Have just been to an area meeting about this, which was about as lively as a morgue. Have a feeling I'll be battered with bricks if I ever go again, just because I questioned the action.
I'd better start be saying that I think the government's plans are devious and conniving, before you lot think I'm a scab 
However, I have a problem envisaging a happy outcome to a strike. The popular tory press is battering public sector workers (pensions, pay, difficulty in shedding staff), and this will just give them an added opportunity to berate teachers and state of education. Many parents read these papers - they do not read the TES, which, apparently is running an ad this week against the pension changes. (When one of the reps proudly announced this, I did point out that the TES wasn't read by all the parents at our school.) We'll be inconveniencing people and 'causing millions in lost revenue' (that only happens when teachers have inconvenient holidays and snow days, not on Royal Wedding Days).
Can anyone convince me how this strike will be successful?
BTW, I fully understand that the ballot is for/against strike action in an effort to encourage the govt to renegotiate, and that the strike isn't set in stone.
Oh, and apparently there was an ATL ballot. Did anyone sign it? Did I see it, I wonder.
Have thought of a non-strike idea - what if we all go into school dressed as grannies? We could wear white wigs and glasses, and refuse to do PE, go deaf for the day and have 6 tea breaks...... well, what about it? 