Teachers in England and Wales could strike again as early as September, according to the head of the UKâs largest education union, who warned of âgrowing frustrationâ within the profession as the country heads towards a general election.
Daniel Kebede, the general secretary of the National Education Union, said further strikes were still on the table after nearly 150,000 teachers voted for industrial action in an indicative ballot, the results of which were published last week.
Speaking to the media before a debate on pay at the NEUâs annual conference in Bournemouth, Kebede said education was in a âpolycrisisâ and urged the education secretary, Gillian Keegan, to âlisten deeplyâ to avoid ending up on a collision course.
A Department for Education spokesperson said: âThe independent STRB is currently considering evidence for this yearâs pay award. Unions should engage with this process instead of striking before they even know what the pay recommendations are.
âFurther strike action would cause more disruption to pupils who have already lost over 25m school days due to last yearâs industrial action. Overall school funding is rising to over £60bn in 2024/25, its highest ever level in real terms per pupil â and teachers have already benefited from two historic pay awards totalling over 12% in just two years.â