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sunflower68 | 22:40 Fri 16th Sep 2005 | Jobs & Education
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Do all teachers really start on �19k, as the ad states?
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Yes, it's that low I'm afraid.

After you have qualified (degree + PGCE or Teacher Training degree), yes and its more if you work in London. If you have a related work history, you might be able to negotiate payment higher up the scale. 

I think teachers get paid well!! I'm now on �29K after 2 years teaching and my other half is on �38K after teaching for 7 years (including management and other responsibility points). We both teach in London.

Personally I don't think many teachers leave teaching because it doesn't pay enough, they leave because of other issues eg work/life balance, beaurocracy, not being valued/trusted as professionals, pupils behaviour (and lack of systems to deal with it)... 

Go to NUT (teacher's union) website www.teachers.org.uk to read more about pay and conditions of being a teacher.

Agree with miss_chase.  The career path of a teacher is very structured and I feel fair.  The recent introduction of the workforce remodelling means teachers teach and are no longer dragged down by administration and non-teaching tasks.  I wish my first job had attracted such a generous salary in comparative terms after I studied the same amount of time.
That's higher than a lot of starting salaries for graduates, and at the risk of upsetting all you teachers out there, it seems to be the less bright teenagers I know who go into teaching these days.
I don't include those who have always wanted to teach and are naturally good at it.

Don't bother teaching in FE then- the pay is abysmally low. I have been teaching in a college since 1998 (I qualified as a teacher in 1994 and worked in a school before that) and I am on something like �22,000 pro rata. (I am part-time.) It is dreadful how FE Colleges pay so much less. If the job was (as people think) teaching small groups of nice A Level students, that would be fine, but it is not! This year all my classes are 30, include 16 year olds and 70 year olds, include ALL abilities, include ex-cons, recovering alcoholics and drug addicts, and schizophrenics. Many have learning disabilities such as dyslexia and dyspraxia, and asperger's syndrome. (I teach on a Music BTEC so there are no formal entry requirements.) The ONLY reason the College take all these people on is because they are paying customers.

Working in a school was hard work, but I felt supported and thought the system was fair. I may well go back to it...

Low??? Gef, if i was to start a career at the very bottom on �380+ per week then i would be happy! Try telling its Low to all the uni graduates that are stuck in dead end jobs on �200 because there are no positions available in their field!!
Sorry twiglet but they should have thought of that before they did their degree. Perhaps they should look at teaching if they have a suitable degree. Teaching is not an easy option.
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By the way, have to agree with Twiglet.  I just have memories from the 80s and 90s of the lowly-paid teachers.  It has improved a great deal, by the looks of things and deservedly so in my opinion.

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