NUT Votes for Strike Action Print E-mail
By Ed Doveton (Wakefield NUT)   
Thursday, 03 April 2008

Teachers in the NUT have voted three to one in favour of a one day strike on 24th April. This is an overwhelming vote to reject the degrading pay offer of New Labour, and reflects the deeper disgust of teachers at the education policies of the government.

The offer of 2.45 % for September 2008, when real inflation is effectively around 6%, is nothing more than a pay cut. This comes on top of similar below inflation pay rises over the past few years, amounting to a sequence of reductions in the living standards of teachers.

This will be the first national strike over pay for 21 years, and reflects a deep mood of resentment and frustration by teachers. A resentment which comes not only from pay, but as a result of deterioration in conditions of employment.

nut.jpgFor the strike to be fully effective it is important that planning for the action is discussed and organised within the schools and that it fully involves the membership. In this planning it will be important to link the poor pay offer with the wider conditions of teachers’ employment and the policy of New Labour to shift the ethos of education towards a business model. For teachers this touches upon the issue of work overload and new regimes of appraisal; within the broader education sector it touches on the drive to privatise state education through the City Academies programme, SATs testing and school league tables.

There is an increased opportunity to strengthen the one-day action. The NUT executive is now attempting to co-ordinate the strike action with the UCU. NUT members who are teaching in FE colleges are currently being balloted to undertake co-ordinated strike action on 24th April. This action forms part of the pay claim for FE teachers for 2008-9, where the fight is for a 6% increase in pay and meaningful negotiations to re-establish common conditions of service across all colleges, which were destroyed under the Thatcher and Major governments.

Success for the industrial action lies not only in its preparation, but also in the action to be taken following the one-day stoppage. Pay, conditions and the wider attack on state education are linked together. A mobilised membership should begin now pressurising the NUT executive for a clear plan of action following the 24th April, and develop firm co-ordination proposals, not only with the UCU, but with other public sector unions.

Class sizes

Class sizes are a vital matter for both teachers and society as a whole. How can teachers provide the kind of education we want our kids to receive when they are struggling to keep the attention and interest of overcrowded classes? Conference called for a reduction to maximum 20 per class by 2020. In England the average is currently over 26.

NUT leaders attacked Academy sponsors for backdoor privatisation and their attempts to force teachers to choose between signing an official commitment to the 'values' of the sponsors, or leaving their jobs. The National Association of Schoolmasters/ Union of Women Teachers (NASUWT) conference also voted to ballot on strike action against proposed Academies where staff oppose the transfer, plus legal action in defence of their rights under European TUPE Regulations