Teachers went on strike late last year. Photo / Stephen Parker
Education groups are guardedly optimistic that talks may stave off more teachers' strikes that have been signalled for this school term.
The Post Primary Teachers' Association (PPTA), whose members voted late last year to strike this term, has met Ministry of Education negotiators four times this year and will meet again for two days next week.
The two unions agreed last November to take "joint actions" this term in support of their claims for better pay and conditions.
But NZEI president Lynda Stuart told the Weekend Herald she was "always optimistic" that agreement might be reached without the need for further strikes.
"I'm always optimistic that we are going to achieve an outcome that will ensure that we can attract and retain teachers into the profession," she said.
PPTA president Jack Boyle said the two unions jointly surveyed teachers who left teaching at the end of last year about their reasons for leaving, but were not talking about joint strikes yet.
"We haven't done any planning around any sort of convergence of industrial things," he said.
"When our membership authorised a strike, it was on the understanding that it would be deployed if we hadn't been able to reach a satisfactory settlement."
The ministry has offered both unions pay rises of 3 per cent a year for three years plus other changes. It says the total cost of its offers over four years would be $1.2 billion - $698m for primary teachers and $496m for secondary teachers.
A spokesman for Education Minister Chris Hipkins said Hipkins told NZEI in a meeting last month that he could not offer any more money.
"It's going to be about how that is cut differently," he said.
Hipkins' spokesman said the Government could not make such a promise in pay negotiations, but was willing to discuss it through reviews which are under way of the education workforce and school governance.
A taskforce on school governance led by Bali Haque has found that primary schools get only half as much management staffing as similar-sized secondary schools, and recommends "alignment and coherence across primary and secondary schools".
Ministry deputy secretary Ellen MacGregor-Reid said talks were continuing.
"Our talks with the PPTA have been ongoing over the summer and we will be meeting them again next week," she said. "At this stage, we have nothing to report regarding resumption of talks with NZEI."