When Exactly Was Louise Haigh's Fraud...
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.After you have qualified (degree + PGCE or Teacher Training degree), yes and its more if you work in London. If you have a related work history, you might be able to negotiate payment higher up the scale.
I think teachers get paid well!! I'm now on �29K after 2 years teaching and my other half is on �38K after teaching for 7 years (including management and other responsibility points). We both teach in London.
Personally I don't think many teachers leave teaching because it doesn't pay enough, they leave because of other issues eg work/life balance, beaurocracy, not being valued/trusted as professionals, pupils behaviour (and lack of systems to deal with it)...
Go to NUT (teacher's union) website www.teachers.org.uk to read more about pay and conditions of being a teacher.
Don't bother teaching in FE then- the pay is abysmally low. I have been teaching in a college since 1998 (I qualified as a teacher in 1994 and worked in a school before that) and I am on something like �22,000 pro rata. (I am part-time.) It is dreadful how FE Colleges pay so much less. If the job was (as people think) teaching small groups of nice A Level students, that would be fine, but it is not! This year all my classes are 30, include 16 year olds and 70 year olds, include ALL abilities, include ex-cons, recovering alcoholics and drug addicts, and schizophrenics. Many have learning disabilities such as dyslexia and dyspraxia, and asperger's syndrome. (I teach on a Music BTEC so there are no formal entry requirements.) The ONLY reason the College take all these people on is because they are paying customers.
Working in a school was hard work, but I felt supported and thought the system was fair. I may well go back to it...