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Teaching abroad: These top countries are hiringnow

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Published on 06 May 2024

Nurses and doctors, technology professionals, skilled manual workers—these are some professions that have experienced global labor shortages in recent years.In many countries,elementary and high school public teachers are also increasingly in demand.Because of the difficulty in hiring or retaining local teachers, schools are turning tothe recruitment and even training ofexpat teachers.

The UK is offering funded training to expatteachers

The state of immigration in the UK is aconundrum: asreported by The Guardian, while the current Conservative government wants to reduce the net immigration rate, the NHS (public health services) and public education system are scrambling to recruit skilled expat workers because of a severe labor shortage.

Why does this shortage in education exist? Not only are not enough locals joining education, but many existing local teachers are also resigning and transitioning to other careers. A survey of theUK'sDepartment of Education (DeF) shockingly found that 9% of all public school teachers, representing 40,000 teachers, resigned before their retirement in thesingle2022-2023 school year. Insatisfaction with their pay, long working hours (sometimes leading to burnout), and a lack of support/resources to handle pupil misbehavior havebeen citedas the reasons behind the mass resignation of local teachers.

The UK government has launched aspecialcampaign calledGet Into Teaching. They guide people interested in a teaching career by giving them one-to-one support on the phone.The good news is that they also offer this personalized support to international applicants, including those fromoutside the EU/EEA.

Qualified Teacher Status (QTS) is required to become a full-fledged teacher in the UK.There are multiple ways to get QTS: a 1-year academiccourse;a course combined with paid placement in aschool;and getting it directly through assessment (only for experienced teachers, even if this experience is in another country and system).

If fully self-funded, the 1-year course can be expensive for international applicants: around £15,000 (~US$20,000) in fees, plus living costs. However, because of the severe shortage for some subjects, state funding is available to sponsor even international applicants. Prospective expat secondary school teachers who teach modern foreign languages (Spanish, French, German) or physics can receive a bursary worth up to £28,000 or a scholarship worth up to £30,000 for a QTS course.There existsan online training called iQTS (International Qualified Teacher Status) tailored to non-UK teachers, but this cannot receive UK state funding.

School Direct, or salaried teacher training, on-site in the UK is alsoa greatoption for free training for expat teachers. They are paid a minimum salary during their 1-year or 2-year training, which is £20,598 in England in general and up to £25,831 in inner areas of London with a higher cost of living. The hitch? This training requires a valid work visa in the UK, even if the expat does not have indefinite leave to remain or permanent residency. The school or training program cannot sponsor a work visafor them, so they need another visa such asthe GraduateVisa, High Potential Individual (HPI) Visa, or India Young Professionals Scheme Visa. The duration of your visa must overlap with the duration of the salaried teacher training program you enroll in – the training must not be even one week longer than your visa duration.

Last year,a pilot project was introducedto pay expat teachers a £10,000 relocation package to move to the UK to work or work and train simultaneously. It was only for physics and modern foreign language teachers. Unfortunately, this program hasbeen discontinuedthis year. Education stakeholders, including the Universities Council for the Education of Teachers, have criticized this cancelation because the Department of Education failed to meet 50% of its recruitment goals last year.

There is a shortage of English teachers inFrance

The French newspaper Le Monde reports that, at the start of the new academic year in September 2023, there were a whopping 3,000 unfilled teaching positions in French public schools. A survey of the SNES-FSU, an organization of unions of high school teachers, found that at least one teaching position remains unfilled in 1 out of 2 middle schools(“collèges”)or high schools(“lycées”).

The challenges in recruiting or retaining local teachers are similar to thosein the UK: stagnating wages or wages that are lower than the average in OECD countries, long working hours, and highstudent-teacher ratios in classrooms. As explained by Rokhaya Diallo in The Guardian piece“France'sschools are in crisis – and it has nothing to do withpupils'dress”– poorer regions, which also tend to be the most ethnically diverse regions in terms of student demographics, are the most badly hit by understaffing.As an expat teacher, if you join the public education system, youare likely to getassigned to a state school in these regions – not to state schools in posh neighborhoods of Paris, which are already staffed by more experienced local teachers.

Teachers from any country in the European Union can, of course, apply directly to teach in France. How about passionate teachers from the rest of the world? There exists a route for young English teachers (no older than 35) from the US called the TAPIF (Teaching Assistant Program in France) route. English is one of the subjects with the most severe shortage in French public schools. Young Americans can teach English in French for a year if they have at least B1 (intermediate) proficiency in French.It isa greatfoot in the door for young graduates whodo not have muchteaching experienceyet.However, this program does not guarantee securing a more long-term teaching position in the country.

Of course, an alternative route is to firstgo toFrance as a student and then join the workforce upon graduating. Higher education remains relatively affordable in France, as public universities havevery lowfees, even for non-EU students.

When expat teachers first join the French education system, theyare consideredunqualified teachers, even if theywerefully qualified in another country. Unqualified teachers have a first degree but have not passed either of these two competitive exams yet: the CAPES(“Certificatd'aptitudeau professorat del'enseignementdu second degré”or“Certificate of aptitude for secondary school teacher”)and the Agrégation. The Agrégation is for applicants with aMaster'sdegree and is more competitive. They lead to higher-paying jobs with less intensive workloads.

As unqualified teachers, expats can get hired as contractual teachers.Thismeans that they are on a fixed contract fora number ofmonths or even sometimes weeks, often to fill a vacancy that hasnot receivedenough interest from fully qualified teachers.Theseteachers'salaries are also lower thanthose offully qualified teachers.

Canada is looking for a million new skilledexpatsin the next2years – includingteachers

Canada is one of the countries that is most open to immigration right now. The federal Canadiangovernment'simmigration target for the near future is 500,000 new expats in 2025 and 500,000 more in 2026 – a total of a million in two years.

Ontario, the largest province in terms of population (around 14 million), home to the capital Ottawa and the metropolis of Toronto, isone of the affected provincesby a teacher shortage.The non-profit People For Education has told the newspaper CP24 that over a quarter of all schools in the province are understaffed, with understaffing affecting more secondary schools (35%). Many schools are employing unqualified teachers on a contractual basis. While this can represent a safety and quality concern, it also allows those new to the profession, including newly arrived expat teachers who are stillgettingqualified, to gain valuable experience.

The francophone province of Quebec is also affected. Global News reports that the Quebecois Education Minister Bernard Drainville said at the start of the new academic year in September 2023 that there were still around 8,500 unfilled teaching positions, both full-time and part-time. Like in many placesaround the world, teachers in Quebec have been protesting and even going on strike to improve their pay, reduce their workload (which is difficult in an understaffed system), and create more manageable student-teacher ratios in classrooms.

Teaching in Quebec can be a good opportunity for expats from other francophone countries because French is the language of instruction in most Quebecois schools.A minority ofbothpublic and private schools in the provincedoteach in English, though.Even better news: Quebec eases the process for recognizing foreign qualifications for expat teachers from certain francophone countriesas well assome other countries.These countries are France, Belgium, Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Cameroon,IvoryCoast,as well asthe US, Romania, Moldova, EgyptandColombia.

Themoreremote Canadian provinces of Newfoundland and Labrador, Saskatchewan, AlbertaandNunavut also suffer from a teacher shortage.The NunavutTeachers'Association reported a vacancy rate of nearly 10% at the start of the new academic year in 2023, which is over 80 positions theyare strugglingto fill.Teacher salaries in Nunavut areparticularlyhigh to accommodate for the high cost of living, remoteness, and harsh climateof the region.

As reported by Nunatsiaq News, teachers in Nunavut were granted a 7% raise by the regional government two years ago. Experienced teachers with at least10years of experience make close to CA$125,000 there now,which isas much as a doctor, while junior teachers can start earning from CA$80,000. Even unqualified teachers, including new expats training to get fully qualified, can earn CA$ 175per day.While movingto the northernmost region of Canadacanseem daunting, itmight bea great professional and financial move for expat teachers.

What are the routes to immigrating to Canada, and how do you get qualified as a teacher onceyou'rethere? The most popular skilled immigration routes, especially the Federal Skilled Worker (FSW) Express Entry Program and the Provincial Nominee Programs (PNP), are also open to teachers or prospective teachers.

If you studied outside of Canada, youwould need toget your qualifications assessed through the Educational Credentials Assessment (ECA) process. If you are an elementary school teacher, you would need aBachelor'sin Education, and if you are a middle/high school teacher, a first degree in the subject you teach (e.g., chemistry, Spanish) followed by at least four semesters of a teacher education program. Given that many schools are contracting unqualified teachers because of the labor shortage, as an expat, you could well start working part-time as an unqualified teacher while studying in a teacher training program.

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