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QTS

Congratulations to all students in Wales who have gained Qualified Teacher Status (QTS) this year! You should have received an email with a secure link to access your certificate. If you have not received it, please get in touch. 
 

    National Eisteddfod

    If you want to know more about the important role we play in maintaining the professionalism of the education workforce while safeguarding learners and young people, then be sure to pop along to our stall for a chat.

    Annual Education Workforce Statistics for Wales 2025

    The data is based on information from the EWC’s Register of Education Practitioners and provides valuable insights into the make-up of the education workforce.

    News

    EWC congratulates Wales’ newly qualified teachers

    The Education Workforce Council (EWC) has extended its congratulations to everyone receiving their Qualified Teacher Status (QTS) in Wales today (1...

    Latest EWC stats provide a comprehensive picture of Wales’ education workforce

    The Education Workforce Council (EWC) has published its Annual Education Workforce Statistics 2025, the independent, professional regulator’s most...

    EWC shares key insights into teacher recruitment and retention

    The Education Workforce Council (EWC) has provided both oral and written evidence to the Senedd’s Children, Young People and Education (CYPE)...

    EWC celebrates another year of progress in its Annual Report and Accounts

    The Education Workforce Council (EWC) has today (15 July 2025) published its suite of annual reports including its Annual Report and Accounts for...

    Celebrating new and reaccredited QMYW recipients

    Three more organisations across Wales have been formally recognised for the quality of their provision, receiving the highly acclaimed Quality Mark...

    Interim Chief Executive named at the EWC

    The Education Workforce Council (EWC) has announced the appointment of Lisa Winstone as its Interim Chief Executive. Lisa will take up the role on...

    Celebrating the vital role of youth work in Wales

    The Education Workforce Council (EWC) is once again supporting the incredible impact of youth work across Wales, by taking part in Youth Work Week....

    EWC highlights accessibility improvements for Global Accessibility Awareness Day

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    EWC hits the road to attend Wales’ top events

    This summer, the Education Workforce Council (EWC) will be attending a series of prominent national events across Wales to engage with its...

    Hayden Llewellyn announces retirement as Chief Executive of the EWC

    The Chief Executive of the Education Workforce Council (EWC), Hayden Llewellyn, has announced his retirement after 25 years of dedicated service....

    EWC outlines its vision for the future

    The Education Workforce Council (EWC) has published its Strategic Plan 2025-28 and refreshed Strategic Equality Plan 2024-28, setting out its key...

    Celebrating success as Cardiff and Merthyr youth services presented national award

    Cardiff and Merthyr Tydfil Youth Services have become the latest organisations to be formally recognised for the quality of their provision,...

    Your Professional Learning Passport dashboard is being updated

    The Education Workforce Council (EWC) has announced a new update to the Professional Learning Passport’s (PLP) dashboard. From 26 February 2025,...

    Have your say on proposed amendments to the Code of Professional Conduct and Practice

    The Education Workforce Council (EWC) has launched a consultation on an updated draft of the Code of Professional Conduct and Practice. The Code is...

    EWC celebrates women and girls in STEM through special podcast episode

    To mark the 10 th International Women and Girls in Science Day, the EWC has published a special episode of its podcast, exploring the barriers,...

    EWC welcomes plans to strengthen youth work in Wales

    The Education Workforce Council (EWC) has responded to a Welsh Government consultation seeking views on a proposed statutory framework for youth...

    Empowering the next generation through environmental education in Wales

    The Education Workforce Council (EWC) has published the latest episode of its podcast, Sgwrsio with the EWC, exploring the vital role of...

    Share your views on the EWC’s Strategic Plan

    The Education Workforce Council (EWC) has today (31 January 2025) launched a consultation seeking views on its draft Strategic Plan 2025-28. The...

    EWC launches first corporate videos in British Sign Language (BSL)

    The Education Workforce Council (EWC) has, for the first time, published two of its key corporate videos in British Sign Language (BSL). The two...

    Future of the EWC’s presence on X

    We wanted to let our audiences know that we have made the decision to discontinue our presence on X (formerly Twitter) effective immediately. This...

    Two youth organisations recognised for their excellence

    Flintshire Youth Service and Vale of Glamorgan Youth Service have become the latest organisations to be formally recognised for the quality of their...

    EWC supporting Defnyddia dy Gymraeg campaign by Welsh Language Commissioner

    The Education Workforce Council (EWC) has joined other organisations across Wales in taking part in the Defnyddia dy Gymraeg (Use your Welsh)...

    EWC reflects on good practice in all new guide for registrants

    The Education Workforce Council (EWC) has published the latest in its series of good practice guides, this time focussing on reflective practice....

    EWC announce keynote for Professionally Speaking 2025

    The Education Workforce Council (EWC) is delighted to announce Professor Rose Luckin as the keynote speaker for Professionally Speaking 2025...

    Planned downtime to EWC services – 4 November 2024

    The Education Workforce Council’s (EWC) online services will be unavailable between 17:30 and 21:00 on Monday, 4 November 2024 due to planned...

    EWC provides its thoughts on draft Welsh language Bill

    The Education Workforce Council (EWC) has published its response to the Children, Young People and Education (CYPE) Committee’s consultation on the...

    Planned downtime to EWC services – 25 October 2024

    The MyEWC online service will be unavailable between 17:00 on Friday 25 October 2024 and 12:00 on Saturday 26 October 2024 due to planned...

    EWC publishes its achievements from the last year

    The Education Workforce Council (EWC) has today (7 August 2024) published its Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31 March 2024. The...

    Congratulations to all our newly qualified teachers in Wales

    The Education Workforce Council (EWC) is delighted to congratulate those who achieved Qualified Teacher Status (QTS) today. This significant...

    Latest statistics on the education workforce in Wales published

    The Education Workforce Council (EWC) has today (31 July 2024) published its latest data on the education workforce in Wales. The independent,...

     John Furlong photoThis month we’re delighted to share two guest recommendations from Professor John Furlong OBE.

    Professor Furlong is an Emeritus Fellow of Green Templeton College and Emeritus Professor of Education at the University of Oxford.

    He is the author of the 2015 report 'Teaching Tomorrow's Teachers', which helped shape the future vision of initial teacher education (ITE) in Wales. He was also the inaugural Chair of the EWC’s ITE Accreditation Board.

    I am recommending two articles that I believe that all colleagues in Wales with an interest in initial teacher education (ITE) should read. They were initially published as part of the BERA-RSA Inquiry into Research and Teacher Education and became central to the thinking underpinning the new model of ITE now adopted in Wales.

    The first paper, by Winch, Oancea and Orchard, examines different conceptions of what it means to be an effective teacher: the teacher as ‘craft worker’, an expert in situated knowledge; the teacher as ‘executive technician’, an expert in technical knowledge. They argue that while each of these dimensions is important, genuine professionalism demands something in addition; that is the ability to form critical judgements on existing knowledge and its relevance to particular situations.

    The well-known paper by Burn and Mutton then goes on to explore the ways in which innovative ITE programmes around the world have attempted to provide opportunities for beginning teachers to do just that – to bring different forms of professional knowledge together in the development of their own practice. The paper also examines the evidence that what they call ‘research-based clinical practice’ does improve beginning teachers’ professional learning and pupil outcomes.

    • Christopher Winch, Alis Oancea & Janet Orchard (2015) The contribution of educational research to teachers’ professional learning: philosophical understandings, Oxford Review of Education
    • Katharine Burn & Trevor Mutton (2015) A review of ‘research-informed clinical practice’ in Initial Teacher Education, Oxford Review of Education