The National - News

TEACHERS HEAD TO UAE AS SCHOOLS PREPARE TO REOPEN

▶ Hundreds will take up new positions when pupils return to class for the first time since March

- KELLY CLARKE

Hundreds of teachers are ready to begin new roles as UAE schools prepare to reopen for the first time since March.

The new academic year gets under way on August 30 and will usher in the start of a new life in the UAE for many overseas recruits.

Because of the economic effect of the pandemic, some schools put their recruitmen­t plans on hold, while others pressed ahead with remote interviews and flights.

Taaleem, which operates 13 schools across the Emirates, is set to welcome 127 teachers, 52 of whom are internatio­nal recruits from countries such as the UK and US.

Kate Fisher, head of human resources at Taaleem, said all of its internatio­nal teachers were recruited before the outbreak.

“When the pandemic started we refocused our recruitmen­t strategy,” she said, to secure staff who were already settled in the UAE.

“From the start of the lockdown, when borders were closed and we had no firm assurances of new overseas recruits being guaranteed entry into the UAE, we began an alternativ­e recruitmen­t strategy to our normal global search.

“Any vacancies we had after the Covid-19 pandemic were interviewe­d for locally.”

She said they would process work visas for the new internatio­nal recruits once they have arrived in the country.

Unlike some schools in the Emirates, all staff, old and new, were reassured that their positions were secure and salary packages remained the same.

At the British School Al Khubairat in Abu Dhabi, seven teachers were recruited for the new academic year, including two from abroad.

Mark Leppard, headmaster at BSAK, said his school has managed to get permission for teachers to fly in to the capital.

“The two teachers recruited from overseas are currently seeking approval to travel and will be arriving in Abu Dhabi this week,” he said.

“We have had to do our staff induction through video calls, rather than in school, and we have started this earlier so that those coming into Abu Dhabi can self-isolate for at least two weeks before the school starts on August 30, as mandated by the government.”

Primary teacher Megan Pankhurst, 26, from London, will arrive in Dubai on August 13 to start work at Dubai British School Jumeirah Park.

“I applied for the job in December, was interviewe­d in January and received an offer a few days later,” Ms Pankhurst said.

“There was a little concern about my job security when the pandemic started to progress globally, but I have friends who live in Dubai and things seemed quite under control because they acted quickly.

“I also received email updates from my new headteache­r in Dubai who assured me that it was still their intention to get me out there, even if distance learning was still in place. That reassuranc­e helped.”

Joining the same school, Eydom Shimeles, 27, is scheduled to arrive in Dubai on Sunday. She secured her position as a primary school teacher in January.

“When the pandemic hit, I felt torn because life had been put on hold,” she said. “I was also worried about moving to another country and getting sick while being so far from home, but I’m looking forward to it now.”

For months she has been teaching children of key workers in the UK and said it will be daunting heading back to a socially distanced classroom.

“For the past four months in my school in London I’ve been teaching very small groups of children, loosely following the national curriculum.

“Going back to a class of 30 kids is going to feel very different for them and me, but I’m excited.”

The teacher recruitmen­t season has changed significan­tly this year, said Diane Jacoutot, managing director at Edvectus, an internatio­nal school recruitmen­t agency.

“From April to July, we saw a 47 per cent drop in job vacancies and a 50 per cent drop in teacher registrati­ons,” she said.

“Teachers we did place faced challenges getting their documents attested, because the state department­s and embassies were closed.

“Uncertaint­y drives a lack of commitment from all parties.”

In terms of salaries, she said some schools in the UAE had cut offers by as much as 40 per cent, particular­ly schools that have moderate tuition fees, about Dh18,000 a year and below.

“This has caused an exodus of teachers looking for a better package with or without their current school’s knowledge.”

In April, teachers who spoke to The National said they had no option but to quit work after being asked to take long-term unpaid leave with no guarantee that they would have a job to return to. Others had been informed of a significan­t cut in salary only days before being paid, with some of the reductions a permanent fixture.

Roddy Hammond, chief executive for Worldteach­ers Recruitmen­t, said some schools in the UAE had continued to interview internatio­nal candidates, but in reduced numbers.

“The usual recruitmen­t we do with some government schools has been effectivel­y put on hold with no interviews, no contracts being issued and no mobilisati­on taking place,” he said.

Mr Hammond said his company had about 50 government teachers from overseas ready to travel this month, when last year that number was more than 100.

“One Dubai school we work with is mobilising 17 teachers from the UK next week.

“We have worked very closely with the school and the teachers – they have needed reassuranc­e that their jobs are still safe.”

For the first time, he said teachers had been offered contracts that were later cancelled, leaving teachers scrambling to find alternativ­e employment.

Uncertaint­y ... has caused an exodus of teachers looking for a better package with or without their school’s knowledge DIANE JACOUTOT Recruiter

 ??  ?? Megan Pankhurst, left, and Eydom Shimeles, centre, are ready to start work in the UAE; Roddy Hammond, chief executive for Worldteach­ers Recruitmen­t, says teachers need reassuranc­es that their jobs are safe
Megan Pankhurst, left, and Eydom Shimeles, centre, are ready to start work in the UAE; Roddy Hammond, chief executive for Worldteach­ers Recruitmen­t, says teachers need reassuranc­es that their jobs are safe
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