Teacher Induction Scheme - Frequently Asked Questions
Eligibility will normally be restricted to those students graduating from a Scottish Higher Education Institution with a Teaching Qualification whose training has been publicly funded. This includes students from other parts of the UK and other parts of the EU provided they have been assessed by SAAS as a Home Fees Student. Students who pay overseas or full fees over £1,820 are not in publicly funded places and are therefore not eligible to join the Scheme. GTC Scotland cannot overturn this decision. Please contact your university direct if you require any further information on eligibility or SAAS in regards to your fees.
Yes. Subject to the relevant home office approval you can apply for temporary and supply contracts but you are not eligible for a place on the scheme. It is the policy of local authorities to only employ fully registered teachers into permanent contracts.
Teacher Induction scheme students are now able to apply for provisional registration using our online facility at www.gtcs.org.uk/studentapplication. GTC Scotland has issued universities with registration packs containing information for applying online. The online form asks you to indicate in preference order the 5 local authority areas that you would be willing to work in for your induction year. You must remember you could be allocated to any of these 5 areas including your 5th choice. Alternatively if you are prepared to work anywhere in Scotland and receive £6,000 (primary) or £8,000 (secondary), (less tax and national insurance) you can tick the 'anywhere' box. You will receive a letter around late May, providing you with details of the local authority you have been allocated to.
You would join the Scheme following successful completion of you Initial Teacher Education programme at the start of the new school session in August.
The Scheme is not compulsory; you could work in temporary and supply contracts or apply for a teaching post in the Independent sector. However, if you wish to be considered for full registration with GTC Scotland within one school year you should complete the Induction Scheme. If you do not join the Induction Scheme you will need at least 270 days teaching experience to reach the Standard for Full Registration, rather than 190 days if you are on the Scheme.
The annual salary for a probationer teacher from 1 April 2009 is £20,937. Your salary will be paid through your bank account on a monthly basis. The local authority you have been allocated to will provide you with details of how much your salary will be and on what date of the month it will be paid.
Primary - 1st preference 74%, 2nd preference 9%, 3rd preference 6% (88% were allocated to one of their first 3 preferences) 4th preference 3%, 5th preference 1%, Secondary - 1st preference 55%, 2nd preference 13%, 3rd preference 9% (77% were allocated to one of their first 3 preferences) 4th preference 4%, 5th preference 2%
Completed Disclose Scotland application and signed declaration forms will be returned to GTC Scotland by HEIs by the end of December. This follows the on-line application process that students are required to complete by 15 December. All data will be fed into the computer system and student preference information will be passed to local authorities by end of February. This will provide a gauge as to the number of vacancies, by subject and by sector, required for the scheme. Local authorities are asked to provide teaching posts, to match these numbers, to the Scottish Executive by end of April.
You may only delay joining the Scheme in very exceptional circumstances, such as illness. Should you wish to delay joining the Scheme you should write to GTC Scotland providing the reasons why you would like to defer your place to the following August. Requests for deferrals should be made prior to you receiving your allocation letter at the end of May.
No. You must be a fully qualified teacher at the beginning of the school session in August, to take up your post. There is only one entry point to the Scheme and local authorities must have teachers to start at the beginning of the new school term. If you have failed elements of your course and/or are not recommended for Registration by 7 July you will be unable to take up your place this year. But you will have the opportunity to join the Scheme next year assuming you have gained your qualification and meet the eligibility criteria.
Yes. If you pass your course later in the year, you would still be able to register with GTC Scotland and be in a position to apply for supply or temporary work. However you would not be eligible for a place on this year's scheme, but would be guaranteed a place on the following August Scheme. You may find yourself in a long-term temporary contract, which provides you with the opportunity to reach the Standard for Full Registration (SFR), and may not wish to take up your place on the following year's Scheme. You should inform GTC Scotland in writing if you no longer wish to be considered for the Induction Scheme.
No. By Easter you will have had an indication from your headteacher whether you are on target to meet the Standard for Full Registration (SFR). If you are, you would be able to apply for permanent posts but you should make it clear to the local authority that you have not yet reached the SFR but that you are on course to do so.
No. It is the policy of the local authorities only to employ fully registered teachers into permanent appointments, but you will be in a position to apply for temporary and/or supply teaching posts.
No. Your personal circumstances will not be taken into account for the random allocation process to local authorities. You should be fully aware that you could be allocated to any of your 5 preferred local authorities, although our aim is to allocate you as high up your preference list as possible. When you are allocated, the local authority will endeavour to take into account where you live when allocating you to a school. But first and foremost, local authorities' statutory responsibility is to deliver education to school age children across Scotland.
You will receive a letter from GTC Scotland advising which local authority you have been allocated to on or around late May.
No. There are no provisions within the Scheme to pay travel expenses, although some local authorities pay expenses for teachers to attend parents' meetings and development courses. Allowances are also payable to teachers who work in remote areas and some of the Islands. Should you be entitled to these allowances the local authority will ensure that they are paid to you through your monthly salary.
It is unlikely that any reallocation will be made should you decide not to take up your post. The local authority may have difficulty in finding a replacement teacher to teach the class you were allocated to. But the first step would be to discuss this issue with the local authority you have been allocated to (contact details in your allocation letter). Indeed it is for them to decide if they are able and willing to release you to another local authority. If they are willing to release you to be reallocated, you must turn down your allocation before the Scottish Government can attempt to reallocate you to another teaching post. However this is dependant on other probationers turning down their allocation. Scottish Government cannot guarantee that you will be reallocated and you should be fully aware that you may lose your post on the Scheme if they cannot do so.
Yes, you can. Should your circumstances change from filling in the online application form, GTC Scotland can amend your preferences. You should email GTC Scotland with your revised preferences to studentadmin@gtcs.org.uk by 26 February 2010 to guarantee changes are made. Changes can not be made after this date.
You must select 5 options or PWP, unless you have been sponsored by a local authority. GTC Scotland will check this with your university and local authority and will contact you about selecting one local authority if you are eligible.
No. The Teacher Induction Scheme was designed in such a way that probationers on the Scheme would be afforded the opportunity to reach the Standard for Full Registration (SFR) in one school year. You would not be able to reach the SFR in one year if you were working on a part-time basis.
It is important that you e-mail studentadmin@gtcs.org.uk of any changes as your allocation letter and any other correspondence will be sent to the address held by us.
Once you have received your allocation letter and are sure that you will not be taking up that post, you should notify the local authority you have been allocated to immediately so that they can make alternative arrangements for the class to be covered by another teacher. Please also email studentadmin@gtcs.org.uk.
We fully appreciate the importance to you of joining the Scheme as soon as possible after qualifying. However, there are significant barriers which prevent a second entry point to the Scheme. There are two main reasons for this: we need to consider disruption to pupils, particularly for those with important exams in the following May. Furthermore there are key activities, for which you would not be sufficiently well prepared to play a meaningful role, that take place between January and Easter such as pupil assessment and parent meetings which are crucial to meeting the Standard for Full Registration.
Students completing concurrent degrees in December will be guaranteed a place on the August Scheme of the following year . In the meantime you can register and work either on supply or temporary contracts. Should the local authority you are working with wish to retain you for your induction year and you are content with this situation, the Scottish Government are content to facilitate this. This is not a foregone conclusion; Scottish Government will invite local authorities to provide details of the probationers that they wish to keep on.
Where you have ticked the denominational box the matching system will attempt to allocate you to a denominational post using your preferences 1 to 5. If there is no denominational post available then you will be allocated a non-denominational post, again using your preferences 1 to 5. It is for local authorities to allocate probationers to schools.
You should apply to the Diocesan office in the parish that you worship as soon as possible. When you have been allocated to a denominational (Catholic) school, you should seek approval as to religious belief from the Diocesan Education office of the Diocese in which the school you have been allocated to is situated. The approval must be passed to the local authority you have been allocated to. (The process is under review). Please look at http://www.sces.uk.com/pages/Approval.html for further information.
You should ensure that you tick the Gaelic Medium box on the application form. The local authority that you are allocated to will allocate you to a Gaelic Medium post as far as possible.
You will be asked when completing the GTC Scotland application form if you have a disability which would affect where you could be allocated to for your Induction year. GTC Scotland will write to you, inviting you to provide further details of your disability. Your correspondence will be forwarded onto the local authority you have been allocated to.
We will make every effort to allocate you to your first subject, but this is dependant on the vacancies offered up by local authorities. The computer system will attempt to allocate you to your first subject. Should no teaching posts be available you will be matched against your second subject.
No. The Scheme provides each probationer with a maximum class commitment of 0.7 (full time equivalent) with time set side for professional development. Therefore there is not enough time during your probationary year to enable you to meet the Standard for Full Registration (SFR) in both subjects. You will be able to work towards the SFR in your second subject once fully registered in one subject.
No, not on the Induction Scheme. Your placement will be with a Scottish local authority.
Local authorities will try as far as possible to offer you an allocation in one school, but it is feasible for the probationer teacher to cover two schools (in secondary).
All you have to do is tick the box that asks you if you are willing to work anywhere in Scotland for the Induction year and complete your induction year. By ticking this box when you apply, you are agreeing to work in any Scottish local authority. If you tick this box, you must not complete the preferred locations section. For choosing this option, you will receive the following payments: £8,000 for Secondary or £6,000 for Primary, as long as you complete your Induction year in the local authority you have been allocated to.
Yes. But you must take up your teaching post with the local authority you have been allocated to and complete the full Induction year to receive the full payment.
This is very much dependant on the number of vacancies offered by local authorities for the Scheme. However you could be allocated to anyone of the 32 authorities - anywhere from Dumfries and Galloway to Orkney. To receive the monies you must be prepared to take up a teaching post anywhere in Scotland.
The payment will be made by the local authority in three instalments, subject to tax and national insurance, at the start of the school terms in August, January and April.
No. If you ticked the anywhere box and do not like the allocation you will not receive the payment and will not be reallocated to another local authority. You will have opted out of the Induction Scheme and will have to follow the Alternative Route into teaching.
GTC Scotland, Clerwood House, 96 Clermiston Road, Edinburgh EH12 6UT | 0131 314 6000 | gtcs@gtcs.org.uk

