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12 teacher posts face axe 15.12.11

by Damian Dowds, Inishowen Independent

CONCERNS have been expressed about the loss of teachers at Inishowen schools as the ramifications of last week’s Budget continue to be felt.
Albert Doherty, secretary of the Moville/Carndonagh branch of the Irish National Teachers Organisation, said that up to a dozen teaching posts are in danger at six schools in the Carn, Moville and Malin areas.
“The DEIS scheme for disadvantaged schools has been severely hit, and indeed band 2 has been wiped out altogether,” Mr Doherty said.
“The Government has stopped accounting for disadvantage, but it still exists here.
“Teachers aren’t here to change disadvantage, we are only here to cater for children in disadvantaged areas. It’s up to the Government to address disadvantage and bring people out of it.”
St Patrick’s Girl’s National School could lose up to five posts, 2-3 posts at St Patrick’s Boy’s National School, two at Scoil Cholmcille at Ballymena, Malin, and one at Gaelscoil Cois Feabhail in Moville. Teachers posts will be cut in those schools for the 2012/13 school year. While concerns for the school year 2013/14 have been expressed for one post at Scoil Treasa Naofa in Malin Town and one at Donagh NS.
Local TDs have also criticised the measures, which will see pupil-teacher ratios increase.
“Fine Gael and Labour have targeted disadvantaged schools for cuts to teacher numbers from next year,” Fianna Fáil’s Charlie McConalogue said. “This is yet another example of their Budget hitting the most vulnerable groups the hardest, while those on higher salaries escape the bulk of the cutbacks.
“Schools in disadvantaged areas face the greatest challenges and can least afford cuts to their staffing levels and services. The cuts announced in Budget will result in larger class sizes in most disadvantaged schools and will have a direct impact on the students who are the most vulnerable in our education system.
Sinn Féin’s Pádraig Mac Lochlainn was scathing about the proposed cut.
“The Labour Party once vowed to break the cycle of educational disadvantage created by successive Fianna Fáil led government’s yet Minister Quinn’s decision to savage DEIS teaching supports will copper fasten inequality of opportunity for our most deprived kids.
“Individual DEIS schools in Donegal will lose up to as many as five teachers. It is completely unacceptable that a county suffering harsh economic and social deprivation would be targeted for such an insidious cut by this Government.
“Withdrawing teaching posts under the banner of enhanced educational opportunity is perverse and a claim that no Government should stand over.”
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