Number of white male teachers falls by 20% in just ten years, sparking fears of lack of role models
Number of white male teachers falls by 20% in just ten years, sparking fears of a lack of role models
- Experts warn that disadvantaged white boys could fall even further behind
- Research shows the profession is becoming ‘increasingly female-dominated’
- Meanwhile the number of male teachers from BME backgrounds has risen
Alan Smithers, of the Centre for Education and Employment Research, said the drop in white male teachers was ‘worrying’
The number of white male secondary school teachers has fallen by almost 20 per cent in a decade, sparking fears over a lack of role models for working-class boys.
Education experts warn that disadvantaged white boys could fall further behind as a result of the ‘worrying’ trend.
Research from the Education Policy Institute (EPI) shows that the teacher workforce is becoming ‘increasingly female-dominated’.
The proportion of men teaching in secondary schools has fallen every year since 2010, hitting its lowest level in 2019, when 35.5 per cent of teachers were male.
Numbers in primary schools remain low at 14.1 per cent.
The EPI analysis reveals that the number of white male teachers in secondary schools has plummeted by more than 12,800 since 2010 – a fall of 17 per cent.
Worrying figures: The amount of male teachers in secondary schools has fallen year on year since 2010 to just 35.5 per cent
Stagnated: The proportion of men teaching at primary schools has remained practically the same in the last decade
The number of men from black and minority ethnic (BME) backgrounds teaching in secondary schools has risen from 10,451 in 2010 to 13,967 last year – an increase of 34 per cent.
Joshua Fullard, senior researcher at EPI, said yesterday: ‘The decline in the number of white male teachers is concerning in areas where there is a prevalence of under-performing white working-class boys.’
There’s also a downward trend in the number of male teachers leaving the profession altogether
Professor Alan Smithers, of the Centre for Education and Employment Research at Buckingham University, said the drop in white male teachers was ‘worrying’.
He added: ‘In striving for equality, the white working-class, particularly boys, are a neglected group.’