Want to find a teaching job in N.L.? French would be an asset - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 11:33 PM | Calgary | -7.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NL

Want to find a teaching job in N.L.? French would be an asset

Schools and future teachers sized each other up Wednesday at Memorial University's annual teacher recruitment.

Education grads may need to look beyond the overpass, recruiters say

Jobs are tight with the English School District in the St. John's area, but students are hearing that French, science and math are all assets. (CBC)

Schools and future teachers sized each other up Wednesday at Memorial University's annual teacher recruitment.

Bottom line: Finding permanent work in St. John's right out of school isn't likely, but students' odds of landing a job after graduation anywhere in the province improve if they specialize in French, science and math.

Andrew Hickey, senior education officer with human resources with the Newfoundland and Labrador English School District, told CBC that the St. John's market is tight and has been for years.

They love being home, they have a lot of friendships and relationships and their families here.- Debbie Toope

Young teachers realize they have better opportunity to secure permanent employment if they go to smaller centres first, he said.

"We are seeing more of our younger teachers going to the rural areas and staying there for a couple of years and then applying for positions back in our bigger centres, but at the same time we do also experience some of our teachers end up staying in our small communities. They enjoy the lifestyle, they make connections, and they do end up staying there."

There are 1,600 teachers on the substitute list, and most of those are experienced teachers, said Hickey.

Still, the district is hiring for several hundred positions; the first bigvacancy list will be issuedFriday, and then every week after that through the spring and summer.

Opportunities in Labrador

And even though job availability is better in rural areas, the district is still having trouble recruiting for Labrador, especially along the coast.

Principal Greg Quilty has about a dozen jobs to fill at his school in Sheshatshiu and there are just as many openings in Natuashish. (CBC)

But Greg Quilty, principal of Sheshatshiu Innu School, near Happy Valley-Goose Bay, has an ace up his sleeve when he recruits for the Innuschools in that community and Natuashish.

"Generally we pitch the idea of Labrador life, and how exciting and how beautiful the culture is and the land and just the lifestyle in Labrador," he said. "It's a great place to go if you're an outdoors person."

There are challenges in getting people to come north, he said, but added that they took in many resums Wednesday from people who are coming to Labrador anyway, either because they're from there or have a partner moving there for work.

We pitch the idea of Labrador life, and how exciting and how beautiful the culture is.- Greg Quilty, principal Sheshatshiu

Patricia Greene, senior education officer with the province's francophone school district, said they recruit from a much smaller pool than their English counterparts.

But she saidthose students who fit their needs highly proficient in French, not necessarily francophone find a lot of opportunity.

"They may be specialists in math as well as French, so we have opportunities for that in our high schools as well," she said.

"It's always a challenge, because our colleagues in the English district look for people who are in French immersion with the high quality of French, and outside the province. A number of people will leave MUN and go outside province to work, and that's just the reality."

Preference is to stay close to home

DebbieToope, senior education officer in human resources in the English school district, said Newfoundland and Labrador holds its own in recruitment.

"Many students say their first preference would be to stay in Newfoundland and Labrador," she said. "They love being home, they have a lot of friendships and relationshipsand their families here."

Recruiters came to Memorial University from all parts of Canada and from overseas. (CBC)

StudentVictoriaLeDrew, who's still in the middle of her university studies, spentWedesday"scopingout" what the job market looks like, especially in French immersion programs.

"Right now I'm looking into primary, elementary, French immersion programs, and the high demand right now is very intriguing," she said. She's trying to tailor her studies to make it easier to find a job when she graduates.

"I enjoy little children and I used to teach piano to children ages four to 16, and I think to go back to that would just be amazing for me."

For LeDrew, it doesn't matter to her where she lands a job and was excited by the different options at Wednesday's fair.

"We have people from the U.K., Yellowknife, Yukon, everywhere, so there's a really high demand for teachers right now. It's very cool to see," she said, adding that it doesn't matter to her if she stays in Newfoundland and Labrador.

"[It's a] wherever the wind goes, wherever anyone needs me kind of thing."