Thousands of schools in England have been closed or are facing serious disruptions after teachers walked out in a row over pay, pensions and working conditions.
The industrial action - organised by the NASUWT and the National Union of Teachers - is being staged in the North East, Cumbria, the South West, South East and London.
In Brighton, more than 2,000 people including teachers from across the city and elsewhere in Sussex staged a noisy march.
Part of the city centre was brought to a temporary standstill as the convoy of placard-waving demonstrators wove their way through as police looked on.
Chants of "What do we want? Gove out. When do we want it? Now" and "No ifs, no buts, no education cuts" were shouted as the march progressed.
Community school teacher Rachel Henocq said: "I think it's unfair what the Government is doing to education. It's ruining children's lives at the moment.
"Someone has got to take a stand. No-one wants to go on strike. I love teaching and I love children.
NASUWT general secretary Chris Keates said: "No teacher has any wish to inconvenience parents or disrupt pupils' education, but this action is not the failure or due to the unreasonableness of teachers.
"It is the failure and unreasonableness of the Secretary of State (Michael Gove), who day-in, day-out is disrupting the education of children and young people through his attacks on the teaching profession."
However, David Cameron blamed unions for the strikes and said it was "disappointing" they had decided to go ahead.
"It is very inconvenient for parents, it is not good for pupils' education, and when we look at the things they are striking over, pensions and pay, they are things that have been decided independently by well-led reviews," he said.
"I was at my children's school today in London. One class was not there but the rest of the school was operating," he told BBC Sussex radio:
"So every praise to those teachers who have gone ahead and kept our schools open for our kids."
A Department for Education spokesman added: "All strikes will do is disrupt parents' lives, hold back children's education and damage the reputation of the profession."
The unions are opposed to Government plans to allow schools to set teachers' salaries, linked to performance in the classroom, and argue that pension changes will leave their members working longer, paying in more and receiving less when they retire.
They also accuse the coalition of attacking their working conditions, including introducing reforms that will allow schools to have longer school days and longer terms.
Research published earlier this month by the Varkey GEMS Foundation revealed that the British public think teachers should be paid around 15% more than their current salaries.
Almost three-quarters (74%) were in favour of performance-related pay for teachers, according to the study.
Regional strikes have already taken place in the North West on June 27, and in the East of England, the East Midlands, West Midlands, Yorkshire and Humberside on October 1.
Plans for a national one-day walkout before Christmas have also been announced by the two unions.
The latest action comes days after a major international report put England 22nd out of 24 western countries on literacy and numeracy.
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development found England was performing worse than nations including Estonia and Slovakia.
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