Change in working or teaching time and
teachers’ practice
In one-half of the countries and economies, some
adjustments have been made to the school calendar
and/or in the curriculum during the 2019/20 (or
2020) school year at pre-primary, primary and
secondary levels. These adjustments consisted in
the prioritisation of certain areas of the curriculum
or certain skills in about one-third of these countries
(usually reading, writing and literature, mathematics,
second or other languages, natural sciences, and
social studies), flexible arrangements at the most local
level of governance in another one-third, and other
types of adjustments in the remaining countries and
economies.
Non-teaching tasks during school closure
Non-teaching tasks are an essential part of a teaching
job, including communication and co-operation with
© OECD 2021
25
The State of Global Education: 18 Months into the Pandemic
parents and guardians. At the primary and secondary
levels (general programmes), relevant official
documents state this task as mandatory for all teachers
in nearly all countries and economies taking part in
the survey. In Norway, the task can be mandatory for
some teachers at the discretion of individual schools
(Table D4.4, available on line).
During school closures, teachers were encouraged to
continue some form of interaction with their students
and/or their parents/guardians outside of the regular
instruction time in 29-30 countries and economies
at the primary and secondary levels (general
programmes). For example, teachers in
the Czech Republic were expected to provide each
student an individual consultation via email, phone or
in person, as well as to gather feedback from parents
through online surveys. In Portugal, teachers, local
governments and other local entities joined forces
with security forces and official mail services to create
a support network during school closures to ensure
the supply of study materials and a daily contact with
students, regardless of the material and technical
conditions students had at home. Seven countries
(Denmark [for primary and lower secondary levels],
Finland, Hungary, the Netherlands, Norway, Spain
and Sweden) did not have specific national guidelines,
but schools or the most local level of governance could
decide to encourage interactions between teachers
and their students and/or their parents during school
closures.
About 40% of countries recruited temporary teachers and/or other
staff in 2021 to ensure the impact on students’ learning is minimised
An increasing number of countries decided to recruit
temporary teachers and/or other staff to implement
measures to support students in need. One-third of
countries (33%) stated that this kind of temporary
recruitment had taken place in at least one educational
level during the 2019/20 school year. This rose to
nearly half of countries (48%) surveyed about the
2020/21 school year. While the recruitment of
temporary staff increased at every educational level
between both years, the rise was the largest at primary
and lower secondary (Figure 8). At these levels, the
proportion of countries hiring temporary staff in schools
increased by 15 percentage points.
%
Upper secondary, vocational
Upper secondary, general
Lower secondary
Primary
Pre-primary
2020
2021
0
10
20
30
40
50
ESP, ISR, LUX, PRT, SVK
BEL, CZE, ESP, FRA, LTU, PRT, SVN
AUT, CZE, ESP, ISR, JPN, LUX, NZL, PRT, SVK
AUT, BEL, CAN, CZE, ESP, EST, FRA, ISR, JPN, LTU, LUX, PRT, SVN
AUT, CZE, ESP, ISR, JPN, NZL, PRT, SVK
AUT, BEL, CAN, CZE, ESP, EST, FRA, ISR, JPN, LTU, PRT, SVN
AUT, CZE, ESP, ISR, JPN, MEX, NZL, PRT, SVK
BEL, CAN, CZE, ESP, EST, FRA, ISR, JPN, LTU, MEX, PRT, SVN
AUT, CZE, ESP, ISR, JPN, MEX, PRT, SVK
BEL, CAN, CZE, ESP, FRA, ISR, JPN, LTU, MEX, PRT, SVN
Figure 8•
Share of countries reporting the recruitment of temporary teachers and/or other staff to support
students in need by level of education (2020 and 2021)
Notes:
In both 2020 and 2021, Chile, Finland, Korea, the Netherlands, and Sweden reported that the decision to recruit
temporary teachers and/or other staff was taken by schools/districts/the most local level of governance at all levels of education
from pre-primary to upper secondary. This was true in Denmark in 2020, and in Norway in 2021. Decisions were taken locally at
one or two levels in England (United Kingdom) and Ireland in 2020, Denmark in 2021, and in New Zealand in both years. Data
for upper secondary vocational education in Japan exclude the College of Technology and regular courses in Grades 1-3.
Source:
OECD/UIS/UNESCO/UNICEF/WB (2021
[1]
).
26
© OECD 2021
The State of Global Education: 18 Months into the Pandemic
In several countries, temporary staff have been hired
to ensure that education can continue safely and in
accordance with public health measures. In France,
for example, 5 000 temporary teachers and support
staff were hired in April 2021 to cover for the
absences of teachers testing positive for COVID-19.
In Luxembourg, temporary staff were hired to assist
teachers with organisational and administrative
tasks as well as with support to students in remedial
programmes. These staff also helped during the
remedial programmes organised during the summer
(Summer School). Elsewhere, temporary staff have
also been hired to run remedial programmes outside
of normal school hours. This has been the case in
Belgium, France and Israel. In Israel, remedial summer
study programmes are usually run for pre-primary and
primary school students only, but temporary staff were
used to provide similar programmes at all educational
levels in July 2021.
Measures to encourage existing teachers to change
their working schedules as part of national policy
remained uncommon. Only five countries (Belgium, the
Czech Republic, France, Israel and Poland) stated that
there were increased incentives for teachers to take on
remedial classes in 2020/21 which were put in place
for every educational level from primary to upper
secondary. This was a small increase from 2019/20,
when only Belgium, the Czech Republic and Poland
reported such measures. No country had a national
level policy to incentivise teachers to delay retirement
in 2020/21, representing a small decrease from the
previous year. However, a few countries stated that this
decision is taken at school/district level. In 2019/20,
only New Zealand had such incentives, which were
implemented from primary to upper secondary levels.
Chile, Denmark, Finland, the Netherlands and Sweden
reported that decisions were taken about incentives
at the local level both for taking on remedial classes
and for delaying retirement at all educational levels in
2019/20. In 2020/21, both types of incentive could
be decided at their own discretion on a local basis in
Chile, Finland, Norway and Sweden at all levels.
Before the pandemic, less than half of the primary and secondary
teachers felt “well prepared” or “very well prepared” to use ICT in
their own teaching
With the widespread adoption of online platforms to
provide education remotely, it is extremely important
that teachers are comfortable using relevant ICT tools.
However, data from the OECD Teaching and Learning
International Survey (TALIS) suggest that significant
proportions of teachers do not receive sufficient
training in using ICT in their initial teacher education
programmes: 56% of teachers in the OECD stated
that the use of ICT for teaching had been included
in their formal education or training on average and
only 43% reported that they felt “well prepared” or
“very well prepared” to use ICT in their own teaching.
Furthermore, ICT skills for teaching was the second
most commonly selected option by teachers (18%)
as an area in which there was a high need for
professional development (OECD, 2019
[17]
).
Only seven countries and economies reported
comparable data on the share of primary and
secondary teachers trained in using ICT tools before
the COVID-19 crisis and after its onset. These all stated
that the proportion of teachers with this kind of training
has risen since the pandemic began in 2020, with
an increase of at least 25 percentage points. For the
Flemish Community (Belgium), Israel, Finland, Lithuania
and Luxembourg, this meant that over three-quarters of
teachers had had training in using ICT tools by 2021.
In Colombia, Israel and Turkey, the share of teachers
with ICT training has more than doubled after the onset
of the pandemic compared to before the crisis.
Some countries were not able to provide data on the
total share of teachers with training in ICT tools from
before and after the pandemic started, but they did
implement widespread measures to support teachers in
using such tools during the crisis. In Chile, for example,
the Centre for Improvement, Experimentation and
Pedagogical Research (CPEIP) and the Innovation
Centre of the Ministry of Education held a series of free
online conferences and training sessions on distance
learning using ICT (as well as on other topics such as
teacher well being and socioemotional learning in
the context of the pandemic). These were attended
by more than 125 000 teaching professionals,
representing 56% of all the teachers working in
subsidised schools.
© OECD 2021
27
The State of Global Education: 18 Months into the Pandemic
In more than one-third of countries, teachers followed the same
vaccination schedule as the general population as of 20 May 2021
More than half of the countries and economies
surveyed (60%) in May 2021 reported that teachers
had been prioritised as part of their national policy to
vaccinate the population against COVID-19. Among
these countries, there were a variety of approaches on
how to prioritise vaccinations for teaching staff.
In Germany, for example, teachers in pre-primary
and primary education levels were prioritised ahead
of secondary teachers. In Portugal, the teachers’
vaccination process was also gradual, starting
with pre-primary and primary (1st cycle) teachers,
then being extended to teachers of other levels of
non-tertiary education. Meanwhile, in the French
Community (Belgium), teachers in special education
schools were allowed to access doses of the vaccine
that were in surplus from other priority groups. In
Canada, some provinces and territories prioritised
teachers for vaccination, either all teachers or those
in areas where incidence rates of COVID were high;
otherwise teachers were vaccinated with their age
group. In some cases, prioritisation of teachers was
based on multiple criteria, such as in the
Czech Republic, where teachers were prioritised
according to their age and whether their classes were
expected to reopen first.
Countries like Israel noted that there had been no need
to prioritise teachers because of the speed at which
the general population was vaccinated. In France,
since 17 April, all school staff members aged 55 and
over (teachers, administrators and support staff) have
had access to vaccination in dedicated vaccination
centres. The prioritisation of all school staff (including
those under the age of 55) was implemented on
24 May, but ended up being rather short-lived, as
vaccination was opened up to the general population
of the same age group a week later, on 31 May. In the
case of Chile, 91% of teachers had been vaccinated
with at least one dose and 86% had been vaccinated
with two doses as of 20 May 2021.
Table2•
Measures for the prioritisation of teachers’ vaccination, pre-primary to upper secondary levels
(as of 20 May 2021)
Dostları ilə paylaş: |