Induction
Purchase
Description
"This book offers a valuable and practical framework for thinking about how to teach successfully—year after year, class after class, student after student. It contains many insights and lessons from teachers who have found their own professional experiences genuinely rewarding and who remained in the profession for a lifetime."
—From the Foreword by Harvey J. Stedman, Vice-Chancellor
New York University
How can you fill the large number of teacher positions you need over the next decade as well as keep the best teachers on your staff?
Each time you sign a contract with an educator, you are choosing someone responsible for helping children learn well and stay safe. Therefore, recruitment and retention form the foundation for achieving your school community's learning and safety goals!
You know what it feels like to ask yourself, "How will this professional fulfill his or her role in five years? Ten?" Induction: Connecting Teacher Recruitment to Retention is designed to help school administrators, teachers, and board of education members choose from a wide variety of proven practices to attract and retain the best professional staff in this competitive market.
This excellent, new resource provides you with the best practices for attracting and keeping educators by using five building blocks to construct a three-year practical plan to recruit and retain staff:
- Preparing: recognizing your induction needs, developing your mission statement, establishing policy, and setting your induction goals
- Staffing: recruiting, interviewing, and hiring
- Orienting—Year One: conducting professional development; mentoring and collaborating; and supervising, observing, and evaluating
- Connecting—Years Two and Three: continuing professional development as well as supervising, observing, and evaluating; granting tenure/permanence
- Keeping/Retaining: sustaining the connection, developing career long learners, and renewing and reorienting
Create a professional culture in which staff members meet student needs by using the best practices throughout their careers. Create a custom approach to recruitment and retention that will meet your school's learning and safety goals now and for years to come.
Contents
List of Tables and Figures
List of Tables and Figures
Foreword
Foreword
Acknowledgements
Acknowledgements
About the Authors
About the Authors
Introduction: Induction - From Recruitment to Retention
- Choosing and Using Successful Practices
- Summary
1. Building Block 1: Preparing to Recruit and Retain
- Chapter Summary
- BluePrint for Building Block 1
2. Building Block 2: Staffing Your School or District - Necessary Tools
- Putting It Together
- Getting Started
- How to Recruit
- How to Interview
- Chapter Summary
- BluePrint for Building Block 2
3. Building Block 3: Orienting New Members of Your Professional Staff - Year One
- Preorientation: Connecting Before the School Year Appointment Begins
- Conducting Professional Development
- Mentoring and Collaborating
- Supervising, Observing, and Evaluating
- Putting It Together for the Induction Task Force
- Chapter Summary
- BluePrint for Building Block 3
4. Building Block 4: Creating Lasting Connections for Your Probationary Professional Staff - Years Two and Three
- Ongoing Professional Development Best Practice: Data Mining
- Ongoing Supervision, Observation, and Evaluation Best Practices: Formal Observation and Informal Supervision
- Ongoing Supervision, Observation, and Evaluation Best Practice: The Process of Granting Tenure/Permanence
- Chapter Summary
- BluePrint for Building Block 4
5. Building Block 5: Retaining Your High-Quality Professional Staff - Best Practices
- Retaining Best Practice: Observation and Evaluation for Tenured Staff
- Retaining Best Practices: Renewing and Reorienting
- Retaining Best Practice: Getting to the "Hearth" of It
- Chapter Summary
- BluePrint for Building Block 5
Endnote
Endnote
Resources
- A. BluePrint for Building Blocks 1-5
- B. Leading for Learning & Safety: A Leadership Development Institute
- C. Affirm, Normalize, and Refocus
- D. Particulars of the Letter of Intent/Binder
- E. Letter of Appointment
- F. Advertisement for Staffing Positions
- G. Tenure Letter
- H. Examplar for How to Use an Evaluation Instrument (see Resource) in the Preobservation, Observation, and Postobservation
- I. Evaluation Instrument
- J. Organizational Chart of the Induction Task Force
Bibliography
Bibliography
Index
Index
Description
"This book offers a valuable and practical framework for thinking about how to teach successfully—year after year, class after class, student after student. It contains many insights and lessons from teachers who have found their own professional experiences genuinely rewarding and who remained in the profession for a lifetime."
—From the Foreword by Harvey J. Stedman, Vice-Chancellor
New York University
How can you fill the large number of teacher positions you need over the next decade as well as keep the best teachers on your staff?
Each time you sign a contract with an educator, you are choosing someone responsible for helping children learn well and stay safe. Therefore, recruitment and retention form the foundation for achieving your school community's learning and safety goals!
You know what it feels like to ask yourself, "How will this professional fulfill his or her role in five years? Ten?" Induction: Connecting Teacher Recruitment to Retention is designed to help school administrators, teachers, and board of education members choose from a wide variety of proven practices to attract and retain the best professional staff in this competitive market.
This excellent, new resource provides you with the best practices for attracting and keeping educators by using five building blocks to construct a three-year practical plan to recruit and retain staff:
- Preparing: recognizing your induction needs, developing your mission statement, establishing policy, and setting your induction goals
- Staffing: recruiting, interviewing, and hiring
- Orienting—Year One: conducting professional development; mentoring and collaborating; and supervising, observing, and evaluating
- Connecting—Years Two and Three: continuing professional development as well as supervising, observing, and evaluating; granting tenure/permanence
- Keeping/Retaining: sustaining the connection, developing career long learners, and renewing and reorienting
Create a professional culture in which staff members meet student needs by using the best practices throughout their careers. Create a custom approach to recruitment and retention that will meet your school's learning and safety goals now and for years to come.
Contents
List of Tables and Figures
List of Tables and Figures
Foreword
Foreword
Acknowledgements
Acknowledgements
About the Authors
About the Authors
Introduction: Induction - From Recruitment to Retention
- Choosing and Using Successful Practices
- Summary
1. Building Block 1: Preparing to Recruit and Retain
- Chapter Summary
- BluePrint for Building Block 1
2. Building Block 2: Staffing Your School or District - Necessary Tools
- Putting It Together
- Getting Started
- How to Recruit
- How to Interview
- Chapter Summary
- BluePrint for Building Block 2
3. Building Block 3: Orienting New Members of Your Professional Staff - Year One
- Preorientation: Connecting Before the School Year Appointment Begins
- Conducting Professional Development
- Mentoring and Collaborating
- Supervising, Observing, and Evaluating
- Putting It Together for the Induction Task Force
- Chapter Summary
- BluePrint for Building Block 3
4. Building Block 4: Creating Lasting Connections for Your Probationary Professional Staff - Years Two and Three
- Ongoing Professional Development Best Practice: Data Mining
- Ongoing Supervision, Observation, and Evaluation Best Practices: Formal Observation and Informal Supervision
- Ongoing Supervision, Observation, and Evaluation Best Practice: The Process of Granting Tenure/Permanence
- Chapter Summary
- BluePrint for Building Block 4
5. Building Block 5: Retaining Your High-Quality Professional Staff - Best Practices
- Retaining Best Practice: Observation and Evaluation for Tenured Staff
- Retaining Best Practices: Renewing and Reorienting
- Retaining Best Practice: Getting to the "Hearth" of It
- Chapter Summary
- BluePrint for Building Block 5
Endnote
Endnote
Resources
- A. BluePrint for Building Blocks 1-5
- B. Leading for Learning & Safety: A Leadership Development Institute
- C. Affirm, Normalize, and Refocus
- D. Particulars of the Letter of Intent/Binder
- E. Letter of Appointment
- F. Advertisement for Staffing Positions
- G. Tenure Letter
- H. Examplar for How to Use an Evaluation Instrument (see Resource) in the Preobservation, Observation, and Postobservation
- I. Evaluation Instrument
- J. Organizational Chart of the Induction Task Force
Bibliography
Bibliography
Index
Index
Reviews
Induction
Connecting Teacher Recruitment to Retention
March 2003 | 144 pages | Corwin
| Format | Published Date | ISBN | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Paperback | 01/02/2026 | 9780761946762 | $37.95 |
"This book offers a valuable and practical framework for thinking about how to teach successfully—year after year, class after class, student after student. It contains many insights and lessons from teachers who have found their own professional experiences genuinely rewarding and who remained in the profession for a lifetime."
—From the Foreword by Harvey J. Stedman, Vice-Chancellor
New York University
How can you fill the large number of teacher positions you need over the next decade as well as keep the best teachers on your staff?
Each time you sign a contract with an educator, you are choosing someone responsible for helping children learn well and stay safe. Therefore, recruitment and retention form the foundation for achieving your school community's learning and safety goals!
You know what it feels like to ask yourself, "How will this professional fulfill his or her role in five years? Ten?" Induction: Connecting Teacher Recruitment to Retention is designed to help school administrators, teachers, and board of education members choose from a wide variety of proven practices to attract and retain the best professional staff in this competitive market.
This excellent, new resource provides you with the best practices for attracting and keeping educators by using five building blocks to construct a three-year practical plan to recruit and retain staff:
- Preparing: recognizing your induction needs, developing your mission statement, establishing policy, and setting your induction goals
- Staffing: recruiting, interviewing, and hiring
- Orienting—Year One: conducting professional development; mentoring and collaborating; and supervising, observing, and evaluating
- Connecting—Years Two and Three: continuing professional development as well as supervising, observing, and evaluating; granting tenure/permanence
- Keeping/Retaining: sustaining the connection, developing career long learners, and renewing and reorienting
Create a professional culture in which staff members meet student needs by using the best practices throughout their careers. Create a custom approach to recruitment and retention that will meet your school's learning and safety goals now and for years to come.
Table Of Contents:
- List of Tables and Figures
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- About the Authors
- Introduction: Induction - From Recruitment to Retention
- Choosing and Using Successful Practices
- Summary
- 1. Building Block 1: Preparing to Recruit and Retain
- Chapter Summary
- BluePrint for Building Block 1
- 2. Building Block 2: Staffing Your School or District - Necessary Tools
- Putting It Together
- Getting Started
- How to Recruit
- How to Interview
- Chapter Summary
- BluePrint for Building Block 2
- 3. Building Block 3: Orienting New Members of Your Professional Staff - Year One
- Preorientation: Connecting Before the School Year Appointment Begins
- Conducting Professional Development
- Mentoring and Collaborating
- Supervising, Observing, and Evaluating
- Putting It Together for the Induction Task Force
- Chapter Summary
- BluePrint for Building Block 3
- 4. Building Block 4: Creating Lasting Connections for Your Probationary Professional Staff - Years Two and Three
- Ongoing Professional Development Best Practice: Data Mining
- Ongoing Supervision, Observation, and Evaluation Best Practices: Formal Observation and Informal Supervision
- Ongoing Supervision, Observation, and Evaluation Best Practice: The Process of Granting Tenure/Permanence
- Chapter Summary
- BluePrint for Building Block 4
- 5. Building Block 5: Retaining Your High-Quality Professional Staff - Best Practices
- Retaining Best Practice: Observation and Evaluation for Tenured Staff
- Retaining Best Practices: Renewing and Reorienting
- Retaining Best Practice: Getting to the "Hearth" of It
- Chapter Summary
- BluePrint for Building Block 5
- Endnote
- Resources
- A. BluePrint for Building Blocks 1-5
- B. Leading for Learning & Safety: A Leadership Development Institute
- C. Affirm, Normalize, and Refocus
- D. Particulars of the Letter of Intent/Binder
- E. Letter of Appointment
- F. Advertisement for Staffing Positions
- G. Tenure Letter
- H. Examplar for How to Use an Evaluation Instrument (see Resource) in the Preobservation, Observation, and Postobservation
- I. Evaluation Instrument
- J. Organizational Chart of the Induction Task Force
- Bibliography
- Index