22 May 2026
From the outside, teaching careers often look deceptively linear. You qualify, you gain experience, and then you take your first promotional step before landing a Head of Year or Head of Department role. Then, if ambition and opportunity align, you step into senior leadership. In reality, most teachers discover very quickly that the path is anything but straight. Along the way, opportunities present themselves that sit awkwardly to the side of that ladder: paid projects, secondments, temporary leadership posts, governor roles, mentoring, outreach work, exam marking, subject associations, or county‑wide responsibilities.
The question ambitious teachers quietly ask is, “Should I apply for roles that don’t clearly lead to senior leadership?”
Early on, it’s tempting to measure every opportunity purely in terms of progression. Will this role make me more promotable? Will the head notice? Will it be a direct route to SLT? That mindset is understandable, especially when the workload is high, time is finite, and you are keen to move up the ladder. However, teaching careers are long, and if you try to take the direct route, there’s a risk of missing roles that make you better, happier, and more intellectually alive in the classroom.
Paid roles that pay back differently
Some paid roles sit in this grey space. Exam marking is a perfect example. Financially, it rarely justifies the hours. Working through holidays for what often feels like a modest reward. Yet, the professional value can be immense. Hearing the conversations examiners actually have about scripts, ambiguity, and standards fundamentally changes how you teach exam classes. One year of marking can sharpen your instincts more than a decade of reading the specification. It may not move your application closer to SLT, but it can transform outcomes for your students and your confidence, both of which are essential for your future prospects.
Other paid opportunities, like freelance authorship or curriculum development, offer a different return. Writing resources for external organisations rarely help you manage people or lead whole‑school initiatives, but it stretches you intellectually, connects you with wider professional communities, and occasionally pay far better than internal school roles. Crucially, it reminds you that teaching expertise has value beyond your own building. That realisation alone can be career‑shifting.
When schools invent a role around you
Sometimes schools create bespoke roles tailored to individual strengths. These can be exhilarating and risky. Reducing contact time to innovate and lead specialist work can reignite enthusiasm and allow you to make a visible difference. Yet these roles can also stall progression if they remove you from the experiences senior leaders ultimately value: line management skills, accountability for results, and genuine whole‑school impact. When viewed too narrowly, these posts can feel like a leap forward; viewed later, they may look like a sideways detour.
Voluntary roles and the hidden power of professional growth
Voluntary roles carry even more tension. Mentoring trainees, for example, offers no additional pay and little formal recognition. Don’t be too quick to write them off, the professional development is profound. Being responsible for another adult’s growth forces you to articulate your practice, confront your blind spots, and model what you believe good teaching really is. For many teachers, mentoring reshapes their identity — from competent practitioner to reflective professional. It won’t guarantee promotion, but it can quietly raise the ceiling of your own practice.
Governance roles similarly operate beyond the classroom. Serving as a governor whether in your own school or elsewhere offers insight into budgets, accountability, politics, and long‑term strategy. You see how decisions are made, why compromises happen, and how leadership thinks under pressure. For teachers curious about the bigger picture, it can be eye‑opening. It also demands time, emotional energy, and a tolerance for paperwork! Taken on lightly, it becomes draining; done well, it can reshape how you understand schools as institutions.
Subject networks, national roles, and the Risk of overreach
National subject networks and professional bodies occupy another interesting space. They rarely lead directly to promotion within your school, and headteachers may value them only insofar as they benefit results locally, but the professional renewal they bring by working with passionate specialists can be career‑defining. These roles remind teachers that schools can be insular places, and that professional identity doesn’t have to stop at your department door. The risk, again, is overcommitment. Even meaningful work becomes problematic if it competes with your core responsibilities.
Perhaps the most powerful “sideways” opportunities come in the form of temporary leadership, particularly maternity covers or short‑term secondments. These occupy a unique middle ground. They may be temporary, but they offer genuine exposure to senior leadership realities—decision‑making, scrutiny, pace, and pressure. They are as close to a “try before you buy” model as teaching gets. Done well, they provide evidence that no interview answer can match. Done badly, they can be career‑limiting. Rare is the experience that doesn’t teach you something vital about yourself.
So how should teachers decide?
The key is intention. Roles that are not direct pathways to SLT are still worth taking, but for the right reasons.
Ask yourself:
- Will this make me better at my core job?
- Will this broaden my understanding of education?
- Will this allow me to change practice and evidence making a difference?
- Will senior leadership genuinely value this work?
- Do I actually have the time to do it properly?
If the answer is “yes” to at least some of these, the role may be invaluable, even if it never appears on an organisational chart.
Teaching careers are rarely ladders. They’re more like networks of paths, some of which loop back, intersect, or dead‑end. Not every detour is a mistake. Some are where professional growth actually happens. The real risk isn’t taking the wrong role. It’s taking roles without being honest about why you’re taking them and what you’re expecting them to give you in return.