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From, a newly qualified teacher will earn a minimum of £20,627 (25,000 in inner London) but could start higher up the scale depending on previous experience.
The pay for graduate careers in teaching is enough to rival many other industries with newly qualified teachers starting on a salary in September 2008of at least £20,627 outside London and 25,000 in inner London.
Graduate careers in teaching are an increasingly popular choice of career. Record numbers continue to enter the profession, coming from all manner of backgrounds. More than 41,000 people began initial teacher training last year, with one in 10 from a minority ethnic background and one in 20 with a declared disability. There are many reasons for the popularity of teaching. The pay for graduate careers in teaching is enough to rival many other industries with newly qualified teachers starting on a salary in September 2008 of at least £20,627 outside London and 25,000 in inner London. Depending on the size of school, pay can rise to more than £90,000 for head teachers – equivalent to the leaders of a sizeable business. And the progression to headship can be swift. Good teachers enjoy excellent career prospects, with heads in their 30’s not uncommon.
Teaching is also a well-supported job. Thorough training ensures teachers are fully prepared before they enter the classroom with newly qualified teachers benefiting from personal mentors. Classroom assistants are widespread and all teachers have half a day out of the classroom a week for planning, preparation and assessment. Subject associations and fellow teachers ensure that there is a substantial network that people can turn to for support and advice.
But what makes teaching different from other careers is the opportunity it offers to work with young people. They make teaching a creative and challenging career in which no two lessons – let alone days – are the same. Passing on your knowledge and enthusiasm and seeing a young person understand something for the first time is a uniquely rewarding experience. Above all, though, teaching is enjoyable. Psychologists were recently sent into classrooms in a variety of schools around the country and found that teachers break into a smile on average 10 times every half an hour and laugh out loud four times during the same period.
How do I become a teacher?
There are several different ways to train to teach, suiting a broad range of circumstances.
All training routes lead to the award of qualified teacher status (QTS) which is a requirement for teaching in a state maintained school in England.
You can train at a university or college, in a school, or on the job.
You will need to have a degree or equivalent, which should relate to the subject you want to teach. If you’re looking to become a primary school teacher, that means the core subjects of the national curriculum.
All teachers must have also achieved a standard equivalent to at least a grade C in GCSE English language and mathematics and if they want to teach primary or Key Stage 2/3 (ages 7-14), a grade C or equivalent in a GCSE science subject.