National Education Union
The National Education Union is a trade union in the United Kingdom for school teachers, further education lecturers, education support staff and teaching assistants. It was formed by the amalgamation of the National Union of Teachers and the Association of Teachers and Lecturers in 2017. With 445,601 members as of 2022, it is the largest education union in the UK and Europe.
Governance and administration
The NEU came into being on 1 September 2017. At that time a Joint Executive Council was formed with the existing structures of the NUT and ATL continuing to function as sections of the new union. Full amalgamation took place on 1 January 2019 and a new Executive Committee was elected. The existing general secretaries of the NUT and ATL, Kevin Courtney and Mary Bousted, served as joint general secretaries of the new union until March 2023, when Daniel Kebede was elected as a single general secretary.History
National Union of Teachers
The NUT was established at a meeting at King's College London on 25 June 1870 as the National Union of Elementary Teachers to represent all school teachers in England and Wales, combining a number of local teacher associations which had formed across the country following the Elementary Education Act 1870. After toying with the idea of changing the name to the National Union of English Teachers, the name National Union of Teachers was finally adopted at Annual Conference in April 1889.Association of Teachers and Lecturers
The origins of ATL go back to 1884 when 180 women met to create the Association of Assistant Mistresses. These women worked in schools founded for higher education of girls. Their concern was primarily for the pupils. However, in 1921, the AAM appointed representatives to the newly formed Burnham Committee on Salaries in Secondary SchoolsThe Association of Assistant Masters in Secondary Schools was formed in 1891. Its purpose was to protect and improve the conditions of service of secondary teachers. Between 1899 and 1908 it played an influential part in obtaining security of tenure for assistant teachers through the Endowed Schools Act.
In 1978 AAM and AMA merged to form the Assistant Masters and Mistresses Association, with a membership of approximately 75,000. The name was changed in 1993 to the Association of Teachers and Lecturers.