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Friday, October 3, 2014

Teachers' salaries start to increase in Europe

by  KG/EUROPA In 2013/2014, teachers saw their salaries increase in 16 European countries (BE, DK, DE, EE, FR, HR, LU, HU, MT, AT, SK, FI, UK, NO, MK, TR) compared with the previous school year, according to a Eurydice report carried out for the European Commission. The rises were chiefly due to salary reforms and adjustments to the cost of living. The survey covers teachers and school heads at pre-primary, primary, lower secondary and upper secondary level. In about half of the 33 European countries featured in the report, teachers' purchasing power1 in 2014 is still below the 2009 level. In a few countries - BE(nl), DK (primary and lower secondary education), LT, LU, AT, FI (primary and lower secondary education) and IT (upper secondary education) – the decrease in purchasing power is relatively small at below 3%, while CY, IT (primary and lower secondary education), NL, PT, RO (primary education) and the UK saw a decrease of 5 to 10%. In IE, ES, RO (secondary education), SI and IS teachers saw a fall in purchasing power of 13% to 17%. The biggest decrease was in Greece with a fall of around 40%. "Raising the attractiveness of the teaching profession is crucial in order to develop a strong pool of teachers equipped with the skills needed in the 21stcentury," said Androulla Vassiliou, European Commissioner for Education, Culture, Multilingualism and Youth. "The quality of education and skills which they impart to our young generation will have a long-lasting impact on future jobs and growth. As the European Union recovers from the economic crisis, Member States should carefully reflect on the role of remuneration and working conditions in attracting and retaining the best candidates into the teaching profession." The report, Teachers' and School Heads' Salaries and Allowances in Europe (2013/2014), shows that the basic salaries for teachers entering the profession in primary and lower secondary education are lower than GDP per capita2 in around three quarters of the countries surveyed (except in DE, ES, CY, MT, PT, the UK-Scotland, ME, and TR). For the majority of countries, this also applies to teachers' salaries in upper secondary education. The report also shows that in a large majority of the countries, teachers' salaries increase in line with length of service. However, the level of salary increases and the speed at which they progress differs. In some cases, increases are relatively low but the top pay scale is reached fairly quickly (DK, EE, LV, MT, FI, UK-Scotland) while in other countries high increases are only achieved at the end of a long service period (EL, HU, AT, PT, RO). Teachers' basic salaries can also increase due to allowances to reflect extra qualifications, performance evaluation, or for teaching children with special needs. Such incentives can contribute to making the profession more attractive, by shifting from career progression based on length of service to a more development- and performance-oriented approach. Linking the acquisition of new skills and better teaching practices to career progression is likely to serve as an incentive for the entire teaching population, and particularly new teachers, including those attracted into the profession after a career elsewhere. Background This annual Eurydice report is published to coincide with World Teachers' Day (5 October); it contains a comparative overview of salaries for full time, fully qualified teachers and school heads at pre-primary, primary, lower secondary and upper secondary education levels. It covers 33 European countries (EU Member States apart from Bulgaria, as well as Iceland, Liechtenstein, Montenegro, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Norway and Turkey). Separate country-specific details cover issues as: Decision-making bodies responsible for setting teachers’/school heads’ salaries; Salaries arrangements in the private sector; Minimum and maximum annual gross statutory salaries of full-time fully qualified teachers/school heads in public schools; Salary progression in relation to experience; Information on salary increase/decrease in the last year; Different types of allowances and the decision-making bodies responsible for their allocation. Eurydice The European Commission's Eurydice Network provides information on and analyses of European education systems and policies. It consists of 40 national units based in 36 countries participating in the EU's Erasmus+ programme (EU Member States, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Montenegro, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Norway, Serbia and Turkey). It is co-ordinated and managed by the EU Education, Audiovisual and Culture Executive Agency in Brussels, which drafts its studies and provides a range of online resources.


READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT www.neurope.eu