The Rise of Teaching-Only Roles in UK Universities
In recent years, UK higher education has seen a significant shift toward specialised academic contracts, with teaching-only roles becoming increasingly common. According to the Higher Education Statistics Agency (HESA) data for the 2024/25 academic year, 35 per cent of academic staff were employed on teaching-only contracts, down slightly by 1 percentage point from the previous year.
The overall number of academic staff in UK higher education fell for the first time on record in 2024/25, dropping amid ongoing sector challenges like international student visa changes and budget cuts.
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A New Survey Highlights Widespread Concerns Among Academics
A landmark report titled "Advancing the Reward of University Teaching," led by education consultant Ruth Graham, has brought these issues into sharp focus. Based on surveys of over 12,071 academics from 17 universities in nine countries conducted between 2019 and 2025, the study found that fully 50 per cent of respondents view teaching-only roles as "career-limiting" at their institutions, with only 20 per cent disagreeing.
The report underscores a perceived hierarchy where research remains the primary pathway to seniority. Only one-third of academics believe university teaching is "very important" for promotion to full professor, though two-thirds wish it were. Graham warns of the "danger" that education-focused contracts could become a "second tier or lower value career route."
This sentiment echoes findings from a 2024 qualitative study of 43 education-focused academics in 12 research-intensive UK universities, where participants lamented inconsistent role definitions and limited progression opportunities.
Early-Career Academics Bear the Brunt of Pessimism
Perceptions vary starkly by career stage, revealing a "seniority gradient." Early-career academics are the most sceptical, with just 54 per cent agreeing their university provides a supportive environment for teaching excellence—compared to 88 per cent of university leaders. They are also half as likely to see leadership as committed to rewarding teaching, at 42 per cent versus 83 per cent for leaders.
This disconnect can deter new entrants to academia. Fixed-term teaching contracts, common at entry levels, exacerbate insecurity, hindering long-term planning and scholarship development. One interviewee in the 2024 study noted: "You certainly don’t get promoted for just teaching, or even if you’re teaching brilliantly... you’re not going to get promoted for that."
For those starting out, crafting a strong academic CV that highlights teaching strengths is crucial.
Career Progression Challenges on the Teaching Track
Promotion criteria in UK universities often prioritise research outputs, such as publications and grants, over teaching excellence. While some institutions like UCL and the University of Glasgow offer dedicated teaching tracks with pathways to senior lecturer or professor, these are not universal. Research-intensive universities (e.g., Russell Group) typically require evidence of scholarship, leadership, or management alongside teaching for advancement.
Teaching loads in these roles—often 500-600 hours annually—leave limited time for the pedagogical research or curriculum development needed for promotion. Fixed-term contracts further limit access to mentorship and networks. HESA data shows 29 per cent of academics on fixed-term deals, many in teaching roles.
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Variations Across Institutions and Disciplines
Not all universities treat teaching tracks equally. Post-1992 institutions and teaching-focused universities often provide clearer progression routes, valuing student satisfaction metrics from the National Student Survey (NSS) and innovations like flipped classrooms. In contrast, research powerhouses like Oxford or Cambridge weigh REF (Research Excellence Framework) outputs heavily.
Discipline matters too: STEM fields demand lab-based teaching, while humanities emphasise seminars. A 2022 study at the University of Brighton highlighted inconsistent support for scholarship in teaching roles, with STEM academics facing heavier administrative burdens.
Read more on recent UK academic staff trends.
Positive Shifts: Progress in Recognising Teaching Excellence
Despite concerns, change is underway. Graham's longitudinal data shows improvement: the share of academics rating teaching as "very important" for promotion rose from 25 per cent in 2019 to 31 per cent in 2025. Institutions like UCL have piloted education professor titles, and the UK Professional Standards Framework (UKPSF) aids fellowship attainment.
Success stories exist—e.g., Queen Mary University staff promoted on teaching-scholarship tracks—and global mapping by Graham identifies best practices like workload models protecting scholarship time.
Stakeholder Perspectives: Voices from the Sector
Ruth Graham emphasises achievable change: "Cultural change is achievable within years, not decades." Unions like UCU advocate for fair workloads, while vice-chancellors cite student demand growth (up 30 per cent since 2010) necessitating specialised roles.
Early-career voices call for mentorship; one Russell Group academic shared: "High teaching scores don't translate to promotion without research."
Broader Implications for the UK Higher Education Workforce
If unaddressed, these views risk talent drain, especially amid HESA's first staff decline. Women, 32 per cent of professors, face compounded barriers in teaching-heavy roles stereotyped as "care work."
Student outcomes may suffer without stable, motivated staff. Solutions include REF 2029 crediting teaching impact and UKRI funding pedagogy.
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Future Outlook and Actionable Insights
Graham's roadmap advocates transparent criteria, dedicated funds, and leadership buy-in. Universities could emulate UCL's pathways or Advance HE's frameworks.
For academics: Build a teaching portfolio with NSS feedback, publications in pedagogy journals, and leadership (e.g., module convening). Seek higher ed career advice and explore higher ed jobs.
In summary, while half see teaching-only roles as limiting, momentum for parity grows. Check Rate My Professor for insights, browse university jobs, or visit faculty positions and how to become a lecturer.