Wednesday, October 8, 2025

Most teachers happy in their jobs, says OECD

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    • Nine in ten teachers report being satisfied with their jobs overall, on average, across OECD education systems, according to a new OECD report.

GENEVA, Switzerland – Based on the OECD’s Teaching and Learning International Survey (TALIS), the report, The State of Teaching, says that almost three-quarters would choose to work as a teacher again, on average, if they had the option to do so. Almost 95 percent of teachers surveyed also say they often feel happy while teaching.

Conducted by the OECD, in 2024, it sampled about 280, 000 teachers and school leaders at 17, 000 lower secondary schools across 55 education systems (see list at end). TALIS aims to help policymakers and education leaders craft informed strategies to improve teaching quality and learning environments.

95% of teachers said the opportunity to make a worthwhile social contribution was important to them. Globally, teachers feel most valued in Viet Nam, where over 92% say they feel valued by society. Since 2018, Bulgaria, Denmark and Saudi Arabia have increased their share of teachers who feel valued by society by at least 19 percentage points.

“Skilled teachers are the foundation for high-performing education systems,” OECD secretary-general Mathias Cormann said. “By continuing to strengthen teacher training and the tools available to them, we can ensure that students are well-prepared for a bright future in our evolving economies and societies.”

The report finds that ageing populations and migration patterns have changed the demography of teachers in many education systems. The average age of teachers across the OECD is now 45 and 50 or above in Latvia, Lithuania and Portugal.

In response, many governments are recruiting teachers from other sectors to ensure a sustainable supply of qualified educators. Second-career teachers now make up 21 percent of the total teaching population in Iceland and 17 percent in Australia. These systems have also made it easier for mid-career professionals to enter teaching. Roughly 47 percent of teachers in Australia and 27 percent of teachers in Iceland completed fast-track or specialised teaching training programmes.

Mentoring to help new teachers has also increased, with the share of novice teachers with an assigned mentor increasing in about one-third of education systems. Across the OECD, about one in four novice teachers now have an assigned mentor, on average. More than 50 percent of teachers with less than five years’ experience have a mentor in Bahrain, Israel, Poland, Shanghai (China), United Arab Emirates and Uzbekistan.

One in three teachers now uses artificial intelligence for work but seven out of ten worry that it facilitates plagiarism and cheating among students. Around three-quarters of teachers in Singapore and United Arab Emirates report using AI in their general work.

Some 29 percent of teachers indicated they need further professional development on the use of AI, more than for any other professional development topic surveyed. Reported teacher participation in AI training is highest in Singapore (76%) and lowest in France (9%), with an average of 38 percent across the OECD. And among teachers who use AI, some 73 percent report leveraging it to efficiently learn about and summarise topics, and 69 percent use it to generate lesson plans, on average.

In almost half of the education systems,1 young teachers aged under 30 disproportionately report working in the most demanding classroom environments. The highest differences are observed in Bahrain, Colombia, Israel and United Arab Emirates, where the share of teachers under 30 who report working with students with language difficulties is 15 percentage points higher than that of their older colleagues.

The post Most teachers happy in their jobs, says OECD appeared first on Caribbean News Global.

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Samuel K Golden preaches ‘Love and Sweetness’ through poetry and music

Poet-cum-artiste Samuel K Golden believes that his work, rooted in the authentic self, and delivered with an inner voice that is defined by its honesty will linger in the minds of fans long after he has departed this earth.

He recently released Countdown to Our Time, a song which is the first release of an EP dubbed Footsteps: Love and Sweetness.

"My romantic poetry drove me in this direction to turn loving words into romantic music. I received both fan and industry excitement about the sound of my music and the soft message of love," he said.

In a world which is dotted with armed conflicts, online hate speech targeting immigrants and high divorce rates, Samuel Golden has a simple but quaint philosophy: love conquers all. Golden calls this radical philosophy a “lake of love,” a vision of art as contribution rather than commodity.

“I believe there is still sweetness in the world. I would like to think my poetic music adds to the lake of love,” he said,

Golden’s journey isn’t just about making music—it’s about transforming words meant for the page into songs that live and breathe. He is aided in his musical endeavours by a production team consisting of aspiring young talented up and comers, Michael Winters, Clifford Coats, and Roger Rodriguez.

He has written love poems for years, a ritual which evolved into two published poetry books, and now, a debut album that carries the same name as his second collection.

A part-time artistic force who continues to hold down a steady nine-to-five, Golden has continued to hone his skills during open mic nights at local music restaurants and bars in the Washington area in the USA.

Now, he is ready to take the next step to promote his introspective album. Each track is refined with patience, an extension of his belief that timing matters as much as talent. Golden describes his sound simply as “alternative,” but that label hardly captures its breadth.

"I love music. I love the way it makes me feel. I love being able to transfer my thoughts into lyrical expressions with melodies that resonate to something meaningful. I love seeing people react. Making music helps to make me feel whole. Bring love to others and seeing their joy is next level for me," he said.

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