Global teacher shortage

A severe global shortage of qualified teachers is one of the biggest barriers to achieving Sustainable Development Goal 4 and realising the right to education for all children.

Key facts

  • High-quality education systems depend on sufficient numbers of qualified, well-supported teachers.
  • Globally, tens of millions of children are out of school and many more are in overcrowded classrooms without a qualified teacher.
  • Pupil-teacher ratios in many regions far exceed recommended benchmarks, especially in sub-Saharan Africa and in refugee and displacement contexts.
  • Teacher migration from lower-income to higher-income countries, including to the United Kingdom, can exacerbate shortages in countries of origin.
  • International bodies have set out clear recommendations for tackling teacher shortages, including better pay, conditions, training and funding.
  • The NEU has called on the UK government to recognise the global nature of the teacher shortage and adopt a coherent strategy in response.

Key statistics

Campaign asks

  • Recognise the global teacher shortage as a shared challenge and make it a priority in UK foreign and development policy.
  • Develop a new FCDO global teacher strategy that supports countries to train, recruit and retain qualified teachers.
  • Improve teachers’ pay and working conditions worldwide so that teaching is an attractive, secure profession.
  • Increase international financing for public education to meet benchmarks of 6% of GDP and 20% of government expenditure.
  • Support teacher-led professional development and strengthen social dialogue with teacher unions in partner countries

International

Internationalism sits at the heart of the National Education Union’s values. As an education trade union, we believe that defending human rights, including trade union rights and the right to education, must be a global endeavour.

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