the Education Commission

The future role of teachers and education support professionals

Two weeks ago, I attended the United Kingdom Forum for International Education and Training (UKFIET) annual conference in Oxford. This gathering brought together a wealth of research on teachers, as well as new insights on how to support, develop and motivate the education workforce – recommendations guided by rigorously collected and very promising evidence.

The UKFIET gathering left me with two questions:

In meeting with a colleague working on transforming the health worker training approach, I was reminded that education has a lot to learn from innovations in the health sector and how it has effectively professionalised support roles. For example, in Chile, every doctor is supported by 4.5 nursing and other health professionals offering support. And yet for every teacher, there are only 0.3 support staff (OECD-Talis data (2013); WHO data, (2015)).

This reminder is a helpful segue to hopeful action. The Education Commission is about to launch the Education Workforce Initiative which aims to:

By establishing collaboration between experts and policy-makers through the Education Workforce Initiative, we hope to learn from promising case studies and catalyse new thinking to support policy-makers ready to make bold decisions to improve the effectiveness and efficiency of their education workforce. In doing so, leaders will stand better equipped to meet the 21st Century needs of all learners.

Amy Bellinger is the Consultant, Strategic Initiatives at the Education Commission.