Findings from NAHT's annual all-member in England survey demonstrates that the impact of workload, inspection and accountability on personal well-being is a key driver of leadership attrition, and also acts as a powerful deterrent to those aspiring to headship.
This year, almost one in two (49%) school leaders in England said they identified that they had a need for professional mental health or well-being support. Over a third (38%) had accessed support, while 7% did not know how to secure it and 5% found access to be unavailable. Leaders said Ofsted pressures were the factor that had the greatest impact on their mental health over the last year.
The Crisis Point report records rising discontent: 57% of school leaders would not recommend leadership as a career choice and 61% said their work satisfaction had declined over the last twelve months. Approaching two-thirds (61%) of assistant and deputy heads said they do not aspire to headship, an increase of more than half since 2016 (40%).
NAHT members said that the government should demonstrate greater recognition of school leaders as professionals, ensure that pay properly reflects leaders’ responsibilities and keeps pace with inflation, introduce lower stakes accountability measures, and reduce leadership workload, to improve the attractiveness of leadership.