Diversity in teaching report: key messages

The Diversity in the Teaching Profession Working Group,convened to investigate the underrepresentation of minority ethnic teachers in Scotland’s schools, initially reported inNovember 2018.
Now, its final report , with group chair Professor Rowena Arshad saying: “There is still much to do for Scotland’s teaching workforce to better reflect the diversity of children and young people in Scottish schools.”
Improving diversity and tackling racism
Some of the key points in the new report, Teaching in a Diverse Scotland: Increasing and Retaining Minority Ethnic Teachers in Scotland’s Schools,Գܻ:
- Racism continues to be experienced “across all aspects of society, including education”.
- Scotland has a targetof at least 4 per centof itsteaching workforce coming fromminority ethnic backgroundsby 2030 -up fromto 1.6 per cent in 2019 -which would reflectthe black, Asian and/or minority ethnic (BAME) population in the 2011 national census(although the upcoming census“will likely mean that the target...will need to be revised”.)
- To achieve the 4 per centtargetwould mean increasingthe number of BAME teachersrecruited into the profession by approximately 200 per year, across all initial teacher education (ITE)providers, from August 2022 to August 2030 inclusive.
Statistics:Proportion of BAME teachers barely changes in a decade
A pupil’s experience:Scottish education can do better for BAMEpupils
Archive interview:Anti-racism educator Jane Elliott
LISTEN:Teachers ‘too scared’ to talk about racism
Decolonising the curriculum:‘Use the school curriculum to tackle racism’
School leadership:‘Race equality in education is far from a reality’
Nicola Sturgeon:BAME people ‘woefully underrepresented’ in schools
- Educators and leaders at all levelsmust approach racism as a structural issue and not just at a personal level - there is a need to become actively anti-racist.
-
To recruit and retain BAME teachers, school leaders’ ability to recognise and address everyday forms of racism mustsignificantly improve.
-
Teachers must beprepared to educate and act against racism, and school leaders must support and sponsor the progression of BAME teachers already in the workforce. Better baseline data will help to monitor progress.
-
Every “education stakeholder”, from those engaged in initial teacher education to those who employ and promote teachers, to those who provide continuous professional learning, must take responsibility and play their part.
- Being anti-racist means acknowledging that racism exists, even when we do not immediately see it or understand it in our individual contexts, and proactively uncovering and countering racism wherever it exists, not just addressing racist incidents when they occur.
- Racism has changed over the years:there is still some overt and deliberate racism in society, but racism has mutated so that microaggressions and unconscious bias are now more common.
Pleased this is out today- the challenge to all involved in Scottish education...to work together to diversify the teaching workforce, to decolonise the curriculum and to recognise and address racial micro aggressions
- Rowena Arshad (@rowenaarshad)
- Black and minority ethnic teachers continue to face structural barriers at every step of their career, from considering teaching as a career through to applying for headships.
- All institutions involved in the career of a teacher, from ITE providers to schools and local authorities, should review and address the barriers to supporting BAME teachers to progress into and through teaching.
- A national offer of support with a focus on sponsorship (sponsors “do not just talent spot but they will hold their sponsored individual’s career vision in mind and invest in upward movement”) should beimplemented to support BAME teachers at each stage of their career, whilestructural barriers remain.
- Effective leadership at all levels is crucial for progress towards a more diverse teaching profession.
- A new national post should becreated to help improve diversity, andshould be placed in an organisation such as the General Teaching Council for Scotland (GTCS).
- Effective use of data is keyto diversifyingthe teaching profession and evaluating success, soannual publication of data relating to the ethnicity of teachers in Scotland should bedeveloped.
- Whereany plans are producedfor diversifyingthe teaching profession these should be publicly available, for transparency and accountability.
You need a Tes subscription to read this article
Subscribe now to read this article and get other subscriber-only content:
- Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
- Exclusive subscriber-only stories
- Award-winning email newsletters
- Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
- Exclusive subscriber-only stories
- Award-winning email newsletters
You need a subscription to read this article
Subscribe now to read this article and get other subscriber-only content, including:
- Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
- Exclusive subscriber-only stories
- Award-winning email newsletters
- Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
- Exclusive subscriber-only stories
- Award-winning email newsletters
topics in this article