
Principals head back into classroom as teacher shortages bite
By David Hill, Local Democracy Reporter
The global teacher shortage is starting to bite in North Canterbury secondary schools.
Local schools have already begun advertising for teaching staff for 2024, while some secondary school principals are heading back into the classroom to fill staffing gaps.
The Ministry of Education said staff retention rates in Canterbury remained high.
But a global teacher shortage is creating challenges, including finding enough relievers to cover for staff sickness during winter months.
Simon Green, an advocate for principals and boards of trustees, said staff recruitment is becoming a headache for Canterbury principals.
"The pay settlement will make it more attractive, but we might have to play a long game.
"No-one is hitting the panic button yet, but schools are having to get better organised in advertising for teachers.
"Some principals are even having to step into the classroom because they can’t get enough teachers and that is almost unheard of at secondary schools."
Having principals in the classroom meant other matters such as discipline may not be addressed in a timely manner.
Subjects like maths, physics and hard materials (woodwork and metal work) were traditionally hard to recruit, but even the number of English teachers has "dropped off", Green said.
Green works as a leadership adviser with Evaluation Associates, supporting principals and boards across Otago and Canterbury.
He is also the Rangiora High School board of trustees chairperson.
Kaiapoi High School principal Jason Reid said he had eight roles to fill for next year, so had begun advertising already.
"There are shortages of teacher trainees across New Zealand, particularly in the North Island.
"We’ve had Auckland principals down here at open days, so we don’t want to miss out."
Rangiora High School principal Bruce Kearney said the number of applicants for teaching positions has dropped back significantly in recent years.
"You used to have 20 people apply for a position, but now you might only get one or two applicants.
"It means teachers can take the opportunity to move or to go for a promotion or to work closer to home, so you can’t really blame them."
Ministry Te Tai Runga (south) hautū (leader) Nancy Bell said enrolment numbers for South Island teacher training courses have returned to pre-Covid levels.
"There is a global shortage of teachers, so training and retaining teachers in Aotearoa is a priority.
"Our teaching workforce is diverse and is made up of great teaching talent that is both domestically trained and trained overseas."
Staff retention rates in Canterbury were at 88.6%, compared with 88.9% nationally.
Bell said the Government has significantly boosted funding over the last 12 months to help out.
The funding is targeted at initiatives to attract New Zealanders into teaching and to recruit talent from overseas.
Photos: Kaiapoi High School has already begun advertising to fill teaching positions for next year + Simon Green, an advocate for principals and boards of trustees.
■ Public interest journalism funded through New Zealand on Air.

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What services does BSNC offer?
Following on from the previous article…and a short recap.
•We cover the Waimakariri and Hurunui districts, and our free and confidential support is available to all New Zealanders.
•Our ABC:
Advocacy, Budgeting, Credit checks, Debts, E-banking, Financial mentoring, Good choices, Hardship applications, Insolvency, Journey (at your pace), KiwiSaver, Listening, Mortgage, No Asset Procedures, Options, Power providers, Queries, Rates, Savings, Transactions, Unsecured loans, Volatility, Work & Income, Xtra special, You first, Zero-based budgeting.
If you’d like more information, or help with decoding these terms, please call/email/website form/drop-in – we’ll be happy to help.
We work closely with all the local Foodbanks e.g. St Vincent de Paul, The Salvation Army, Kaiapoi Community Service, etc. Sometimes one food box will be enough to cover your needs as you get back on your feet. Other times it might be that a few food boxes will enable you to re-direct that “food” money to paying off some smaller bills.
•More wraparound services that we refer clients to:
oCitizens Advice Bureau, Canlaw, Curtain Bank, Community Energy Action (for healthy homes checks and energy advice), Comcare, Cancer Society, Community Wellbeing NC
oDriving Miss Daisy, Generator, St Johns, Nurse Maude
oLibraries - for Skinny Jump (data), digital/mobile/tablet training
oOxford Community Trust
oPerson to Person (depression support)
Far too many to name - Every single agency we work with is truly valued, and we appreciate the help and support they provide for our clients.
Community Education Workshops
•“Let’s Talk About” – 8 x one-hour sessions, covering various “money” topics. These casual “coffee and cake chats” are group lead.
For example, the general chat will start off with “money” and what it means to you. Some people will just listen, others might share their stories.
•“Lifeskills 101” – a half-day session presenting “tasters” of budgeting (why?), debts (good vs bad), Kiwisaver etc.
Previous hosts - The Mayors Taskforce for Jobs Project (Waimakariri and Hurunui), NC Equipment Ltd. and others.
•Individuals, families and groups of friends have requested variations of these workshops = lots of sharing, laughter and fun. If you’d like to get a group together, call us and we’ll facilitate it.
Community Outreach
We run fortnightly “Budgeting Drop-in Clinics” at the following locations:
The Salvation Army Rangiora – next one on the 30th April – 9:30am – 11:30am
CAB (Citizens Advice Bureau) – next one on the 30th April – 9:30am – 11:30am
KCS (Kaiapoi Community Centre) – next one on the 23rd April – 9:30am – 11:30am
No appointment necessary for the “quick question” 10-minute slots.
Following on from the “quick question “a full 1-hour appointment can be made for a later date.
Phone or email to talk about your situation:
03 315 3505 or email: servicemanager@bsnc.org.nz
We’re on Facebook and www.bsnc.org.nz...
Our office is in the War Memorial Hall, 1 Albert Street, Rangiora.

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