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Educational Administration Quarterly
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New Teachers' Experiences of Hiring: Late, Rushed, and Information-Poor

Edward Liu

Department of educational theory, policy, and administration at Rutgers University

Susan Moore Johnson

Harvard Graduate School of Education

Purpose: Teacher hiring decisions have far-reaching consequences for a school, its students, and faculty. This article examines how new teachers in four states are hired and explores whether the process leads to good matches between these individuals and their schools. The authors conceive of hiring as a two-way process and examine the extent to which the hiring process provides opportunities for prospective teachers and schools to collect rich information about, and form accurate impressions of, one another.

Research Methods: This study surveyed a representative random sample of 486 first-year and second-year teachers in California, Florida, Massachusetts, and Michigan. Participants were chosen using two-stage stratified cluster sampling, and the study achieved a response rate of 65%. Statistical methods used in the analysis include principal components analysis, chi-square analysis, and t tests.

Findings: The data reveal that the majority of new teachers in these states are hired through a decentralized, school-based process. Despite the opportunity this provides schools and prospective teachers to explore the potential match between them, most new teachers actually have limited interactions with school-based personnel during the hiring process, and the process is relatively information-poor. Many new teachers are also hired quite late—more than one third of new teachers in California and Florida are hired after the school year has already started.

Implications: The results of our analysis suggest that shifting hiring decisions to the school level is not sufficient to guarantee information-rich hiring. They also suggest that schools may need help removing barriers to conducting more information-rich hiring.

Key Words: teacher hiring • personnel • human resource

Educational Administration Quarterly, Vol. 42, No. 3, 324-360 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/0013161X05282610


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