Teaching Recruitment Process

How Recruitment Agencies Match Teachers With the Right Schools

Hiring the right teacher takes more than posting a job. The process involves several steps, and a clear approach keeps classrooms running smoothly.

Recruitment agencies support this process. They source, vet, and match qualified teachers to suitable roles, so schools do not have to manage applications alone.

At OTJR Online, we have done this since 2006. We connect London schools with dedicated educators across supply, contract, and permanent roles. One thing remains consistent: good matches do not happen by accident.

What the Teaching Recruitment Process Looks Like Behind the Scenes

What the Teaching Recruitment Process Looks Like Behind the Scenes

The recruitment process is a core part of keeping any school environment stable. From the moment a vacancy appears, timing becomes critical.

A typical hiring process moves through several stages. It starts with identifying staffing needs, then sourcing candidates, checking qualifications, and managing the interview process. Each step builds on the last (skip one and things tend to unravel pretty quickly).

What makes this process effective in the education sector is its structure. Agencies gather detailed information before approaching candidates. This structured approach keeps the process focused and helps schools avoid unnecessary delays.

How Agencies Identify a School’s Staffing Needs

Some vacancies are filled quickly, while others take weeks. The difference often comes down to how clearly an agency understands a school’s staffing needs from the start.

For example, one primary setting may need strong classroom management, while another may require experience in special educational needs. Identifying these differences early guides the entire search (same borough, completely different requirements).

Two things usually define how an agency reads a school’s staffing needs.

Reading Between the Lines of a Job Brief

A job description only tells part of the story. Schools often need more than the listed qualifications. For example, they may look for classroom management skills, the ability to adapt to different learning levels, experience with specific curricula, or someone who fits the school’s culture and values.

A job ad might ask for an experienced teacher, but it does not tell the full story. For example, the class may have behaviour challenges, mixed ability levels, or students who need extra support. The school may also expect a clear teaching style, such as strong discipline, structured lessons, or a more flexible approach.

They also look at how the school runs each day. Is behaviour strict? Do teachers follow a set lesson plan? How much teamwork is expected? These details help match the right teacher to the role (we have seen tidy CVs fall flat simply because the candidate’s style didn’t match the school).

When Schools Need Someone Quickly

Most supply teaching agencies with strong London networks can place a teacher in two days. That kind of turnaround only works because the groundwork has already been done. Candidates are already checked and ready to step into a classroom at short notice. As a result, schools can fill gaps quickly and keep things running.

When schools are clear about their needs from the start, the process runs easily. It saves time, avoids disruption for students, and places the right educators in the classrooms where they fit best.

How Agencies Identify a School's Staffing Needs

Building the Skilled Candidate Profile From Teaching Talent

The search for top talent is only half the job; the other half is to place them in an environment where they can succeed. According to NFER, poor matching between teachers and schools drives early departures, as shown by data on how factors like job satisfaction and wellbeing influence retention.

Agencies focus on three main areas:

  • Experience and Expertise: Practical classroom experience matters more than a polished CV.
  • Working Style and Skills: How educators engage with students and manage challenges is just as important as qualifications.
  • Career Goals and Future Plans: Aligning roles with professional development opportunities improves long-term retention.

When these factors align, placements last longer, and students benefit from consistent teaching.

What Schools Look for Beyond Qualifications

Beyond qualifications, schools also place strong value on adaptability and teamwork. Teachers who can collaborate with other teachers, support children with different needs, and adjust to different school environments are far more likely to succeed in the role.

As a result, flexibility becomes especially important in supply positions, where educators often move between classrooms and year groups.

Vetting, Background Checks, and Interviews

Before candidates are introduced to a school, they go through a detailed vetting process.

This process includes:

  • Background checks, including DBS and right-to-work verification
  • Direct reference checks with previous employers
  • A structured interview process aligned with the Equality Act

This stage ensures schools only meet candidates who meet both compliance standards and day-to-day job expectations.

Agencies also assess how applicants demonstrate their skills under pressure, helping schools make informed decisions.

How Supply Teaching Agency Placements Work

A supply teaching agency plays a main role when schools need staff quickly.

As we mentioned earlier, with access to pre-vetted candidates, agencies can often fill vacancies within one or two days. This speed is possible because candidates are already assessed and ready to step into the classroom.

Even in urgent cases, the full recruitment process is followed to maintain quality and compliance.

How Institutions Choose Educators From the Shortlist

Instead of reviewing dozens of applications, schools receive a focused shortlist.

A dedicated team typically pulls together three to five educators’ profiles. Each one includes a clear summary of availability, relevant experience, and suitability for that specific role (think of it as doing the hard filtering on behalf of the academy).

Institutions can access these profiles, review them at their own pace, and confirm their preferred applicants within an agreed time frame. This shortlist and profile review process helps institutions identify the best match without unnecessary delays. It also ensures it works well for both sides.

Staying Involved After the Placement Begins

Confirming a placement is not the finish line. For a good supply teaching agency, it is closer to the halfway point.

Most challenges appear in the first few weeks, so agencies stay involved to provide ongoing support. This helps both schools and educators settle in quickly, aligning with the government’s focus on early support for teachers.

That kind of hands-on support is what builds long-term partnerships between agencies, schools, and the wider teaching community. Teachers also gain something valuable from this stage. Staying connected to an agency that opens doors to better roles, fresh services, and stronger professional ties down the line.

Every step, starting with the initial shortlist and continuing through the early weeks of placement, is managed with care to keep both schools and educators coming back.

How Supply Teaching Agency Placements Work

The Role of Tools and Technology

Modern recruitment agencies increasingly rely on digital tools to manage applications, track compliance, and improve efficiency.

These systems help agencies handle large volumes of applicants while maintaining consistency across the hiring process.

Why the Hiring Process Runs Smoothly With a Recruitment Agency

Schools that work with a recruitment agency typically fill vacancies faster and with far fewer drop-offs in the first term. And when you look at what goes into running a school day, it’s not hard to see why more London schools are choosing to hand this part over to specialists.

A quick side-by-side comparison shows why more schools are going down this route.

Without an AgencyWith a Recruitment Agency
Vacancy SpeedWeeks of advertising and waitingFilled within days via existing candidate pools
Candidate QualityMixed, often unvetted applicationsPre-screened, qualified teachers only
Admin LoadHeavy, handled entirely by school staffManaged by the agency’s dedicated team
ComplianceSchool responsible for all checksDBS, references, and right-to-work handled in full
CostAdvertising fees plus staff timeFocused spend with clear, agreed service costs
FlexibilityLimited, especially for short-term coverAccess to supply and permanent options across budgets

Most school hiring teams don’t have time to build a recruitment agency’s level of expertise. They know how local schools operate and have connections across London boroughs. A headteacher in Brixton once told us the best decision that term was calling us (one quick call, problem solved).

When institutions hand the recruitment process to people who do it every day, everyone benefits, especially the pupils. The process frees up headteachers and staff to focus more on teaching.

Staying aware of teacher recruitment trends for 2026, for example, can also help schools make more informed hiring decisions.

Supporting Long-Term Growth in Education

The education sector continues to face staffing challenges, especially in specialist roles and the rising demand for experienced teachers. The right fit is not always quick or easy, and gaps can affect both teaching quality and student progress.

Agencies help schools manage challenges like shortages in maths, science, and SEN teachers, as well as last-minute absences. With access to a wider talent pool, they match suitable candidates faster and more efficiently, so schools can keep things running without disruption.

Ready to Find Your Next Role? Let’s Talk

The teaching recruitment process is more complex in practice. But when your institution manages it properly, it creates better outcomes for schools, teachers, and students.

OTJR Online has supported London schools in matching teachers to supply, contractual, and permanent roles. The focus is always on finding a strong fit for both sides, which means placing a specialist ahead of a new term or helping a teacher find a role that supports their career goals.

If your school needs reliable recruitment support, our team is ready to help. If you are a teacher looking for your next role, get in touch at otjronline.com. Good education starts with good people. We bring together schools and educators who make learning happen.

Posted in Education, Teacher Recruitment.