Area school leaders embrace new tactics to address 'unprecedented' hiring shortages

Aug. 25—GRAND FORKS — Some area school districts are using new creative ways to coax more teachers into the classroom, as they struggle with an "unprecedented" lack of applicants for these and other positions.

In Grand Forks, administrators have enlisted strategies such as an employee referral program, advertising on online venues not normally used due to their higher cost, and hiring international teachers.

Based on the experience of a couple of other North Dakota school districts that "have had tremendous success hiring teachers from the Philippines, we followed that model," Superintendent Terry Brenner said.

"There just doesn't appear to be enough applicants in the pool — regionally, locally — to hire teachers from," he said. "So we've reached out internationally."

This is an entirely new phenomenon for Grand Forks Public Schools, Brenner said.

"Gone are the days of one elementary teaching opening and 250 applicants for that job," he said. "That's just not the case any more."

Across the region, superintendents have noticed the same pattern. Elementary teaching positions in Crookston used to get 60 to 80 applications, said Dave Kuehn, interim superintendent, but this year, the district had to recruit to fill those openings.

"They had really no applications for three elementary positions that they advertised in April and May, which is just unheard of from the olden days," he said.

In Grafton, Superintendent Darren Albrecht said elementary teaching positions would have 50 to 60 applicants each.

"We don't get even close to that right now," he said.

In Grand Forks schools, hiring staff "is very challenging," Linsey Stadstad, director of human resources for Grand Forks Public Schools said in a recent interview with the Fargo Forum. "All places from my understanding and from what I'm hearing are struggling with workforce shortage, we are also struggling with unprecedented staffing shortages."

The number of teaching positions that need to be filled just before the start of school this week in Grand Forks was "a moving target," Brenner said in a recent interview with the Herald.

When asked what schools are affected by teacher shortages, Brenner said in an interview last week that at that time the district was doing some "shuffling and reorganizing of some instructional staff" so it would be difficult to say where the openings were at the time. But Brenner added he was "confident" the district would start the school year on Wednesday, Aug. 24, "staffed appropriately at the classroom level and at all levels."