What happens when a teacher resigns two weeks before the term starts at a remote school? Naturally, panic sets in, and the principal rushes to fill the position fast.
While this case of a last-minute resignation isn’t common, it often happens because the school doesn’t have a backup plan or enough time to recruit properly.
And these rushed teacher hiring processes often land schools with staff who aren’t quite the right fit. Sometimes they’re underqualified. Other times, they’re simply unprepared for the role. Either way, students miss out on quality instruction, and the rest of the teaching team feels the pressure.
With the ongoing teacher shortage across Australian schools, reactive hiring can feel like the only option. But these quick decisions come with financial strain, academic setbacks, and burnout among existing staff.
So, in this post, we’ll unpack what’s going wrong with school staffing issues, why reactive recruitment backfires, and how your school can take a better approach.
Let’s begin.
The Teacher Hiring Process: What’s Going Wrong?
The teacher hiring process falls apart when schools wait too long to start looking. Late timelines mean fewer candidates, weaker shortlists, and rushed decisions that hurt everyone.

Here’s where most schools go wrong, and what you can do about it.
Delayed Recruitment Process Hurts Everyone
Teacher shortages are still a big problem in Australia, and many schools struggle to fill open positions. Despite this, many schools still start off their recruitment process late in the cycle.
By that stage, the strongest candidates have already signed contracts elsewhere. So schools end up fighting over a shrinking pool of applicants. And as the pressure to fill positions grows, principals often hire whoever is available instead of the person best suited for the role. We’ve noticed this pattern repeat year after year.
Shallow Checks Lead to Bad Hires and Teacher Shortages
When schools run out of time, they complete pre-employment checks quickly, speed through interviews, and often skip demonstration lessons.
This short period then gives them little chance to assess subject knowledge, classroom management, or fit with the school culture. So, it’s not surprising that schools shorten reference calls, ignore teaching philosophies, and miss warning signs.
The impact of this pressure is not going unnoticed. ABC News reports that teacher shortages in Australia are forcing schools to hire underqualified or provisional staff to fill classrooms quickly. Many schools rely on student teachers or temporary permits because they cannot find fully qualified teachers in time. This urgent hiring puts pressure on both students and existing staff.
Why Remote and Rural Schools Face the Biggest Staffing Challenges
Remote and rural schools face bigger staffing challenges because they have fewer applicants, longer hiring cycles, and limited local talent. This makes recruitment even harder. Many principals in these areas report being short-staffed for months at a time.
But the frustrating part is that many registered teachers are willing to work in regional and remote communities.
Research from the Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership (AITSL) shows that most early career teachers recommend regional or remote positions to new teachers. Yet, only about one‑third of these teachers actually plan to stay in these areas long term. This highlights the ongoing challenge of attracting and retaining teachers in rural schools.
But if schools start recruiting too late, these candidates never even see the job ad. They’ve probably already accepted positions in metro areas. That’s why reaching out even a few weeks earlier can help schools attract qualified teachers to regional and remote roles.
The Financial and Academic Impact of Reactive Recruitment
Reactive recruitment costs schools money, affects classrooms, and harms staff wellbeing. Below, we’ll share how rushed hiring creates problems that ripple across every part of a school.

The Financial Drain
Every poor hire costs schools time, money, and disruption in the classroom. First, schools spend money onboarding and training someone who may leave quickly. Then, they face additional expenses replacing that teacher. In regional and remote areas, teacher turnover can cost schools thousands of dollars per vacancy, which shows how staffing problems directly affect school budgets and operations.
Temporary teachers add more costs for schools. They cover short-term gaps but disrupt long-term planning. Because of this, budgets stretch thin, resources get duplicated, and when another vacancy appears, the cycle starts over.
Student Outcomes Suffer
Students rarely raise concerns about staffing, but they still feel the effects. When teachers change mid-year, new teachers must catch up on plans and routines. This causes lesson sequences to break down and slows student progress.
Problems get worse when a rushed hire lacks proper training or experience. Without an experienced teacher, behavioural issues increase, and classroom management becomes a daily struggle. And students who need consistency most face the greatest instability.
Believe it or not, teacher quality directly affects student performance, especially for those from disadvantaged backgrounds. For example, students from low-income families whose parents work multiple jobs, children in foster care, or pupils in remote communities. These students rely more heavily on consistent, skilled teaching at school.
Teachers Burn Out When Systems Fail
About 39% of Australian teachers plan to leave the profession before retirement, and only about 26% intend to stay in teaching until retirement. This highlights a serious problem with teacher retention.
The issue worsens because many newly qualified teachers start in schools without proper mentorship or induction support. But they’re expected to figure things out on their own. And when the school hired them at the last minute, there’s even less time to set them up for success.
Now, if you hire the right person just two weeks before term starts, it’s still not enough. Even talented teachers struggle without proper support. We’ve seen how early hires who receive strong onboarding stay longer and perform better.
Recruitment Risks Are Leadership Risks
Australian principals carry the weight of hiring decisions, yet many have never had formal training in how to recruit well. They rely on gut instinct, past habits, or whatever process the school has always followed.
These schools, without a clear hiring structure, depend on luck instead of strategy. When luck runs out, leaders deal with complaints from parents, disengaged students, and burnt-out staff.
Underserved Schools Deserve Better
Schools in lower-income and remote areas face the hardest challenges. They need more teachers, but they often miss out on recruitment support and funding.
Evidence for Learning also suggests that induction support, mentoring, manageable workloads, and strong leadership at the school level are linked with better teacher recruitment and retention outcomes. These findings have been around for years. Yet many underserved schools still lack the resources to build proper systems.
If we’re serious about fixing the teacher shortage, these communities deserve the same attention as schools in the city. Anything less just widens the gap.
Smarter Hiring: How Schools Can Get Ahead

Has your school felt the pressure of last-minute hiring? If this article hit close to home, the good news is that small changes can go a long way.
Start recruiting earlier in the cycle, even by a few weeks. This extra time will let you strengthen pre-employment checks so nothing important is missed.
Next, use structured interviews and sample lessons to get a real sense of each candidate. And take time to understand their career intentions, then connect them with mentorship programs that help them settle in.
For principals, the long-term change should be building systems that support wiser hiring (not just faster hiring). A thoughtful teacher hiring process cuts down on education recruitment risks and sets your school up for the long run.
If you need a hand with teacher recruitment, we’re here to help. Visit Francis Orr to learn how we work with Australian schools to find the right teachers at the right time.
