Sunday, March 11, 2018

Hiring Excellent Teachers--Important First Steps


If we want really talented people to apply for teaching positions at our school,  then the "how" matters, especially in the initial stages of the hiring process!

Here are two suggestions:

We should take time to design a really pro-active, optimistic job description, explaining our vision for the school, and the role of teachers in our school. This is worth the effort! Talented people, the kind we want for our school, have many options for jobs, and it's foolish to believe they'll automatically want to work for us. We have to sell them! We have to tap into their idealism, their desire to do something important with their lives, to use their talents to build up the kingdom of God and make a difference in the lives of kids.  

We should then post all this on a web page, and get the link out using social media sites, in parishes bulletins, and job bulletin boards. Here’s what I’ve written up at St. Michael  as an introduction to our job postings, as an example. 

We should require very little upfront. I emphasize the point of needing to “sell” prospects on the school, because too often we assume the opposite. Too often, our first outreach is “Here are the forms you must send us.” —A diocesan application, a verification of work experience form, letters of reference, child protection screening forms, transcripts, whatever. Forms! Forms! Forms! Once ALL those forms are in, we say without meaning to, we’ll CONSIDER you for a possible interview—maybe. 

I believe a lot of talented people turn away from us, even before we know they’re interested. That's exactly the opposite of what we want! If there’s a talented prospect even marginally interested in a job, we want to be in a dialogue with that person! Yes, in this litigious world of ours, we'll have to fill out forms at some point, but those should come second, after a relationship has been established! 

So all I ask a teacher prospect to do, as a first step, is send me a cover letter, explaining his or her interest, and a resume. I ask for the resume to determine credentials, and the cover letter, to see how well they write.  The ability to write well speaks of intellectual depth; it’s not something a person can “fake.” 

With a resume and a cover letter, we can take the next step, which is deciding whom we want to interview or not. In general, I try and interview as few people as possible, simply because of the constraints of time, so I really do try and "pare down the candidates" from the resume and cover letter. 

I’ll write about the interview next. 

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