Secondary Teachers Meet To Decide Collective Agreement Claims
Secondary teachers throughout Aotearoa New Zealand are
holding paid union meetings this week to decide on claims
for their new collective agreement.
The current
secondary teachers’ collective agreement expires at the
end of May.
Melanie Webber, PPTA Te Wehengarua
president, says the environment in which the last collective
agreement was settled in 2019 seems like a different world
altogether from now.
“COVID-19 has resulted in
huge changes to how teachers work. Teachers rose to the
challenge, and mastered digital techniques to ensure
students continued to learn.
“It’s fantastic that
many teachers have gained a whole new set of skills and many
students have learnt how to work much more independently and
flexibly. However, this has led to teachers being considered
to be accessible at all hours, whether it’s the middle of
the day or late at night. And there is an increasing
expectation at the moment that teachers will deliver hybrid
lessons,
i.e. in a classroom with students as well as
online with students who are either isolating or choosing to
learn from home, which is extremely
demanding.
“Also, many teachers are about to spend a
huge amount of time on changes to the National Certificate
of Educational Achievement (NCEA) and the curriculum, that
are being introduced from next year.
We support the
changes which will make NCEA more accessible and fairer for
all students and make te ao Māori more visible, but it will
mean teachers having to rewrite every
programme,
every course, every lesson, all
assessments and assignments. It’s a huge
undertaking.
“Teachers’ incredibly heavy workloads need to be acknowledged and compensated for so they have a healthy work / life balance – students deserve happy, energetic and healthy teachers.”
Melanie Webber said
she expected addressing the teacher supply crisis would be a
significant element of the collective agreement
claim.
“We need more secondary teachers,
particularly Maths, Science, Te Reo and Technology teachers.
According to an Education Review Office
report,
released last December, 17 percent of
secondary school principals reported in the middle of last
year that they could not fill vacant positions.
“The
kinds of knowledge, skills and attributes that secondary
teachers have are highly sought after, so secondary
teachers’ salaries must be sufficient
to attract
the best graduates into the profession and keep them
there.”
Recommendations from the paid union meetings will help form a package of claims that will be tabled when the secondary teachers’ collective agreement negotiations begin in May / June.
New Zealand employment law allows
every union to have two paid union meetings each year during
normal working hours. During the time of the meeting,
students will be sent home.
Those who are unable to
be at home will be supervised at
school.