Where have all the teachers gone?

A glimpse Down Under

Letter of the Day
Letter of the Day

Sir, – Further to “Secondary schools struggle to fill hundreds of posts” (News, January 1st), I think I’ve solved the problem of the missing teachers. They’re living and working in Sydney.

I teach in a small special needs/diverse learning school in Sydney’s inner west. We have a classroom staff of around 45, of which about a third are young Irish teachers in their mid-twenties. There is a large table in the staff room which is abuzz with regional accents from around the country. A few months back we were joined by a teacher from Tyrone which completed the set of staff from all four provinces.

Why are they here? Travel and adventure? Lifestyle? They certainly congregate in the beach-side suburbs. Better pay and opportunities? Certainly. The pay rates in Sydney are much higher than London, and I guess higher than Dublin too.

What can you do to entice them home? That’s an issue for your Department of Education, but family connections are important to these teachers.

READ SOME MORE

Meanwhile, I have a new role at home – Senior Pronunciation Officer for the local staff: “Steve, how do you say Aoife/Muireann/Caoimheán?” – Yours, etc,

STEVE DOWSE,

Newtown,

New South Wales,

Australia.