As school communities around the country shutter their doors indefinitely to curb the spread of the new coronavirus, a great deal of uncertainty and unfinished business remains. Chief among this list of outstanding to-dos: hiring teachers for the next school year.
鈥淎pril is peak hiring time,鈥 said Kelly Coash-Johnson, executive director of American Association of School Personnel Administrators (AASPA).
But this year, it鈥檚 safe to say that few prospective job seekers and employers will be engaging in de rigueur interviewing practices, like shaking hands and making in-person eye contact. Already, 95 percent of the nation鈥檚 career fairs for school personnel have been canceled, reports AASPA鈥檚 Coash-Johnson.
As traditional hiring practices all but grind to a halt, the question of what will replace them in the coming months looms large. The response to that question鈥攑ut to school districts and educational hiring professionals days or even hours after their schools closed鈥攙aried widely.
There are also bigger questions lurking about how the economic fallout from the coronavirus will impact hiring overall. Will districts have the resources to bring new employees on board for the fall?
For some, hiring focus on hiatus
Some say that, right now, hiring is not even on the radar.
鈥淥ur staff who work in supporting districts in educator recruitment said they have not discussed this question with districts yet so we don鈥檛 have a lot of answers,鈥 said Alison May, a spokesperson for the Delaware Department of Education.
She emphasized that Delaware educators are prioritizing planning and preparing to support students and educators in the event schools are closed for an extended period of time.
Others indicated that their school systems, too, were focusing exclusively on trying to get ahead of their most immediate and pressing priority: serving their student population.
鈥淓arly this month we called on schools to start creating closure plans that focused on providing home instruction to students, ensuring equitable access to all children, and addressing food security for students who receive free and reduced lunch. Those issues have taken center stage in recent days,鈥 Michael Yaple, spokesperson for the New Jersey Department of Education, wrote in an email. New Jersey schools closed on Wednesday, March 18.
Hiring may not be on the minds of most school officials at the moment, but some say it remains part of their immediate plan of action for spring.
鈥淲e will still be actively looking for educators to join our team,鈥 said Xavier Andrews, a spokesperson for Boston Public Schools, adding that, right now, the school district has no plans to freeze hiring.
He did, however, provide a caveat: 鈥淎s things are changing minute to minute, it鈥檚 not the best time for us to make bold affirmative statements.鈥
Ramping up alternative hiring practices
As hiring appears to have taken a backseat at many school districts, some hiring professionals note that they鈥檙e prepared to ramp up alternate hiring practices. Tim Alexander, who heads up human resources for Minnetonka Public Schools in Minnesota, doesn鈥檛 seem fazed by the sudden and unanticipated closure of their schools. He says they鈥檝e been doing Skype interviews for as long as the online platform has existed.
鈥淰irtually every single year, we鈥檒l have a handful of candidates we鈥檒l choose by Skype,鈥 Alexander said.
The use of online interviewing enables hiring professionals with Minnetonka Public Schools to connect to teaching candidates, especially those applying to teach in the district鈥檚 long-standing immersion program, which features Chinese and Spanish and begins at the elementary school level. Alexander says the district also conducts online interviews to accommodate candidates鈥 tight schedules.
Downplaying the unique nature of online interviewing, Alexander says he follows the same format whether he鈥檚 interviewing someone in-person or on Skype, and that he asks the same set of questions. 鈥淭he only difference is that the candidate鈥檚 not physically present,鈥 he said.
But he does draw a distinction at phone interviews, saying he never hires based on phone interviews only. 鈥淲e want to be able to see their faces,鈥 Alexander noted.
Like Minnetonka Public Schools鈥 Alexander, hiring professionals at Teach for America appear undaunted by what may become the new, albeit temporary, hiring 鈥渘ormal鈥 of online interviewing. The nonprofit, which hires candidates to commit to teaching a minimum of two years in an under-resourced U.S. public school and is known for its selective recruitment process, isn鈥檛 new to online interviewing.
The nonprofit began conducting some of its interviews virtually in 2012. That practice allowed their hiring professionals to connect primarily with candidates living abroad, whether as students or enlisted military personnel, said Marissa Ring, Teach for America鈥檚 chief of staff. The nonprofit has steadily increased its use of online interviewing over time, says Ring, and as the coronavirus epidemic plays out around the globe, Teach for America plans to conduct all interviews virtually for an indefinite time period.
While Teach for America has eight years of virtual interview experience to draw on, Ring acknowledges that it doesn鈥檛 necessarily come second nature to new users. 鈥淚t can be daunting to do a virtual interview if you haven鈥檛 done one before,鈥 Ring said.
With that in mind, Teach for America provides specific guidance to teaching candidates on the online interview process, making sure they know how to log into and practice navigating Zoom, the video conferencing system the nonprofit uses.
Teaching candidates aren鈥檛 the only ones who can benefit from honing their online interviewing skills during these days of social distancing. Says Minnetonka Public Schools鈥 Alexander: 鈥淧rincipals are going to have a lot of time [due to school closures] to get acclimated to online interviewing. Why not focus that energy on making sure we hire the very best teachers we can for the fall?鈥