The oldest profession — teaching — is no longer attractive. The Queensland Deans of Education have revealed there have been alarming drops in first preference applications for this year's teacher preparation courses.

Queensland has experienced an overall 26 per cent drop. Most alarmingly, the University of Queensland reported a 44 per cent plunge. The Queensland University of Technology saw a 19 per cent drop.

These figures reflect a national trend.

Australian Catholic University figures are down 20 per cent for campuses in Queensland, New South Wales and Victoria. This follows disappointing interest in 2017.

The Victorian Tertiary Admissions Centre reported a 40 per cent drop in 2017 compared with 2016.

So why don't people want to be teachers anymore?

There are at least seven reasons people aren't so keen.

1. Teacher education competency fixation

Our best teachers can inspire a student to achieve beyond their wildest expectations. They find the teachable moments and use humour to explain key concepts.

Teaching programs are long and intense, and the creativity and relationships aspect has been eroded. ( ABC RN: Tiger Webb )

They care for their students as individuals and go that extra mile to design their teaching to connect with them in meaningful ways. Their assessments are fair and they rejoice with students when they master important ideas.

These professional attributes are the essence of good teaching. But accredited teacher education programs must be designed around 37 competencies, as prescribed by the Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership (AITSL). These competencies don't address these personal attributes.

Having a competency framework is not so terrible. We need teachers to have observable capabilities to plan assessment, to know content and related ways to teach it.

The skills are necessary, but not sufficient. We need the relationships dimension in the teacher education package.

The types of things we value in our best teachers are conspicuous by their absence in program accreditation. So why would someone aspire to teach if the interpersonal dimension is lost?

2. Standardised testing obsession

Standardised testing has become a national sport, with PISA and NAPLAN. Much class time is spent preparing students to do well. The stakes are high for the teachers and their schools.

While teachers do need to test their students to check on their progress, the national obsession is a problem.

Teachers spend a great deal of time preparing students for these tests. Standardised tests are a unique testing genre, and teachers need to attend to this preparation without abandoning everything else they need to do. This is a challenge, and the first casualty is teacher creativity.

International reports also argue this point. Where's the fun in teaching if you don't have scope to be creative?

3. Lack of autonomy

Finland enjoys attention for their successful education system. Finnish teachers have an open brief to decide what to teach their students and how.

In Australia we micromanage and control. The emphasis on play and the arts in Australian schools is lacking.

In Australia, departments of education provide explicit guidance for classes well ahead of time. This means the teaching approach and content is in place even before a teacher meets their students.

This undermines the ability for teachers to be responsive and tailor teaching to learners' needs. And so, the professional responsibility of Australian teachers is compromised — making the job seem rather unattractive.

4. Work intensification

Work intensification refers to the increasing range of duties and responsibilities that have been attached to the role of teachers. Teachers report the rewards of teaching are obscured by this, and the crowded curriculum. They are stressed by the range of things they're required to teach and the snowball effect that emerges from increased requirements.

Intensification is due to many factors, not least of which is the expansion of teacher responsibilities to include social skills development previously addressed at home.

Teaching is well known to be hard work. Yet, hard work without appreciation or respect is a disincentive.

A dentist graduating from a five-year course earns $130,000. Secondary teachers also complete a five-year program, but start on $65,486. ( ABC News: Joanna Crothers )

5. Negative public image

An audit of newspaper stories in Queensland over the past year shows a tendency to report negatively on teachers. In the 12 months examined, 11 months featured more negative stories.

6. Teacher bashing

Teaching as a vocation is publicly scorned. This is commonly called "teacher bashing". As a career, teaching is tolerated as a convenient backup pathway for people, but not endorsed as the main game. There have even been reports of teachers being actually physically bashed.

7. Teachers' salaries are poor

The final nail in the coffin: poor salaries. A graduate dentist from a five-year course earns A$130,000. The majority of secondary teachers have also completed a five-year program, but the starting salary is $65,486, reaching $71,000 after five to 10 years.

No wonder people don't want to be teachers

It's not surprising, then, that numbers of applicants for teacher education programs have slumped. The programs are long and intense, the creativity and relationships aspect of the vocation has been eroded, there is pervasive negativity in the media, and comparatively poor salary and working conditions.

It's hard to know where to start, but appealing to the vocational drive of those who love leading others to achieve by raising the profile of these additional attributes in teacher education programs might help. This would require a gentle review of the national program design and accreditation guidelines. Or perhaps we need to be better at reporting teacher success in the mass media.

Nan Bahr is Pro Vice Chancellor (Students)/Dean of Education, Southern Cross University; Jo-Anne Ferreira is director of teaching and learning at Southern Cross University.

This article first appeared on The Conversation.