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State schools, called public schools in North America and many other countries, are generally primary or secondary schools mandated for or offered to all children without charge, funded in whole or in part by taxation.

Teacher strikes: Unions team up in England pay dispute

Feb 22,2023 11:21 am

By Hazel ShearingEducation correspondent, at NAHT conference in Telford

Teachers in four unions in England say they will team up on any strike action over pay - which could mean full school closures in the autumn term.

Only the National Education Union (NEU) has enough backing from members to organise walkouts at present. The Next strike will be on Tuesday.

But the three other unions, including two for head teachers, are asking their members whether they want to strike.

The government said it had made a " fair and reasonable" pay offer.

The Four unions teaming up in the dispute are the NEU, the NASUWT, The National Association of Head Teachers (NAHT) and The Association of School and College Leaders (ASCL).

Paul Whiteman , NAHT General Secretary , called their decision to coordinate action an " unprecedented show of solidarity".

" School staff will not put up with eroded pay, squeezed school funding and unbearable workload and working conditions any longer - and We Are fully united together in fighting for change, " He Said .

Many teachers are about to be asked for a second time whether they want to strike.

Three of the unions already held ballots this year. However, when the results were announced in January, only the NEU had enough members voting to move ahead to strikes.

NEU walkouts have been held since February, and it is about to reballot its members - asking them whether or they would want to continue strike action into next term.

The NASUWT union and the NAHT did not meet the turnout threshold needed to strike in England in their last ballots - But both are due to reballot their members ahead of next term.

The Fourth union, ASCL, is due to ballot members for the First Time in its history.

More Than half of England's 22,000 schools either closed or partially closed on NEU strike days in February and March.

If members from multiple unions, including head teachers, were to walk out together, it is likely there would be more full school closures.

The joint announcement, made at the NAHT conference in Telford, comes after

Katie Chilvers, a Year One teacher in Birmingham, supports the NEU strike action and has walked out this year.

But she did not take part in the latest strike on Thursday because she could not " justify" losing Another Day 's pay.

" We're looking at around £80 A Day that we'd lose out on, on average, " She Said .

She Said she was finding other ways to support The Cause , such as " spreading the word" on Social Media .

The NEU says members can apply to access hardship funds.

What are teachers' pay demands?

Most State School teachers in England had a 5% rise in 2022, and a 3% rise was recommended from September 2023.

But the unions want above-inflation increases, and extra money to ensure any pay rises do not come from schools' existing budgets.

After the February strikes, the government made a new pay offer for school teachers, which included a £1,000 one-off payment this year and a 4. 3% pay rise for most staff in September .

The starting salary for teachers in England is also due to rise to £30,000 a year by September - a previous government commitment.

All four unions rejected the offer. They said it was still not fully funded, meaning schools would have had to make cuts elsewhere to afford it.

Education Secretary Gillian Keegan said the offer was no longer on The Table , so the decision on pay would now be made by The Independent pay review body.

A Department For Education statement said: " We have made a fair and reasonable teacher pay offer to the unions, which recognises teachers' Hard Work and commitment.

" We know schools are facing increased costs like energy and staffing, and are providing an extra £2bn in each of The Next two years to cover those costs. As a result, school funding is set to rise faster than forecast inflation in both 2023/24 and 2024/25. "

The Statement said school funding would be " at its highest level in history, in real terms per pupil" next year, as measured by The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS).

The IFS said in December that the increased funding would mean that school spending per pupil " will grow in real terms through to 2024 and will return to at least 2010 levels".

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Source of news: bbc.com

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