Primary school teachers have voted to reject their 3rd offer from the Ministry of Education.
Lead negotiator for the Primary Teachers’ Collective Agreement negotiation team, Barb Curran, said the vote reflected primary teachers’ frustration that the pressures they are facing in the classroom and from the cost of living crisis were not being adequately recognised by the Government. She said the negotiation team would now be informing the Ministry of Education that it wanted to resume negotiations.
“This offer clearly did not meet members’ expectations sufficiently to settle our agreement. They want an offer that swiftly delivers additional time and staffing to enable teachers to support students. And they want a pay offer that will pay the bills, having seen no pay rise since July 2021 while the CPI has increased at record levels.”
Primary teachers have been facing many challenges for decades: high student numbers, lack of support for tamariki with complex learning needs, shortages of relievers and beginning teachers, and a lack of non-contact time. The curriculum refresh has added to the pressure.
Barb Curran said the announcement to reduce teacher to student ratios in years 4-8 from 1:29 to 1:28 by 2025 was welcome, but teacher reaction was that it was too little and not fast enough.
“The issue with high teacher to student ratios has been recognised by the Minister, but staffing issues have been going on for decades and we need to see commitments to a plan for much more meaningful class size reductions as swiftly as possible,” said Ms Curran.
She said that the fact that teachers had been negotiating since July last year was not helping members feel valued.
“Members are feeling frustrated with the lack of progress, they’ve been almost a year without a signed agreement now because of the slow pace of negotiations.”
Members will now be surveyed to see what action they want to take next.
“It is up to the members to decide what they want to do next. They’re clearly unhappy with the offer,” said Ms Curran.
Area school teachers joined their PPTA secondary school colleagues at rolling strikes this week across the motu as a result of a lack of meaningful progress in their negotiations.
Recent media releases
-
Early childhood teachers take action on day of pay parity funding freeze
Early childhood teachers, educators, and supporters are taking action across the country tomorrow as the freeze on teachers’ pay parity rates comes into effect.
-
Teachers burned on pay equity hit negotiating table
Primary school teachers head into collective agreement negotiations tomorrow for the first time since the Government scrapped their pay equity claim.
-
Early childhood teachers aghast as Government eyes quality vs cost trade-off
Teachers are horrified the Government has told a group reviewing early childhood education funding they should consider making trade-offs between quality education and cost.