Thousands view Shropshire widow's plea to Michael Gove over teacher's tragic death
An open letter to Education Secretary Michael Gove from the widow of a Shropshire teacher warning him of the stress teachers face has been viewed over 50,000 times.
Father-of-three Gareth Utting, a 37-year-old English teacher at Thomas Adams High School in Wem, died suddenly of a heart attack last month.
His wife, Alison Utting, wrote the open letter to Mr Gove and posted it on Facebook to help spread awareness of the pressures teachers are being put under – saying her husband had been "killed by the system" and that what happened to her husband should not have done.
Mrs Utting, 41, said she had written the letter to help warn Mr Gove and others about the stress and pressures she says teachers are currently under.
The letter was posted on Facebook and has so far been viewed and re-posted over 50,000 times.
Mrs Utting said: "I am swept away by the reaction. When I first wrote it I thought a few people would share it, but I can't believe the uptake it has had.
"I think Gareth would have been pleased that something good has come out of all this pain we are going through.
"It is good people care and want to show support to the message."
In the letter Mrs Utting writes: "There were a few contributory factors to his (Gareth's) death, but looming large was the word 'stress'.
"I should be proud that my husband was a teacher. But right at this moment, I'm not. I'm sorry that he was. Because if he had a different job, he might still be with us."
She also says she wishes she had done more to help him get out of teaching.
Mrs Utting, who lived with her husband and their three children in Ellesmere, said teachers were struggling under pressures from above, which she says have greatly increased.
The letter says: "I don't see better education. I see good teachers breaking under the load. I see good teachers embittered and weary. I see good teachers leaving the profession. I see good teachers never even entering the profession, for fear of what lies ahead."
She also urged Mr Gove to rethink how education is run.
Mr Utting was taken ill while exercising at his home in Cherry Drive on April 2 and died of a heart attack later that same day at Royal Shrewsbury Hospital.
In a Shropshire Star poll, 81% of almost 900 people who voted said that teachers were under too much stress.
Wifes open letter to Michael Gove over the problems teachers face:
"Dear Mr Gove,
I am writing to inform you of the death of Mr Gareth Utting, a teacher of English at a secondary school in Shropshire.
Gareth died at the age of 37 of a massive heart attack. There were a few contributory factors to his death, but looming large was the word "stress".
He leaves me a widow with three children, aged fourteen, four and one.
This is not the angry rant of a bereaved person.
I haven't got anywhere near angry yet. I am still reeling with shock and wondering if there was anything I could have done to prevent my husband's death. When these thoughts beset me, I keep coming back to the fact that I should have done more to help him get out of teaching.
And how can that be right, to think that? I love teaching.
In the few weeks since Gareth died, I have heard and read so many tributes from his students that attest to the positive impact that a good teacher can make. I should be proud that my husband was a teacher. But right at this moment, I'm not. I'm sorry that he was. Because if he had a different job, he might still be with us.
I don't pretend to know the ins and outs of the changes that have hit teachers in the last few years. I qualified as a teacher myself but have been at home raising our young children, so have not been directly involved. But I can tell you what I see around me.
Teachers like Gareth have changed.
Their hopes for the young people in their care have not changed. Neither has their willingness to go the extra mile to help those young people to succeed. But the work-load that they struggle under and the pressures that are applied to them from above have greatly increased. If this led to better education for our children, then I would be supporting these changes.
But I don't see better education. I see good teachers breaking under the load.
I see good teachers embittered and weary.
I see good teachers leaving the profession.
I see good teachers never even entering the profession, for fear of what lies ahead.
I see pupils indoctrinated with achievement targets, who are afraid to veer from the curriculum in case it affects their next assessment; pupils for whom "knowledge" is defined by a pass mark and their position within a cohort. Within this atmosphere, my husband struggled to help his pupils in every way he could. The comments that they have left on social media reflect a teacher-pupil relationship that was honest, helpful and mutually respectful.
He taught them English, and they did well at it. But he also taught them about life, and love, and self-esteem. But he did this in spite of, not because of, the current state of the education system. Gareth is at peace now. But I have some difficult choices to make. Do I return to a profession that takes so high a toll? When my four-year-old son says he wants to be a teacher, do I smile or try to talk him out of it?
When I see Gareth's colleagues, do I congratulate them for being so amazing, or encourage them to explore other career options?
Mr Gove, I don't envy you your job. I don't know the best way to achieve a high standard of education for all pupils, everywhere. But I do know this: People don't become teachers to be slackers, for the pension or for the name badge. Here's an interesting theory of mine that I was discussing recently with my husband. If you took away all external inspection and supervision, all targets and reviews, if teachers were left to themselves to teach what they wanted to teach, the way they wanted to teach it, what do you think would happen?
This is what I think: Every teacher that I know cares deeply about their subject and their students. They would teach marvellously.
They would share knowledge and encourage each other. They would deal with problems (including less-than-perfect pupils and teachers) with the professionalism that they possess in spades. Of course we cannot remove all monitoring of teachers and schools. But it seems to me that you have forgotten this basic fact: Teachers love to teach, and they want to do it well.
I don't know what I want to ask of you. All I know is that the situation as it stands is wrong.
On behalf of all the teachers and pupils out there, I beg you to go back to the drawing-board.
Learn from your mistakes. Gain knowledge. And please don't send me your condolences.
Yours,
Alison Utting"
See also: Shropshire teacher was 'killed by the system' says his widow