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TUI Say Not Enough Teachers For Student Spike

By News
April 19, 2019
Est. Reading: 2 minutes

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The number of students going to college is set to increase by 54 thousand in the next ten years.

The Teachers' Union of Ireland is calling on the crisis of staff shortages to be addressed to meet the demands. They are holding their annual congress in Co. Kerry next week.

The TUI has warned that a significant projected increase in the number of students in the country’s third level institutions will greatly worsen the current crisis in the sector unless urgent action is taken.

Speaking today, TUI President Seamus Lahart said:

‘Increased participation at third level should be something to be celebrated, but the abject failure of successive Governments to address the sector’s funding crisis make the latest projections a ticking timebomb for a sector that has already been ravaged by cutbacks.

The Department of Education and Skills’ latest figures show that full-time student numbers at third level could grow by 54,000 or almost 30% by 2029, but the sector’s capacity has already been hacked back to the bare bones by an era of severe cutbacks.

Since 2008, the Institute of Technology/Technological University sector has suffered significant cuts to funding which have had a severely damaging effect on both the educational experience of students and the working conditions of academic staff.

The time that lecturing staff can provide to students has come under immense pressure and there is now significantly less opportunity available to interact with students on an individual basis or in smaller groups.’

‘In such a situation, those students who might struggle with aspects of their course lose out and in too many cases drop-out before completion of their course. Gallingly for lecturers, such opportunity to interact has been a major strength of the Institute sector, which benefits students from diverse social and educational backgrounds. Other deficits regularly cited by academic staff as a result of funding cuts include:

  1. Larger class sizes
  2. Cuts to class contact hours of courses
  3. Cuts to budgets for equipment and laboratory materials
  4. Cuts to budgets for routine maintenance of facilities
  5. Cuts to tutorial and other supports
  6. Cuts to library facilities
  7. Less access to laboratories
  8. Limited maintenance of facilities and equipment

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