UCL Study:  UkTeachers Workload Exceed 60 Hours Per Week

UCL Study: UkTeachers Workload Exceed 60 Hours Per Week

By Gavin Mackintosh-

A quarter of teachers in the Uk work more than 60 hours per week, according to a new study.

The study, published today by the Nuffield Foundation and UCL Institute of Education suggests that  government attempts to reduce working hours have failed.
The study  found high working hours have been relatively unchanged for 20 years – making it unlikely that workload is to blame for the teacher retention crisis.

The report  says teachers work an average of 47 hours a week in term time, eight hours more than teachers in comparable OECD countries.One in four teachers work more than 59 hours a week, while 10 per cent work more than 65 hours per week. Around 40 per cent said they usually work in the evening, and 10 per cent during the weekend.

The workload on teachers can affect the mental space needed to bring the best out of pupils through high quality and thorough teaching. Although many teachers in the Uk do their best in teaching pupils, separate research by The Eye Of Media.Com suggests a consistent level of inadequate teaching in many primary schools

Although the hours worked are “high” , the report says it had been broadly the same for the last two decades and were “unlikely” to explain declining teacher retention.

“We do not find evidence that average working hours have increased. Indeed, we find no notable change in total hours over the last 20 years, no notable change in the incidence of work during evenings and weekends over a 15 year period and no notable change in time spent on specific tasks over the last five years,” the report said.

It warned “five years of policy initiatives” aimed at reducing hours have “proven insufficient”, and bringing working hours down will “require additional, more radical action on the part of policymakers”.

Kevin Courtney, joint general secretary of the National Education Union, said 60-hour working weeks are “completely unacceptable” and “successive education secretaries are failing to solve the problem”. He blamed the Department for Education and Ofsted for the “culture of excessive accountability” that has driven up workload.
The report also said workload “may have been given undue emphasis in the debate on teacher retention” and recommended the government focus on other ways to improve retention, including increasing pay, improving leadership and better working conditions.

The study found over the last 25 years secondary teachers have worked between 46 and 48 hours per week, with the highest level recorded at 49 hours in 2001, suggesting the current 47 hours is not “outside of their historical norm”.
Primary school teachers worked an average of between 47 and 49 hours per week in the same period, reaching its highest point of 50 hours in 2002.
In the last five years, there is “little sign of any substantial reduction” in the time spent marking (6.3 hours per week in both 2013 and 2018) or administration (4.2 hours in 2013 and 4 hours in 2018), while any “minor reductions” in lesson planning and extracurricular activities have been “offset by increases in pupil guidance/discipline and ‘other’ (undefined) tasks”.
Full-time secondary teachers spend almost as much time on management, administration, marking and lesson planning each week (20.1 hours) as they do on actually teaching pupils (20.5 hours).
A spokesperson for the DfE said it is “making concerted efforts to reduce workload driven by unnecessary tasks”.
Excessive teacher workload is a persistent problem because governments constantly raise the bar on what they expect from schools
“We will continue our work within the sector to drive down these burdensome tasks outside the classroom so that teachers are free to do what they do best – teach”.
However Geoff Barton, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders (ASCL), said “excessive teacher workload is a persistent problem because governments constantly raise the bar on what they expect schools to do”.
“Various initiatives have been launched to reduce workload in recent years but schools have been swamped by changes to qualifications and testing, relentless pressure on performance and results, and funding cuts which have led to reductions in staffing and larger class sizes.”
The report called for the DfE to reform its workload survey, which has very low response rates and “adds little value over other routinely collected data sources”.
The study was based on data collected from more than 40,000 primary and secondary teachers in England between 1992 and 2018 by the Labour Force Survey, the Teaching and Learning International Survey, the UK Time-Use diaries and information gathered from the Teacher Tapp app

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