Administration

School support staff to demand fair pay in week of action

School support staff start a week of action tomorrow (Monday 11 November) to express their frustration over the stalling of collective agreement and pay equity negotiations.

NZEI Te Riu Roa has been negotiating collective agreements with the Ministry of Education since 30 July with no offer forthcoming, and pay equity processes for teacher aides have been ongoing for the past three years. Members are holding the week of action to demand the government move faster to resolve the situation and to give schools and staff certainty before the end of the year.

Ally Kemplen, an Auckland teacher aide on the NZEI Te Riu Roa pay equity negotiation team, said the mood amongst support staff at recent paid union meetings was increasingly angry.

“Support staff are crucial to children’s education and the running of our schools, but we’re certainly not treated that way by the current system. We endure poor pay and insecure employment to do the job we love,” she said.

“Support staff are on the front line of student support. We work with children who have some of the most complex learning needs. If we truly value the learning of those children, we need to value the people who work closest with them.”

“For years, successive governments have saved money by suppressing our pay – 90% of teacher aides earn less than the Living Wage of $21.15 and more than 60% are on fixed term contracts. That means many of us have to juggle two or more jobs to make ends meet. We are officially over it. We need the government to fix this now.”

At paid union meetings last month, support staff in primary and secondary schools voted to commit to a week of action to raise awareness of the issues. Members will engage with their school communities, MPs and media to raise awareness of poor pay and job insecurity.

The key teacher aide issues are:

• the need for significant increases in pay,

• security of employment,

• career development,

• school funding changes to support these

School News

School News is not affiliated with any government agency, body or political party. We are an independently owned, family-operated magazine.

Recent Posts

Teaching enrolments decline, renewing shortage concerns

Educators and politicians are trying to address the current teaching shortage through different policy settings.…

3 days ago

Educators farewell past union leader Melanie Webber

Melanie Webber was the president of the secondary school union PPTA Te Wehengarua from 2021…

3 days ago

Paediatric wait-times could be burdening the education system

Wait times for paediatric care is having an impact on young people’s education and the…

3 days ago

Why do we ban books in a free society?

Home of the brave, land of the free… except when it comes to books for…

3 days ago

Boys not only perform better in maths, they are also more confident about the subject than girls

Could a gender achievement gap in maths be due to confidence? Sarah Buckley from the…

3 days ago

English curriculum draft out for consultation

The much-delayed English draft curriculum is now out for consultation, generating discussion from teachers.

3 weeks ago