The Philadelphia School District plans to hire at least
400 teachers for the 2015-16 school year.
In a district that has spent the last several years
closing schools and laying off teachers, that is notable.
Particular areas of need, officials said, are secondary
math and science, special education, art, music, and upper elementary school.
In an effort to compete with charter schools and other
systems, the district has also changed its application process, shortening the
hiring timeline and requiring applicants to submit more information up front.
"We wanted to streamline the way we do hiring of
teachers," said Kendra Rosati, the district's director of recruiting.
"And we wanted to increase the quality of people. We need to have
excellent teachers in front of our kids."
City schools have long been criticized for a cumbersome,
opaque hiring process that complicates recruiting teachers in a district where
bad news has been the norm. Rosati knows that and said the district was doing
all it could to reverse that trend.
In the past, candidates often did not know whether they
were even eligible to interview with principals until the summer, well after
charter schools and other districts made hiring decisions.
Though the budget situation remains bleak - officials
predict a deficit of $80 million, and it is unclear when principals will know
exactly how many teachers they can hire for next year - Rosati said the new
process meant candidates would know within four to six weeks of applying
whether they were eligible to interview for jobs.
The district had been using a cursory online application
that did not allow for resumés and cover letters. Those are required now, and
would-be teachers will also be asked to submit reference information, a sample
lesson plan, and a video of themselves teaching.
"This is a competitive process," Rosati said.
Last year, the district projected it would have about 200
jobs to fill for the start of the 2014-15 school year. It ended up having to
fill 400.
Rosati said 400 was now the baseline for the next school
year. Most of the 400 will replace teachers who retire or resign.
Much remains up in the air for the district. In addition
to the uncertain budget picture, it is unclear whether the School Reform
Commission's move to cancel the existing teachers' contract will stick.
The SRC wants teachers to begin paying for part of their
health insurance, which it says would save the district more than $50 million
annually. Commonwealth Court recently ruled the district cannot cancel
contracts, but the district has not yet announced whether it would appeal that
decision to the state Supreme Court.
The district currently employs about 8,500 teachers.
Starting salary for a new teacher with no experience is $45,360.
Phila. Schools Hiring Teachers
The Philadelphia School District expects to hire 400
teachers for the 2015-16 school year. Vacancies are expected in special
education, art, music, secondary math, secondary science, and upper elementary
grades.
For more information, e-mail recruitment@philasd.org or
visit www.philasd.org and click on "employment."
Source: Philly.com
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