Everything you need to know about reference checks in international education
Reference checks are one of the most important steps in selecting and hiring a new faculty or staff member at your international school.
Not only do reference checks give you the opportunity to determine if your chosen candidate is suited for the role in question, it means you’ll prevent wasting both time and money on an ill-suited new hire.
There are countless benefits to performing a reference check, including:
Steps to planning an effective teaching reference
Example questions to ask in an international teaching job reference
What can’t I ask about?
Many employers are under the misconception that it is illegal to discuss the job performance or behaviour of a current or former employee. This is false. Rather, it is prohibited to discuss topics that may result in discrimination, including race, national or ethnic origin, religion, age, sex, sexual orientation, marital status, family status, disability. The exact parameters will differ from country to country. To protect yourself and your school, simply ensure your questions only focus on the fitness of the candidate for the job.
Steps to performing an effective teaching reference
Assessing the candidate
Results and feedback attained from reference checks need to be reviewed carefully in order to be useful.
We recommend the use of a set rating scale to both enable a more accurate and granular assessment of the candidate’s suitability for the position and minimise personal bias. This can be as simple as a meets/does not meet rating, a scoring out of 5, and in-depth rating rubrics. An expanded rating scale will help you make meaningful distinctions among candidates.
Errors and personal biases
It’s important you make every effort possible to minimise the potential for errors and personal biases to influence your evaluation of candidates. Errors can occur when your evaluation is influenced by something other than the evidence provided by the referee. Examples can include:
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By becoming aware of errors and personal biases, you can work to mitigate them.
Referencing with Schrole
Though one of the most important parts of the recruitment process, the heavy administrative burden of referencing mean it rarely receives the time, care and attention it deserves. With Schrole, all the hard work is done for you, ensuring references are in-depth, unbiased and consistent. Additional benefits of Schrole referencing include:
All references are strictly confidential
The candidate isn’t involved in the reference process and is not able to view their reference. This means they do not have the ability to remove references. All references completed through the Schrole app go from the referee to Schrole direct to the hiring manager.
All referees are direct supervisors
Candidates usually have a reference from at least a Head of School, but as a minimum they’re from people who can actually talk to the candidate’s actual abilities. We don’t take references from colleagues or subordinates.
References are taken ahead of job applications
Instead of wasting hours sorting, interviewing and shortlisting candidates only to find out they’re unsuitable at the referencing stage, Schrole references are taken ahead of job applications. This gives you the ability to use references as a screening tool to decide who to shortlist and interview.?
References are consistent across all candidates
All candidate references are in the same format, allowing you to compare apples with apples and keep your recruiting practices fair.
Rubric format to eliminate cultural bias.
While a set rating scale helps to keep your referencing standard, asking a referee to rate a candidate on a scale of 1-10 is problematic because there’s no explanation of what a 10 is. By using a rubric that ties a rating to specific metric, candidates can be rated more fairly and compared more equitably. For example, to be rated as Accomplished for managing student behaviour, the candidate needs to be someone who Develops and shares with colleagues a range of behavior management strategies using research and classroom experience. Schrole rubrics are based around teacher appraisals to get into the nitty gritty of the suitability of your candidate.
Different rubrics for different job types
Candidates applying for leadership jobs are referenced against leadership criteria; candidates for early childhood positions are referenced against developing early childhood educational programs; and secondary teachers the ability to develop and write curriculum.
References that ask the right questions
Schrole works to help you achieve safer and smarter recruitment. Our references ask the right questions in order to protect your school and its community including: To your knowledge, has this candidate ever been in a situation that may compromise their ethical or professional standing? and To your knowledge, has the candidate ever been reported/investigated for issues relating to child protection?
References contain contact details for the referee
If you want to contact the referee to ask additional questions or follow up on information in the reference, rest assured that all references contain contact details for the referee.
Want to learn more about the benefits of Schrole software for your international school? Get in touch today.