Teacher pay and school funding on agenda of conferences
Key topics at the INTO annual meeting include school funding, special education, teacher supply, and the primary school curriculum. Picture: iStock
Pay, industrial relations, and the funding and resourcing of education will dominate the agenda this week as 85,000 teachers gather at their annual congresses across the country.
The Irish National Teachersâ Organisation (INTO) annual congress gets under way in Killarney today, Monday, while the annual conferences of the Association of Secondary Teachersâ Ireland (ASTI) and the Teachersâ Union of Ireland (TUI) both open tomorrow, Tuesday.
At the INTO, key topics will include school funding, special education, teacher supply, and the primary school curriculum. Carmel Dillon is principal of St Maryâs Junior National School in Blessington, County Wicklow.
She believes schools are still âfantastic places to workâ.
Ms Dillon says: âYouâre surrounded by very committed people. Weâve very supportive parents, and we have wonderful children.â
But she is concerned about a âgrowing disconnectâ between the Department of Education and whatâs happening on the ground.
âI think they donât realise the frustration people are experiencing; they donât realise that the successes in schools are because of the hard work and dedication to the children, despite all the challenges.Â
There was a glimpse of this chasm between wider policy and the reality in the classroom earlier in the year, when the handling of special needs assistant (SNA) allocations led to public and political backlash.
âI think that was the one that got the most traction in the media, because of the impact it would have on children who are very vulnerable,â Ms Dillon says.
âThe reality is you canât define vulnerability anymore in terms of a diagnosis. There are children without diagnoses who are also very vulnerable in the education system, who are also supported by SNAs, who are absolutely amazing at their job.â
With the falling pupil numbers in schools, the department did have an opportunity to address the teacher ratio, but didnât, she says.
âAs a result, in our school, for example, weâre losing one mainstream post. Weâre also losing 10 special education hours. Youâre expected to cluster with other schools in your locality, but all of the schools I have tried to contact are in a deficit themselves and trying to hold onto posts.
âIt would have been a fantastic opportunity for the department to have a bit of vision, hold onto all the teachers and balance the system. Instead, weâre also being penalised for doing well in our standardised testing. Because weâve done well in our standardised testing, weâre deemed not to need as much school support.â
Ms Dillon worries about resources, finances, and initiative rollouts.
âSome schools can afford to buy sets of laptops for their students,â she says. âOur school, I donât know if weâll ever be in that position, because weâre so financially underfunded.
âWe manage on a shoestring, but we get by, just about, with a lot of stress, because of the flexibility of our staff, the generosity of parents, and because they understand and support us.
âIt would be lovely to say, âWeâll use that bit of fundraising to buy a set of iPadsâ, but when you have a gas bill, and an electricity bill, and all sorts of other bills mounting up, you have to prioritise keeping the school open.â
Another example of the disconnect is the âŹ80 provided per pupil under the free schoolbook grant.Â
In the first years of its introduction, St Maryâs didnât have enough with the grant to cover all the books required by students.
This year, following a âcullâ, the school broke even for the first time.
âWeâve had to eliminate some textbooks,â Ms Dillon says. âIt was very difficult to do it, but this year was the first weâve managed to break even, and only because our numbers have gone down.Â
âWeâve cancelled the direct debits, and we just pay a certain amount every month. In the summer months, we go in to the black; coming in to winter, we go in to the red.
âThey contact me and say, âCarmel, you owe money on the bill, youâre going to be on the list to be disconnectedâ.â
âI say: âPut me on the list, and if you disconnect me, you can contact the Department of Education about it.â We just canât afford to pay the bills in full.â
Orla Casby, a member of the Association of Secondary Teachers Ireland (ASTI), is a chemistry teacher in Galway.
Its annual congress is expected to debate teachersâ concerns about changes to the Leaving Cert, including the introduction of additional assessment components (AACs) to be worth 40% of a studentâs overall grade in a subject.
Ms Casbyâs concern, like many of her fellow members, is around fairness. She says:Â
âSome private schools have wonderful, cutting-edge facilities, but all of that is expensive. Other labs have mercury thermometers, and some have no thermometers. Others are using data loggers.
âI think there should be a practical element in science,â she says. âI do think science should be hands-on. You canât do that if you donât have the equipment.
âWe need investment and for everyone to be brought up to the same level. Itâs not like for like at the moment. Itâs so varied what schools have and havenât got access to.â
Nessa OâMeara, a member of the Teachers' Union of Ireland (TUI), is based in Carlow.
She is an established teacher now, but her path to a full-hours contract wasnât straightforward. This is despite her teaching English, a core subject, and history, which is a core subject at Junior Cycle.
She qualified in 2014, but received her first permanent, full-hours contract in 2020.
After three years of subbing, she secured a fixed-term contract offering her six teaching hours per week. Ms OâMeara says:Â
Her experience is common to many teachers, and she knows of others who have since left the profession.
âThey just couldnât sustain the six hours there, or the 11 hours here,â she says.
The TUI has called for contracts of full hours to be issued to new entrants from their initial appointment, which the union says will allow them to have a sustainable career.
- Jess Casey, Education Correspondent






