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School Teacher

School Teacher

Do you want to become a School Teacher? Here is some information to help point you in the right direction:

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Teachers help children and young people to develop their abilities and achieve their full potential. They can choose to teach a particular age group, and this determines the type of school they work in and the subjects they teach. The age groups are:

·        Nursery and primary school nursery classes (three to five year olds) - teachers usually take their class for all lessons.

·        Primary (5 to 11 year olds in England and Wales, or 5 to 12 in Scotland) - teachers teach most subjects to the same class.

·        Secondary (11 to 16 year olds in England and Wales, or 12 to 16 in Scotland - this is 11 to 19 if the school has a sixth form, 12 to 18 in Scotland) - teachers usually teach only one or two subjects to different classes.

As well as teaching in class, teachers also spend a lot of time planning and preparing lessons, setting and marking homework and exams, writing reports and organising trips and events.

Teachers work 39 weeks a year in school. The school day varies, but is usually between the hours of 8.45am to 3.40pm. Teachers often work outside school hours.

In state schools in England and Wales, salaries range from £18,558 for teachers starting out, to £96,450 for headteachers of a large secondary school in inner London. In Scotland, salaries range from £18,522 for teachers starting out, to £71,310 for experienced headteachers.

A school teacher should:

·        be passionate about their subject and keep up to date with new developments

·        be committed to teaching, as it can be very challenging

·        be able to involve and motivate pupils

·        be well prepared and have strong organisational skills

·        enjoy working with children and young people.

The demand for teachers has been rising, but a fall in the number of school-age children may affect demand in the coming years.

The route to qualifying as a teacher in England and Wales is through an Initial Teacher Training (ITT) course to obtain Qualified Teacher Status (QTS). In Scotland the route is through an Initial Teacher Education (ITE) course to obtain a Teaching Qualification (TQ). The main ways of training are:

·        a first degree course leading to QTS/TQ - three to four-and-a-half years full time

·        a first degree followed by a Postgraduate Certificate of Education (PGCE) - a one-year full-time course (funding may be available for this route).

There are good opportunities for promotion, either through taking on management responsibility or through progression to advanced skills teacher status (principal teacher or chartered teacher status in Scotland).

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