Written answers

Thursday, 2 February 2023

Department of Education and Skills

School Staff

Photo of Paul DonnellyPaul Donnelly (Dublin West, Sinn Fein)
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310. To ask the Minister for Education and Skills if the issue in relation to the fact that there has been no Spanish teacher in a school (details supplied) will be addressed. [5465/23]

Photo of Norma FoleyNorma Foley (Kerry, Fianna Fail)
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The recruitment and appointment of teachers to fill teaching posts is a matter for the individual school authority, subject to procedures agreed under Section 24 of the Education Act 1998 (as amended by the Education (Amendment) Act 2012).My Department is aware of the issue in the school referred to by the Deputy.

Ensuring a sufficient supply of qualified teachers is a priority area of action for the Department given the importance of ensuring that every child's experience in school is positive and that they have available to them qualified, engaged, and supportive teachers to support them in their learning.

To enhance the supply of teachers of Spanish my Department fully funds a 2-year part-time programme to upskill teachers to meet the Teaching Council's requirements in that subject. 35 teachers completed the programme in 2022 and more than 40 are expected to complete the programme this year. My Department has agreed to fund a further intake to the programme in September 2023.  

My Department is undertaking a comprehensive programme to support the supply of teachers. A number of measures are being implemented to  enhance the supply of teachers, including:

- a number of special temporary arrangements are being introduced, following meetings I held with initial teacher education providers, to create greater capacity for student teachers to provided substitute cover.

- the Department’s continuing professional development (CPD) services have adjusted planned CPD to reduce the need for substitution and provide additional personnel to support schools

- the additional hours that post primary teachers can teach each term have been increased from 20 to 35 for the remainder of the 2022/23 school year.

- a communications campaign has been launched to encourage retired teachers to take up short-term substitute positions and enabling them to teach for up to 50 days in each of the calendar years 2021 to 2023 without reducing their pension.  In 2022, almost 870 retired primary teachers and over 220 post-primary teachers provided substitute cover in schools, representing an increase over 2021. 

- registration with the Teaching Council of over 2,100 3rd and 4th year undergraduate student teachers, enabling them cover substitutable vacancies.

- providing allocations for the 2023/24 school year to post-primary schools on 26 January, while those for primary schools issued on 31 January.

- providing for fully funded upskilling programmes in mathematics, physics and Spanish. Beginning with 170 places in January 2021, I have agreed to increase places to over 300 in 2023, and a new Irish upskilling programme is planned for 2023/24.

- providing for the allocation of a significant number of additional posts to primary substitute teacher supply panels in areas where significant challenges in sourcing substitution continue. This brings the total to 610 posts on 151 panels covering more than 2,840 schools.

- the Teaching Council, on a time-bound basis, will accept applications from primary and post-primary teachers who have qualified outside of Ireland but who have not completed the statutory period of induction in the country in which they qualified. 

These measures are underpinned by the Teaching Transforms campaign which promotes the teaching profession and encourages students to follow a career in teaching.

Despite the positive impact of these important actions, work remains to be done to address teacher supply challenges, particularly to ensure the availability of sufficient numbers of substitute teachers. My Department continues to work intensively with all stakeholders to develop and implement creative solutions to address the teacher supply challenges for schools.

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