不可能的任务?改进英格兰继续教育和培训教师的招聘和保留的战略方法

IF 3.2 3区 管理学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Paul Tully
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引用次数: 1

摘要

继续教育和培训(FET)部门正被定位为政府大流行后复苏的核心。然而,能力和员工流失问题正威胁着这一战略的潜在成功。不幸的是,几乎没有人对英语FET体系中的教师流失进行战略分析,也没有人对招聘和留住教师的衍生问题进行战略分析,这两个问题都会危及该行业提供高质量教学和提高劳动力技能的能力。本文为政策制定者和部门领导人探讨了这些问题,并就如何解决这些问题提出了建议。提出了一个更联合的FET部门的呼吁。这是教育和培训基金会于2022年发布的一份关于英语FET领域教师招聘的报告的后续论文。本文汇集了英语FET领域关于教师招聘和留任的所有最新研究,并将这些研究与教育部的就业技能政策承诺进行了对比。它还分析了一些拟议的解决办法,反映了它们的优点和潜在后果。研究结果提供了大学、私人培训和成人子部门中FET机构的最新概况,显示了英国FET部门是如何稳步下降的,这与工业生产力和经济复兴的修辞并在一起。四个变量,即资金,机构数量,人员配备和学习者数量进行检查,以探讨这种差异。对招聘和留任研究的更深入分析表明,薪酬、工作不安全感和地位是影响决定开始FET职业生涯的因素。评估了补救“危机”的战略,包括国家运动和专业机构的作用。任何研究计划的第一点都是将之前讨论过的研究数据和主题汇集在一起,以便为未来的调查建立一个平台,这就是本文所做的。对于未来的研究可能在哪里进行,有明确的指导方针:员工福利、专业地位、招聘方法以及FET职业的含义。这些因素影响着FET工作的吸引力和该部门招聘高素质候选人的能力。不进行这项研究的后果可能是现状的延续,这对FET行业来说是不可持续的,对英国的生产率可能是灾难性的。本报告向政策制定者和部门领导人提供了关于教师短缺影响和导致这一问题的因素的分析和建议。研究了支持这些因素的证据,并根据这些证据讨论了解决方案。他们提出了一项研究议程,包括呼吁专业组织和FET利益相关者共同努力,解决招聘和留住危机。研究的启发和信息的力量是提出的几个结论之一。解决侵蚀教职员工专业精神和增加教师流失的因素是提高FET职业吸引力的更广泛讨论的重要组成部分。地位和尊重问题交织在这一分析中,不招聘有才能的教师和评估员的影响也是如此。这包括员工福利——这在FET期刊论文中是一个罕见的话题——以及组织文化和FET使命的重要性,后者被认为是嵌入公共服务伦理的。这一使命通过《Augur报告》与该行业提高社会流动性的转型属性联系在一起。这篇论文没有先例。这是第一篇对影响英国整个FET部门的教师招聘和保留问题进行全面考察的文章。虽然其比较分析建立在教育和培训基金会(2022)早期报告的基础上,但它独特地借鉴了其他当代研究,对这些发现进行了三角分析和讨论,包括为变革和未来研究制定了新的议程。在这样做时,提出了新的问题供讨论,包括专业地位和工作人员福利。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Mission impossible? A strategic approach to improving the recruitment and retention of further education and training teachers in England
Purpose The Further Education and Training (FET) sector is being positioned as a centrepiece of the government's post-pandemic recovery. However, issues of capacity and staff churn are threatening the potential success of this strategy. Unfortunately, there has been almost no strategic analysis of teacher churn in the English FET system or of the derivative issues of recruitment and retention, both of which jeopardise the sector's capacity to deliver high-quality teaching and improve workforce skills. This paper examines these issues for policymakers and sector leaders and makes suggestions on how these can be redressed. A call for a more joined-up FET sector is presented. Design/methodology/approach This is a follow-up paper to a report published by the Education and Training Foundation in 2022 on teacher recruitment in the English FET sector. This paper pulls together all of the most recent research on the English FET sector on teacher recruitment and retention and frames these against the DfE's Skills for Jobs policy commitments. It also analyses a number of proposed solutions, reflecting on their merits and potential consequences. Findings An updated profile of FET institutions within the college, private training and adult subsectors is offered, showing how the FET sector in England has been in steady decline, which is juxtaposed against the rhetoric of industrial productivity and economic renewal. Four variables, namely funding, institutional numbers, staffing and learner numbers are examined to explore this disparity. A more in-depth analysis of recruitment and retention research follows, showing that pay, job insecurity and status are the factors influencing the decision to start an FET career. Strategies for remedying the “crisis” are assessed, including the role of national campaigns and professional bodies. Research limitations/implications The first point for any research programme is to draw together the research data and themes that have been previously discussed in order to build a platform for future investigation, which is what this paper does. There are clear steers on where future research might be located: staff well-being, professional status, recruitment methods and what is meant by an FET career. These are factors that affect the desirability of FET work and the sector's ability to recruit high-quality candidates. The consequences of not doing this research is the likely continuation of the status quo, which is unsustainable for the FET sector and potentially catastrophic to UK productivity. Practical implications Policymakers and sector leaders are presented with analysis and advice on the impact of teacher shortages and the factors that contribute to this. The evidence to support these factors is explored and solutions discussed in light of this evidence. A research agenda is suggested including an appeal for professional organisations and FET stakeholders to work together to solve the recruitment and retention crisis. The power of research to enlighten and inform is one of several conclusions proposed. Social implications Addressing the factors that corrode staff professionalism and increase teacher attrition is an essential component of a wider discourse to improve the desirability of an FET career. Issues of status and esteem are interwoven in this analysis, as are the implications of not recruiting talented teachers and assessors. This includes staff well-being – a rare topic in FET journal papers – as well as organisational culture and importance of the FET mission, which is considered to be embedded in an ethic of public service. This mission is linked via the Augur Report to the sector's transformational properties to raise social mobility. Originality/value There is no precedent for this paper. It is the first article that has provided a comprehensive examination of teacher recruitment and retention issues affecting the whole FET sector in England. Whilst its comparative analysis builds on the Education and Training Foundation (2022) earlier report, it uniquely draws on other contemporary research that triangulates and discusses these findings, including setting out a new agenda for change and future research. In doing so, new issues are introduced for discussion including professional status and staff well-being.
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来源期刊
Education and Training
Education and Training EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
7.20
自引率
13.90%
发文量
57
期刊介绍: Education + Training addresses the increasingly complex relationships between education, training and employment and the impact of these relationships on national and global labour markets. The journal gives specific consideration to young people, looking at how the transition from school/college to employment is achieved and how the nature of partnerships between the worlds of education and work continues to evolve. The journal explores vocationalism in learning and efforts to address employability within the curriculum, together with coverage of innovative themes and initiatives within vocational education and training. The journal is read by policy makers, educators and academics working in a wide range of fields including education, learning and skills development, enterprise and entrepreneurship education and training, induction and career development. Coverage: Managing the transition from school/college to work New initiatives in post 16 vocational education and training Education-Business partnerships and collaboration Links between education and industry The graduate labour market Work experience and placements The recruitment, induction and development of school leavers and graduates Young person employability and career development E learning in further and higher education Research news Reviews of recent publications.
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