The New Albion

The New Albion

Share this post

The New Albion
The New Albion
Why There Will Never Be Enough Teachers
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More

Why There Will Never Be Enough Teachers

Schools are playing surrogate families, and it just doesn't work

Rhys Laverty's avatar
Rhys Laverty
Apr 21, 2023
∙ Paid

Share this post

The New Albion
The New Albion
Why There Will Never Be Enough Teachers
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
Share

Rishi Sunak pledged this week to tackle the “anti-maths mindset” in the UK. Personally, useless English graduate that I am, I feel slightly threatened by the statement, but good luck to him.

Sunak’s announcement led to Labour banging a familiar drum: “all well and good, but what about the government’s long-term inability to recruit new Maths teachers?” It’s a fair point. We are told there is a chronic shortage, despite the government having long offered new Maths teachers literally tens of thousands of pounds, tax-free, to just stay in the job for a few years

But it’s not just Maths teachers—teacher recruitment figures are tanking across the board, with graduate recruits down 20% overall. Many of us know teachers, so we’ve probably heard it all before: they’re fed up.

The causes of this are varied—the very fact that some subjects struggle more than others attests to this. But even if you could address the Maths imbalance, the big problems driving teachers out of the job would remain: overwork, bureaucracy, and lack of resources. Successfully recruiting and retaining enough Maths teachers would just mean hundreds more adults crying into their scientific calculators at 11:45pm at night.

Subscriptions to The New Albion are now just £4 a month, or £45 for the year. Why not support me to write Christian commentary for a changed Britain?

The fact is, the nature of our current education system means that we will never have enough teachers. The impossibility of the job is a feature, not a bug, because we have placed a burden upon schools which they are not designed to carry: the burden of the overall wellbeing of our children.

Schools have ceased to be simply places where children gain an education, and perhaps learn to be good citizens. Little by little, since the advent of mass education in the 1800s, and especially since the Butler Act absorbed most C of E schools into the state sector in 1944, British schools have expanded their remit. Far beyond simply being responsible for developing a child’s intellect, they have become responsible for cultivating their entire person.

Keep reading with a 7-day free trial

Subscribe to The New Albion to keep reading this post and get 7 days of free access to the full post archives.

Already a paid subscriber? Sign in
© 2025 Rhys Laverty
Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start writingGet the app
Substack is the home for great culture

Share

Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More