The Hiring Pressure Schools Can’t Ignore After the Teacher Strike
The recent wave of teacher strikes across Australia is not an isolated disruption. It is a signal.
For school leaders, it highlights a deeper shift already underway - one driven by sustained pressure around pay, workload, and long-term sustainability of the profession. The strike has simply made those pressures visible.
For hiring teams, the implication is clear: recruitment strategies that worked even 12–18 months ago are no longer enough.
Why the Strike Happened
In March 2026, around 35,000 Victorian teachers and support staff took part in a 24-hour strike, forcing more than 500 schools to close. The action followed a breakdown in negotiations, with unions rejecting an 18.5% pay offer and pushing for higher increases alongside changes to workload and conditions.
The scale of the response matters - but it’s what sits behind it that schools cannot afford to overlook.
Across multiple states, industrial action has been driven by three consistent issues:
- Pay that is not keeping pace with expectations or inflation
- Workloads that continue to expand beyond classroom teaching
- Ongoing staff shortages increasing pressure on existing teams
This isn’t new, but it has reached a tipping point.
Recent workforce data shows:
- Nearly 47% of Australian teachers have considered leaving within the next 12 months, up significantly from previous years
- Over 80% report increasing workload pressures
- Teachers are working 46.5 hours per week on average, well above OECD benchmarks
When industrial action happens at scale, it is rarely about a single issue. It reflects accumulated pressure across the system.
What the Strike Signals to Schools
1. Retention Is Now the Core Risk
The biggest hiring challenge schools face is no longer attraction. It is retention.
The strike reinforces what many leaders are already seeing internally:
- Experienced teachers reassessing long-term career viability
- Mid-career professionals exploring alternative pathways
- Early-career teachers questioning whether to stay
With only around 30% of teachers intending to remain in public schools long-term, schools are not just competing for talent - they are competing to keep it.
2. Workload Is the Defining Factor
While salary remains a key issue, workload is increasingly the deciding factor.
Teachers are spending less than half their time on direct teaching, with the remainder consumed by:
- Administrative tasks
- Planning and marking
- Reporting and compliance requirements
This imbalance is one of the strongest drivers of attrition.
From a hiring perspective, candidates are now assessing roles through a different lens:
- How manageable is the workload in practice?
- What support structures are in place?
- How does leadership respond to pressure?
Job descriptions alone no longer answer these questions.
3. School Culture Is Under Greater Scrutiny
The strike has also shifted how teachers evaluate employers.
Conversations with candidates are increasingly focused on:
- Leadership visibility and communication
- Support during high-pressure periods
- Realistic expectations around workload
Teachers are looking beyond reputation. They are trying to understand what day-to-day experience actually feels like.
This aligns with broader workforce trends, where culture is no longer defined by statements and instead by behaviour.
4. Hiring Timelines Are Getting Longer
As pressure increases, decision-making is slowing down on both sides.
Schools are:
- Taking longer to secure the right candidate
- Facing more declined offers
- Re-entering the market for the same roles
At the same time, candidates are:
- Being more selective
- Asking more detailed questions
- Prioritising long-term fit over short-term moves
The result is a more complex, competitive hiring environment.
The Broader System Pressure
The strike sits within a wider national challenge.
Australia’s National Teacher Workforce Action Plan explicitly recognises the need to both attract and retain teachers, acknowledging ongoing workforce shortages and structural pressures.
At the same time, international data continues to highlight that Australia is among the countries most affected by teaching shortages, particularly in public education.
This is not a short-term disruption. It is a long-term structural shift.
What This Means for Schools Hiring in 2026
The immediate takeaway is simple: hiring cannot be treated as a standalone activity.
It is now directly tied to:
- Workload design
- Leadership capability
- Employee experience
Schools that are attracting and retaining strong teachers are doing a few things differently:
- They are addressing workload, not just acknowledging it
This might include:
- Redistributing non-teaching responsibilities
- Investing in administrative support
- Creating more realistic expectations around planning and reporting
2. They are communicating more clearly during hiring
Candidates want transparency. Schools that are upfront about challenges and how they are being managed are building more trust early in the process.
3. They are focusing on retention as part of their hiring strategy
Recruitment is no longer just about filling vacancies. It is about building stability across teams.
The Shift Schools Can’t Ignore
The recent teacher strike has brought long-standing issues into sharper focus.
But the underlying pressure has been building for years.
For schools, the risk is not the disruption caused by a single day of industrial action. It is what happens if nothing changes afterwards.
Because in the current market, teachers have options.
And increasingly, they are making decisions based on where they feel supported, sustainable, and able to do their job well.
To understand how these market shifts are influencing teacher hiring and retention, or to explore opportunities within the education sector, contact Inspired Recruitment here.












