largely restricted to weekends and holidays – and even some of these were taken up by lesson preparation, marking, schemes of work and other administrative tasks.

Teachers March for Education - Westminster 2013 Gove Must Go!

Various governments had imposed changes on our education system over the years I was involved and few of them had improved our education system but I think all had made teaching as a career more onerous and less attractive. While the National Curriculum was a good idea, its implementation from the start by Kenneth Baker in 1989 was unduly detailed and prescriptive. To a small extent it was updated to make it simpler in 1994, but then under New Labour things got worse.

Teachers March for Education - Westminster 2013 Gove Must Go!

Education also suffered because of Margaret Thatcher’s determination to cut the power of local authorities with many administrative functions being removed from their grasp leading to schools becoming businesses. Back when I started schools didn’t have managers and there were very few staff who weren’t teachers other than the caretaker and cleaners. New Labour went further in 2000 with the setting up of academies which were totally independent of local authority schools and later the coalition government went further with so-called free schools.

Teachers March for Education - Westminster 2013 Gove Must Go!

Ofsted inspections had come in in 1993. Before that time school inspections were carried out by Her Majesty’s Inspectors and local authority teams. All involved I think had experience in education and their aim was to enable staff and schools to improve their performance. Ofsted was quite different with many inspectors having little or no experience in education and all were trained in a rigid framework for inspection which allowed no real dialogue with the schools or the teachers who were being inspected.

I was very pleased to be able to leave full-time teaching and move into the photographic area after I was invited to write about photography for a leading US web site as the administrative burden of teaching was becoming simply unbearable. And it certainly wasn’t improving my teaching.

I quoted Peter Glover, Liverpool NUT and NUT National Executive member for Merseyside and Cheshire on the reason for the forthcoming strike action and rallies:

“Pay, pensions, workload, holidays, OFSTED, surveillance…the attacks on teachers have never been as severe. In many schools this Government has created an atmosphere of terror. Managers with no teaching responsibility roam schools armed with clipboards and OFSTED-inspired grids, pouncing on teachers. ‘Drop-ins’ that turn into capability procedures are the vogue.”

Jolyon Rubinstein and Heydon Prowse of ‘The Revolution Will Be Televised’ start taking the piss out of teachers, not all of whom are amused

As I commented, “Many teachers feel that Minister Michael Gove is setting out to smash the teaching unions in the way that the Thatcher government took on the miners. Teaching is a highly unionised profession, and thus a prime candidate for attack. But teachers join teaching unions because they see them as working not just for their own interests, but more generally for education and for children, protecting educational standards against the attacks by successive governments. They are not just trade unions but professional bodies.”

The government was attacking the national pay system, allowing schools to employ unqualified teachers and worsening working conditions. Many also felt threatened by the general plans to raise “the retirement age to 68. Teaching is a very stressful career and as they say, ’68 is too late’.”

Gove was also responsible for changing the National Curriculum in ways that showed his unwillingness to “take notice of educational research or the views of experts in the field” relying instead on his own whims and unsuitable advisers. If you have children or grandchildren who can tell you abstruse (and sometimes academically contentious) grammatical terms such as “fronted adverbials” but can’t write an interesting story, then you have Gove to thank for it.

More about the march and more pictures on My London Diary at Teachers March for Education.


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All photographs on this page are copyright © Peter Marshall.
Contact me to buy prints or licence to reproduce.