Teaching unions have accused the government of stonewalling and refusing to enter into negotiations, as teachers in England and Northern Ireland started a fifth day of strikes on Thursday.
Dr Mary Bousted, a co-head of the National Education Union, apologised to parents facing another day with their children not in school, but said teachers were striking for the future of education. She said there were strike exemptions for vulnerable children, and for children in years 6, 11, and 13 who were preparing for exams.
“I apologise to the parents and say that this is not what the National Education Union wants to do, it’s not what its members want to do,” she said on the BBC Radio 4’s Today programme. “But I think parents have to consider that every day now, there is an ongoing crisis in our schools.”
She added: “This is not an education service which is able to function properly any more because of the ongoing crisis in our schools. Members would not be taking strike action, when they’re already inadequately paid, if they felt there was any alternative. We want to negotiate. We want to end this dispute.”
Bousted said class sizes in secondary schools were the highest on record, while those in primaries were the highest in 40 years. Heads were facing a staffing crisis, with teacher vacancies 37% higher than they were last year and 93% higher than in 2019, she said. Children’s lives and health were being put at risk in “deteriorating and dilapidated school buildings”, she added.