General Secretary’s Report -11 May 2007
President, colleagues, in presenting this report to you today,
I want to take the opportunity to introduce you to the latest member
of the Eaglesham family, Isaac Kael Eaglesham, born on 25th April
at 17:00, weight 7lb 6oz, first child of Martin and Sara, first
grandchild for Doreen and me.
Shortly after his birth, someone said to me “You have now
seen the face of the future”, and these words remained uppermost
in my mind as I finalised what I would say to you today.
In essence, this is what we are all about – we help to secure
the future for all the Isaacs and Kates of today and tomorrow.
We are the guardians and guarantors of the future that they will
achieve, a future far beyond our capacity or imagination. But until
those faces of the future are the teachers of the future, the responsibility
lies in our hands to make their future as positive and productive
as we possibly can.
This has been the year of the retrospective so beloved of the
arts community. Our retrospective in 2007 has been on the work
of Gavin McCrone, or to be more accurate the McCrone School of
Artists, of whom very few remain active in their field.
The two major exhibitions have been held in the galleries of Audit
Scotland and HMIE in Livingston with a follow up in the Holyrood
galleries and debating chamber, all featuring the post McCrone
impressionists.
What we have learned from the retrospectives is this – “if
we had been there, then we would have done things differently”.
Well, there are only two things wrong with this hindsight philosophy.
First, you weren’t there, and second, you fail to recognise
and understand just what was taking place in the context of the
negotiations at that time.
We were replacing decades of “boom and bust” pay reviews
with concomitant industrial action. We were seeking to repair the
damage to the status of the profession and to make it attractive
to the desperately needed potential recruits. We were working against
monumental constraints of time and resources – the deal reached
in early 2001 would never have been on offer in mid or late 2001.
What the three sides sought to do was to conclude the best possible
deal in the available time, and if we didn’t seek to insert
performance analysis measures, and expected learning outcomes then – sorry!
What is a pointless exercise in sophistry at this stage is to
seek to analyse and criticise a deal which has brought pay enhancement
and stability to our teachers and schools in terms of post hoc
data or rationalisation.
The flaws – and there have been flaws – in the Agreement
are sins of omission, not commission. They reflect the haste in
concluding the deal, not a failure to expand the terms even further.
If we ever have to conclude such an Agreement again, then perhaps
we should include some of these analytical factors. If we do, they
require to be part of an agreed, pre-planned, joint and clarified
approach, for only in this way can they be valid.
The issue of Disclosure checks has been with us for sometime now,
but regrettably it will increase in significance in coming years.
We live in a world now where nothing can be taken at face value – the
internet chat room with 40 year olds masquerading as 15, the “Brandon
Lee” schoolboy, fake trading online. Whereas in generations
gone by the priest, the police officer, the nurse, the teacher,
were figures automatically beyond reproach, sadly this is no longer
the case. In our brave new world, technology has enabled us to
run checks on an infinite range of people and so now we face not
only checks on entry to TEI’s, and by GTCS, but also on taking
up any new employment, or even a new post with an existing employer.
To this will now be added checks for everyone – and not of
the monetary value kind. The inexorable spread of computer checks
is here to stay.
So will the world of education in Isaac’s day be wholly
secure? Sadly, the answer is no.
Firstly, despite the huge burden and cost of Disclosure checks
on teachers, they do no more than make a single statement of fact.
They provide no help as to inclination or intent, no surety as
to conduct in the future. Like the investment warning says, “past
performance is no guarantee of future returns”.
Secondly, like any other such system it will suffer from weaknesses
and inaccuracies. It cannot guarantee 100% accuracy or consistency.
Thus some may escape detection, while others are erroneously listed.
The system will become like so many in our day and age – we
rely on it automatically and tick the “job done” box.
We sit back complacently and vigilance decreases. If and when the
system fails we are unprepared for the consequences (“Cullen
Locks”)
The only way to ensure the safety and wellbeing of our young people
is for perpetual vigilance by the regulatory body – the GTCS,
by education authorities, by schools and by teachers themselves.
We must never allow harm to befall any young person in our care,
and must never allow blind reliance on a database to do this job
for us. We are the professionals.
I turn now to the vexed question, “How does a union which
is avowedly non-political take a stance on political issues?”
We have been faced with this challenge before and failed to rise
to meet it. For decades the question of whether there should be
devolved government in Scotland was debated by Congress, but we
never reached a conclusion. The late Alex Stanley observed that
we were not sure if we wanted a Scottish Parliament, but we were
sure if there was, we wanted it elected by proportional representation.
Well, we got our way – or did we? Almost as sure as day follows
night, the birth of a Scottish Parliament has led to discussion
of a referendum on independence for Scotland. This is not the time
for sound bites, but once again we feel the hand of history on
our shoulder! What will be our attitude some 20 years on. Would
the future for Isaac and his generation be better with an independent
nation, or a devolved administration? Are we going to debate and
examine the issue or will our fence-building skills be called into
action again?
I’m calling today for this union to be pro-active in any
debate to come – not by supporting any party or parties,
but by examining the proposition in an open and balanced way, rather
than waiting for the outcome of a referendum and the responding
to whatever new political reality exists thereafter. We need to
stand up for education in Scotland, without fear or favour from
political parties or other groups. A move to independence would
have potentially far-reaching consequences for our education systems
and thus for future generations of our young people. We have a
duty to these to care to ensure that the way in which we govern
ourselves is to the benefit of young
people and not simply for the sake of political dogma. This whole
issue is complex, but it is being raised before us now as never
before.
Whatever may happen and whenever, as one of the major players
in Scottish Society, we have a duty to the young people of our
nation to do our utmost to ensure that the governance of this land
is the most fit for purpose so far as education is concerned.
From a global perspective, the outlook for remuneration of teachers
does not look promising. The OECD Economic Outlook for 2006 shows
that wages as a
share of national income in the EU, Japan and USA has fallen substantially,
brought about by the process of globalisation. The effect of this
is to enrich a tiny minority of the population at the expense of
wage earners. In the EU the wage share percentage has dropped steadily
and drastically from 68% in 1975 to 58% in 2005. This effect is
most marked in the “northern European …… deregulated
market countries”. Downward pressure on wages through increased
automisation, export of jobs, feminisation and casualisation is
a phenomenon with which we are all too familiar. Its inexorable
route march through our country is well documented, and the reclaimed
landscapes of Bathgate, Revenscraig and Linwood bear testimony
of this.
However, the fuel for this process of change requires constant
renewal – the easy targets have been eliminated –the “low
hanging fruits”. More recently we have seen the “new
dawn” industries similarly affected – Motorola no more,
Compaq no more, Hewlett Packard no more.
In all of this, the direct provision of education has been relatively
little affected, so far. Or has it?
We have seen job losses and wage cuts across support services
for many years now. The thin end of the PPP wedge has fully inserted
itself in the corporate body of education.
So far, however, the work of agencies is providing supply teachers
is about as far as the private sector has invaded the direct provision
of education.
Soon this will change as the analysts get to work on the algorithms
for teaching tasks. More and more analysis will lead to greater
and greater opportunity for alternative providers to supply the
market. Producing the same final product (or pupils as we used
to call them) at a lower cost using automation or lower skilled
workers is the direct consequence, and I make no apology for returning
to this theme once again.
When the inconceivable becomes the unthinkable, and the unthinkable
becomes the impossible, the journey from impossible via unlikely
to highly probably becomes entirely credible.
Education will be delivered in teacher free zones. Light touch
supervision from the professional will be all the human input needed.
The education system can then produce to the exact demands of
the global economy, and can re-tool its production to deliver a
modified output when required.
The acceleration of this whole process is being driven not least
by the rapid growth of non-regulated hedge funds and private equity.
These hugely leveraged funds are exempt from any regulation and
seek only one thing – maximise short term return, and then
sell it off. Maximising return means lower wages, more productivity
and greater profit. It also means less jobs, lower paid jobs and
less societal value.
We need to support EI and the newly-formed International Trade
Union Confederation, whose 168 million members in 153 countries
are led by Sharon Burrow, a good friend of the SSTA. All of these
colleagues are in the front line of this battle, the next stage
of which will be in Heiligendamn in three weeks time when the G8
meet again.
We need to tell them – education is for the life of young
people not a commodity.
Education is far too important to subjugate to the needs of global
capital. Education enables people to be free in thought and action,
to grow and develop beyond the constraints of the previous generation.
Without education, women would not take the vote, slavery would
still exist in many nations, and fear, ignorance and superstition
would rule.
Education is far too valuable to give over to those who only seek
to enrich themselves. Education is the heritage of which we are
the current custodians – our task is to preserve it for future
generations not to sell it for a mess of pottage.
Isaac’s birth right is not for sale. Not now, not ever,
not by this Association and its members, nor our sisters and brothers
across the union movement.
|