Liberal Party NSW
Connect with the NSW Liberals
  • Our Team
    • State Liberals
    • Meet Mark Speakman
    • Federal Liberals
  • Our Party
    • Our Structure
    • Our Beliefs
    • Our History
    • Our Leaders
    • Join Our Party
    • Friends of the Liberal Party
    • Liberal Women's Council
    • NSW Young Liberals
  • News
    • Federal News
    • State News
  • Get Involved
  • Contact
  • Volunteer
  • Members' Login
Join Donate

Ground-breaking plans to keep excellent teachers in the classroom

11 August 2022
Share this
Related Articles

New, higher paid roles for outstanding teachers could be introduced in NSW under ground-breaking plans being driven by leading educational expert Professor John Hattie. 

Minister for Education and Early Learning Sarah Mitchell said creating a stronger career path for classroom teachers which better rewards excellence in teaching is key to modernising our education system.  

“NSW has some of the best teachers in the world, but they often leave the classroom and move into management roles to secure higher pay and career progression,” Ms Mitchell said.  

“The structure of our teaching profession should reflect our teachers, by being innovative, ambitious and modern, keeping more of our best teachers in the classroom.  

“This model is not ‘performance pay,’ this is about expanding the career options for teachers and keeping our best in the classroom.”  

Newly graduated teachers in NSW start on a competitive annual salary of $73,737, which sees them out-earn graduates entering many other professions. A classroom teacher’s pay reaches a maximum of $117,060 if they gain accreditation as Highly Accomplished or Lead Teacher, or $126,528 if they take on additional responsibilities as an Assistant Principal.  

A better system for rewarding and retaining excellent teachers could also help attract more people to teaching profession. 

The Department of Education will produce a policy paper on the issue with initial recommendations later this year.  

Professor John Hattie, a world-leading expert on education outcomes and student learning, is providing independent expert advice on the reform.  

“The rewarding of excellence and expertise is the right topic to realise high standards and maximise positive impacts on students,” Professor Hattie said.  

“It is exciting to be part of these NSW discussions and I look forward to hearing the views of the profession.”  

The paper will also draw on input from some of the most experienced educators in our public education system. 

The Government will carry out extensive public consultation, including with teachers, parents and other stakeholders, before implementing any changes.  

Related Articles: #Education | #Jobs

More Pain on The Way as Labor Cuts TAFE Funding

More Pain on The Way as Labor Cuts TAFE Funding

Shadow Minister for Skills, TAFE, and Tertiary Education Justin Clancy has criticised reports of the NSW Labor Government’s latest budget cuts to TAFE.

14 June 2024

Labor must come clean on school funding cuts

Labor must come clean on school funding cuts

The NSW Opposition has called on the Minns Labor Government to deliver the school upgrades it promised before the election, after parents raised concerns about funding shortfalls.

15 May 2024

Labor blindsides schools with budget cuts

Labor blindsides schools with budget cuts

The NSW Opposition has condemned the Minns Labor Government for slashing public school budgets by almost $150 million, despite promising its union deals would not impact classrooms.

10 April 2024

Authorised by Chris Stone, Liberal Party of Australia, NSW Division, Level 2, 131 Macquarie Street, Sydney NSW 2000.

Donations by individuals to registered political parties of between $2 and $1,500 in a financial year are tax deductible. Phone: 02 8356 0300.

Privacy Policy

Liberal Party NSW