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Discipline fears as female teachers outnumber male peers by 12 to 1

Last updated at 23:22pm on 09.11.06

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More required: Female teachers outnumber their male peers by 12 to 1

Teaching is fast becoming an all-female profession with women outnumbering men in the classroom as much as 13 to one, dramatic new figures revealed today.

The number of male teachers has plummeted to an all-time low, threatening a classroom discipline crisis as a generation of boys misses out on authority role models.

In parts of the country worst-hit by the male recruitment slump, fewer than 10 per cent of primary teachers are men. In Reading, just 38 primary teachers are male compared with 478 women.

But the decline has been particularly marked in secondary schools, fuelling fears of rising misbehaviour among disaffected teenage boys whose lives lack male authority figures.

Analysts believe male teachers are "fast becoming an endangered species" as salaries rise more quickly for other graduate jobs, especially high-flying City roles which traditionally attract men.

There are also fears men are being scared away by the fear of false child abuse allegations while others are thought to be put off by the absence of male companionship in primary schools.

It means that in the space of a generation, the proportion of secondary school male teachers has dropped from 55 per cent to 41 per cent. Across all state schools, just a quarter of teachers are men.

The shortage is most severe in the commuter belt surrounding London where soaring house prices and high cost of living renders teaching merely the 'second income' for many couples, according to an analysis conducted for the relaunch issue of the Times Educational Supplement.

Local authority areas with the fewest male teachers include Reading, Sutton, Windsor and Maidenhead, Surrey, Wokingham, Richmond-upon-Thames, Harrow, Camden and Bracknell Forest.

Teachers are said to be 'mostly women whose husbands or partners have good jobs'. The highest concentrations of male teachers are found in lower-cost areas such as Cornwall, Devon, Norfolk, North East Lincolnshire and Hull.

The findings sparked calls last night for urgent measures to make teaching more attractive, especially in the South East.

The imposition this September of £3,000-a-year top-up fees on university courses is thought to have particularly deterred male applicants.

Multi-million pound Government advertising campaigns aimed at tempting more men into teaching are thought to have mainly benefited fee-paying schools, where salaries tend to be higher, it emerged.

Experts are concerned the lack of male role models in the classroom could have serious implications for boys' performance in exams.

It is thought to be one of the key reasons why boys now lag behind girls in every major school examination. Analysts from the research firm Education Data Surveys said the trend warranted national debate.

Professor John Howson, EDS director and visiting professor at Oxford Brookes University, said: "We've all known it's been like this in primaries. When you add in all the classroom assistants, the dinner ladies and the office staff, probably only about one per cent of the primary workforce in somewhere like Reading is male.

"We've rather accepted it. But do we want secondary schools to go the same way?" Since men are more likely to become heads and deputies, who are registered as teachers but often do not have active teaching duties, the number of male teachers actually in the classroom is even smaller.

Professor Howson continued: "In the classroom, the division is even more stark. It is perfectly possible for a child to go through their whole education and be taught entirely by women. That may not necessarily be a bad thing, but it is an issue that society has to have a debate about.

"Clearly some schools where all the teachers are women are functioning very well but there may be groups, particularly the older age group of pupils, for whom having some more male role models around would be helpful in making them better operating schools."

The Training and Development Agency, the teacher training body, said male teachers were "important".

A spokeswoman said: "Different people bring different qualities to the classroom. It is important that children are exposed to a teaching force which is representative of society."

But the agency is concerned men still have "misconceptions" about teaching such as the likely salaries they can earn.

Professor Howson said a senior teacher leading a large secondary school department could command more than £50,000-a-year in London, and £46,000 outside.


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For years the goverment has directed schools to make themselves more female friendly. Every effort has been expended to motivate and improve the performance of the girls while effectively ignoring the boys. Thats not to say there are no good schools because my son went to a first class state school. This however directly effects career choice. Most men do not wish to work in a female dominated envoiroment, which exactly describes a lot of the state schools today. It will be interesting to see if the PCGM mob are prepared to spend a generation motivating and educating boys as they did the girls. I doubt it, we only have to look at the USA to see that for a boy to get a decent education he has to go to a private school.

- Pete, Bournemouth, 10/11/2006 16:12
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Two reasons I wouldn't consider teaching in a UK state school (backed up by two teachers in my family).

The first is personal safety. Schools can't expel undisciplined students, they can't even expel violent ones with convictions to prove it. It's high time that ordinary schools once again become places only for students who are willing to behave properly, with "special schools" or borstals reintroduced for the 10% who make learning well-nigh impossible for most of the other 90% (especially in "mixed-ability" classrooms, another disaster story).

How mostly women staff cope I don't know. Perhaps even thugs think beating up a woman is bad.

The second is the prescriptive nature of the national curriculum. I wouldn't be allowed to teach any real science anyway, just a collection of disconnected facts that allow the students to pass various tests and will thereafter be forgotten because there is no context in which to remember and reapply them.

Pay has little to do with it.

- Nigel, London, 10/11/2006 14:41
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I have just taken my son out of a state school in Kingston, where all the teachers at every level were female. His one PE lesson a week usually entailed something like netball, or catch, and the annual sports day was non-competitive. There was also a lot of job shares going on so the children would have two female form tutors - it was clear at parents evening they had no idea what he was like or what he had been doing in school.

At his new private school he has 2 afternoons of sport a week, plus PE lessons on top, and they have a healthy mix of male and female teachers conducting lessons and sports. It's a shame that people without a great deal of money like myself have to pay to give my child the education I used to receive free on the state system when I was growing up.

- Bryan Barrington, Kingston, Surrey, 10/11/2006 13:34
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This answers an unbelievable amount of questions for me...

- Jay, London, UK, 10/11/2006 13:14
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I left Primary school teaching in Greater London last July for several reasons. One, my salary was inadequate. Two, the workload was intolerable. Three, with increasing governmental control, I felt I was no longer able to teach properly.

Most of my colleagues were women, and most had husbands earning considerably more than me - they regarded their salaries as 'topping up' their husbands'.

I'm now teaching English in China, after taking early retirement. The quality of life for my wife and myself is far better and I'm enjoying teaching again. I feel I have greater professional freedom in China than in Britain.

- Tim Lyon, Changsha, China, 10/11/2006 10:35
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We need a proper balance of male and female teachers in all primary schools; there simply aren't enough male role models.

- Dhanraj, Basildon, Essex, 10/11/2006 08:35
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This isn't a question of money but of job security & future prospects. Why should any man want to become a teacher when it only needs one stroppy teenage girl with a grudge to tell one lie about him & his career vanishes overnight?

- Fred James, Worcester, UK, 10/11/2006 08:11
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