State of education 2023: workload and wellbeing
The State of Education survey gauges the views of working teacher, support staff and school leader NEU members in England and Wales.
The State of Education survey gauges the views of working teacher, support staff and school leader NEU members in England and Wales.
The National Council – the independent sector is an elected member group that helps organise and promote the engagement of members working in the independent sector.
The NEU values the early years sector. It’s about time the government did too.
The NEU will continue putting pressure on the Government to live up to its commitments to reduce workload and working hours
We should be developing a curriculum for children and young people that supports the democratic values of a diverse Britain.
The longer government allows teacher workload to remain unsustainably high, the greater the risks posed to young people’s education.
Expecting teachers to work for free is not acceptable. No teacher should be required to undertake additional responsibilities without appropriate TLRs. .
SATs are not a useful or accurate way of assessing what children can do.
Teachers and support staff are regularly paying to help disadvantaged pupils in their care.
Seven in eight respondents tell us the SEND resources they do have are insufficient.
We need to see an overhaul of the curriculum so that every student is taught a whole compliment of subjects playing to all strengths and interests.
With a lack of funding and cuts to staff, the post-16 sector has been treated badly for years.