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IT teacher applications continue to decline

Only physics more unpopular

Tags: skills, pcge, teachers

By Natasha Lomas

Published: 1 July 2008 15:49 BST

The number of students applying to start postgraduate teacher training courses in IT this academic year continues to slide.

The latest stats from the Graduate Teacher Training Registry (GTTR) show total applicant numbers across all subjects for England, Scotland and Wales are 18 per cent down on 2007 - with IT showing the second worst decline of secondary school subjects.

As of June 2008, a total of 508 men and 273 women had applied to do an IT PGCE (Post Graduate Certificate in Education) in the UK, compared to 619 men and 333 women by June 2007. Only physics has a bigger decline in applications, with a drop off of 27.5 per cent.

Back in February, the percentage of students applying to study an IT PGCE in England was 16.3 per cent lower than the year before. And while the situation in this region has improved slightly - applications are now down 15.8 per cent - IT applications in England are still seeing the second biggest decline after physics.

Business studies, biology and chemistry - which, earlier in the year, all had bigger declines in applicant numbers than IT - are now declining at a slower rate than IT.

At the start of the year, industry sector skills body, e-skills UK, predicted 140,000 new IT and telecoms workers will be needed annually to satisfy the industry's demand for increasingly skilled staff.

Margaret Sambell, head of strategy for e-skills UK, said: "IT is fundamentally important to business and society, and IT is recognised as a subject of strategic importance to the nation. With employment in the UK's IT industry continuing to grow five times faster than the all-industry average, it is essential we inspire young people about technology and encourage them to consider becoming the IT professionals of the future. We should all be very concerned about this decline in students applying to teach IT."

Speaking last month, a leading academic called for the IT curriculum in schools to be overhauled as he claims "boring" ICT classes which focus on Word and Excel are turning teenagers off IT as a career. As it turns out, they may also be turning off potential teachers.

According to the GTTR, student numbers to all teacher training courses continues to decline - with the total number of applications 8.3 per cent lower than this time last year.

Music, Spanish, drama, home economics and social studies are the only subjects showing increased numbers of applicants.

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