Inset day

An Inset day, originally an acronym for IN-SErvice Training day,[1] also known as a TD Day (Teacher Development Day) or PD Day (Professional Development Day), and sometimes known as a Baker day,[2][3] is one of a series of five days in most English, Welsh, Scottish and Northern Irish schools on which school sessions are not run and the pupils do not attend school[4] but the staff are required to attend for training or to complete administrative tasks. Teachers can catch up with work and also have the opportunity to train for any new technology or new ways of doing things within the school. [4]

History

Inset days were introduced in 1988 under a Conservative government by the minister then responsible, Kenneth Baker, as part of a series of reforms,[2] including the introduction of the National Curriculum. They were originally, and are still occasionally, referred to as Baker Days, because Kenneth Baker introduced the requirement for teachers to attend training in addition to the 190 days previously required.[2]

Attendance

Teachers in state schools are required to undertake five Inset days in addition to the 190 teaching days children are required to be in school.[2] The days are determined by the local education authority, though academy and free schools have the freedom to set their own dates.

Controversy

This development of teacher training days is thought by some education bodies to cause additional disruption[5] and burdens on working parents who do not have easy access to flexible childcare, although the five training days were introduced as an addition to teachers' attendance days and the total number of days children are required to be in school was not affected.

Teachers who are parents themselves may have greater problems than other working parents since they are unable to take ad-hoc days off to look after their own children whenever an Inset day is scheduled at their children's school.[6]

See also

  • Inservice program

References

  1. "Monthly News - Training day". Teacher Development Agency. Archived from the original on December 31, 2006.
  2. "inset day attendance". schoolzone. Archived from the original on 2010-07-29.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link); not available as of 2014-05-22, retrieved from
  3. "Parents 'baffled by Inset days', teachers are told". BBC News.
  4. "No Pupils? It must be a Baker Day". Times Educational Supplement. 1997-05-16. Archived from the original on 2014-03-10. Retrieved 2010-03-31.
  5. School Inset Days Academic Year Ending July 2013. on Vale of Glamorgan Council website.
  6. INSET Days – A Pleasure Or A Pain? by Alex Freeman, a freelance writer specialising in parenting and family topics.
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