Pandemic and political factors have combined to take the shine off Hong Kong as a teaching destination forcing the city’s international schools to re-examine how they recruit and retain staff
- Pandemic restrictions and political factors have led to an unprecedented exodus of teachers with some international schools losing as much as 30 per cent of their staff
- Travel restrictions are one area of sensitivity within the profession but there are opportunities to recruit from a younger, more flexible demographic
Hong Kong’s status as one of the top teaching destinations in the world has never been more vulnerable.
The city has the densest collection of prestigious international schools in the world, which offer great wages, benefits, working conditions and well-behaved students of an elite academic standard. As a result, top teachers have migrated from Europe, North America and across Asia to pursue their careers in Hong Kong.
This, in turn, made the city a popular destination for expats of various professions, as they knew their children would have access to a world-class education, in what became a very healthy self-sustaining ecosystem.
But as more expatriates leave the city due to Covid-19 restrictions and other political factors, so too are teachers and students. According to an Education Bureau report in May, at least 4,050 teachers or 7.6 per cent of the educator workforce have left their jobs in the current school year – a 70 per cent increase from the previous year. For international schools, the situation is even worse, as some schools have reportedly lost 30 per cent or more of their staff this year alone.
Moving forward, international schools must now focus on what they can control – which is retaining and recruiting top teaching talent. Indeed, this is not only important for schools, but for Hong Kong’s expatriate ecosystem as a whole, in which high-level teachers have always been an integral part.
Good Schools Guide talked to principals of some of Hong Kong’s top international schools about what the city’s schools must do moving forward.