Tuesday, 31 March 2015

Long time - no post

Well, I finally have something constructive to say about my professional situation.


With effect from September 2015, I shall be returning to the University of Hull as a Student Teacher (salaried) to achieve Early Years QTS. I have passed the necessary QTS Professional Skills Tests in Literacy & Numeracy. The course will last from September through to June 2015 and is being funded by the Riding Forward Schools Alliance. I shall be placed with the setting that has employed me for the past 15 years.


After all this time, I may finally achieve Qualified Teacher Status (QTS) and hopefully become a fully qualified and permanently employed teacher - Although there is no guarantee that I will be automatically offered employment upon achieving QTS, I vow to do everything in my power to finally achieve this goal. At 52 years of age (I turn 52 this May), I am certainly no spring chicken and I will be another year older by the time I achieve QTS but I remain hopeful that my years of experience at the 'coal face' will stand me in good stead.


I have to say that I had thought that I had left my degree too late to be of any use and that my ship had sailed on by but fate has a funny way of catching up with me!


Fingers crossed that everything goes smoothly!!!

Tuesday, 5 August 2014

Call to align nursery and primary school teacher status

Nursery school teachers should be given the same status and pay as those in primary school, the Pre-School Learning Alliance has said. 


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-28545669




Let me know what you think...

Tuesday, 22 October 2013

Salaried Schools Direct Teacher Training for Early Years

I have been looking out for September 2014's list of Salaried Early Years Schools Direct Teacher Training Places.

Regrettably, I have observed that the new Schools Direct list has NO salaried training places for Early Years. (https://education.gov.uk/schooldirectapplications/ui/public/search/course/_source/menu/_pageId/10/_pageVn/0.21)

This implies that I must give up my low paid but secure Early Years job to undertake further training in an age group that is different to the Early Years to enable me to achieve QTS and then to apply to teach in the Early Years!

Catastrophically ridiculous!

Saturday, 12 October 2013

Letter to Ms Truss 121013

As I have never received a response to my personally addressed letter to Ms Truss (dated 280813 - proof of delivery retained) I have penned another letter of which I may send copies to other MPs, media etc.

I don't plan on giving up this fight any time soon!

Feel free to copy and paste:

****************************************************

Elizabeth Truss MP
Department for Education
Castle View House
East Lane
Runcorn
Cheshire
WA7 2GJ

12th October 2013

Dear Ms Truss,

Further to our recent communications via Mr Graham Stuart MP, I will be most grateful if you will in future respond personally and directly to my communications in respect of the difficulties currently encountered by Early Years Professionals (EYPs). It seems impractical to involve my local MP in a matter which relates purely to the Department for Education (DfE) and which effectively removes his attention from local but equally important political matters.

I am appreciative of your responses to my concerns however I remain anxious that in spite of your rhetoric, which clearly establishes the value of Early Years Professionals and the newly titled Early Years Teachers (EYTs), there remains no conclusive decision or plan to pay these highly skilled individuals a wage commensurate with their level of expertise and graduate qualification. Indeed, I suspect that many existing EYPs may well be considering leaving the sector in order to earn a wage that can more effectively meet the financial commitments of a family!

May I suggest that you take a close look at the disparity between the wages of teachers with Qualified Teacher Status (QTS) and those without QTS on the document to which you refer in your last email -(http://media.education.gov.uk/assets/files/pdf/s/2013%20stpcd%20master%20final.pdf). It is apparent to all Early Years practitioners that there is a colossal and unfair difference, a matter on which I have never received an acceptable explanation. And yet, your department continues to claim that EYPs and EYTs, specifically trained to deal with the ever-changing needs of our youngest children, are equally as important as teachers of our older children.

With respect to your comments regarding the other options which may be available to me should I wish to achieve QTS, I do not currently get paid a wage (£12600) that can effectively support my family, let alone support me through yet further education or assessment to qualify to teach a different age group.

I have begun to investigate your suggestion that there is potential to achieve QTS through the ‘assessment only’ route, however I am being advised that this is not available to me locally (East Yorkshire) and that I am required to be able to demonstrate experience in another age range to be accepted. I wonder if you would suggest that I give up my relatively secure, although poorly paid, permanent job (£8.16/hour) to seek primary school experience which will likely be at a lower pay rate and on a temporary contract, so that I might be considered a suitable candidate to pay approximately £2000 plus travel expenses for this assessment route?

I continue to stress that my existing skills and training have been explicitly honed to focus on the very different needs and education of the under 5s (as directed by the EYFS), yet I feel that I have been more than suitably equipped with the knowledge and understanding to teach older children. Despite all these abilities, I ought to admit that I am beginning to wonder whether my protracted qualifications, experience and skills are still considered to be ‘good enough’ and, if not, why were vast sums from tax payer funds used to train so many EYPs for something so worthless.

I should advise that I have been very dissatisfied with every DfE response that I have received to date as the department seems unable to comprehend the harsh impact that their punitive decisions have had on the financial security and career prospects of Early Years Professionals who have provided dedicated service to the sector.  In fact, I have not received any response to my most recent letter (addressed to you personally) which was posted in August 2013.

I look forward to your new response so that I may share your comments with my fellow campaigners and relevant Early Years media.

Sincerely,

 
Julie Dervey

P.S. You may wish to take a look at my Blog which relates to my campaign and the comments from others who have signed the Petition which is committed to improving salary and conditions for EYPs. I have provided the links below:



 
*********************************************************

Tuesday, 24 September 2013

Succinctly Said!

Succinctly Said!
These are the views of an Early Years Professional who has signed the petition and made the following statement:




I studied for several years, achieving a 1st class degree and a uni prize for excellence in education. I have been promoted within my setting but overlooked when a head of dept job came available because of 'the teacher thing' - I am now helping a teacher to understand how the EYFS works as she takes on this role. The promised requirement of a graduate in every setting appears to have gone and managers jobs are advertised for Level 3's with salaries to match. I am now planning to leave Early Years so that I can get a salary that will pay the bills and improve my family's quality of life - not an easy decision but I have resigned myself to the fact that my skills and experience are worthless. The most shocking thing about all this is that all of my learning, my skills and my understanding were funded by the LEA/tax payer. What a scandalous waste. Why have you not invested just a little more to ensure that the money put into EY training was not a total waste. Ms Nutbrown suggested a simple conversion that would enable EYP's to gain QTS and so open up the job market and use their skills in the state sector, without risking their income and employment. It was a common sense solution and would have benefited children across all EY sectors. I am proud of the difference that my training has made to the children who have been in my care. I am ashamed that I have been a part of the shameful waste of skills, training and tax payers' money and now have no option but to leave the sector. The government should be ashamed too.
__________________________________________

This statement precisely depicts all of the discrimination that EYPs are experiencing and clearly demonstrates the reasons why the current working conditions must be addressed.

This will help the campaign to gain more credence and hopefully help us to succeed in removing the discrimination of EYPs.

Definition of equal (from the Oxford English Dictionary)

The Oxford English Dictionary clarifies that the word equal means as follows:
adjective-
• (of people) having the same status, rights, or opportunities

http://oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/equal?q=equal

I understood that EYPs were supposed to be equal to QTS in terms of Early Years expertise but it seems that we will never have the same status. rights or opportunities. Now it seems we will also be usurped by EYTs for employment opportunities because our EYPS has become out-dated!!