What Teachers Are Really Looking for When Choosing a School in 2026
Across Australia, conversations about teacher shortages often focus on numbers. Are there enough teachers entering the profession? Are universities producing enough graduates? Are international pathways helping address workforce gaps?
But the numbers point to a retention problem too. According to the Australian Teacher Workforce Data report, around 39% of Australian teachers intend to leave the profession before retirement, driven by growing pressure around workload, career sustainability and long-term wellbeing. The pipeline challenge isn't only about supply.
This is changing how recruitment works. Teachers are becoming more deliberate about where they choose to work, and schools are paying closer attention to what makes a role genuinely attractive.
At Inspired Recruitment, we see this consistently. Recruitment is no longer simply about matching a teacher to a vacancy. It is about finding the right environment where educators feel supported by leadership and confident in their ability to build meaningful relationships with students.
Understanding what teachers are looking for when evaluating a school is, therefore, becoming a critical part of attracting and retaining strong educators.
Leadership Matters More Than Many Schools Realise
When teachers consider moving schools, leadership is often the first thing they try to understand.
Not necessarily in terms of titles or hierarchy, but in terms of how the school operates day to day.
Teachers will often try to gauge things like:
- whether leadership teams are visible and present within the school
- how decisions are communicated
- whether staff feel supported when challenges arise
Experienced educators in particular tend to look closely at leadership stability. A school that has experienced several leadership changes in a short period of time can sometimes raise questions about direction or internal pressures.
Equally, schools where leadership teams are known to be collaborative and accessible often attract strong interest from teachers who value professional trust and clear communication.
From a recruitment perspective, leadership culture often plays a larger role in attracting teachers than many schools initially expect.
Teachers Pay Attention to Workload Signals
Workload is one of the most widely discussed issues in education, but it can be difficult for teachers to assess from a job description alone.
As a result, educators often look for indirect signals when evaluating opportunities.
For example:
- how clearly teaching allocations are explained
- whether support roles exist within the school
- how administrative responsibilities are structured
Even small details can influence perception. If a role description lists a wide range of additional responsibilities without explaining how those tasks are supported, teachers may assume the workload could become difficult to manage.
On the other hand, schools that are transparent about expectations and support structures often find candidates approach the opportunity with greater confidence.
School Culture Is Often the Deciding Factor
While salary and location still matter, culture frequently becomes the deciding factor for many educators.
Teachers often try to understand the day to day working environment by asking questions such as:
- Do staff collaborate or mostly work independently?
- How are new teachers welcomed into the team?
- Is professional dialogue encouraged across departments?
Culture can be difficult to communicate through formal job descriptions, but candidates often pick up signals through conversations during the recruitment process.
Schools where teachers feel trusted, supported and included in decision-making tend to see stronger retention over time. For many educators, feeling valued within the school community matters just as much as the specifics of the role itself.
Professional Growth Still Matters
Many teachers see their role as part of a long-term career pathway rather than a single job.
Because of this, opportunities for professional development play an important role in how educators evaluate schools.
This may include:
- mentoring programs for early-career teachers
- opportunities to contribute to curriculum development
- pathways into middle or senior leadership
Interestingly, career development does not always mean rapid promotion. For many educators, it means the opportunity to deepen their practice, collaborate with experienced colleagues and gradually take on greater responsibility.
Schools that support this kind of growth often build stronger long-term relationships with their staff.
Values and Purpose Are Becoming More Visible
Teaching is a profession strongly connected to purpose. Many educators enter the field because they want to make a meaningful impact on students and communities.
Because of this, teachers increasingly pay attention to whether a school’s values align with their own.
This may include alignment around:
- student wellbeing and inclusion
- community engagement
- innovative teaching approaches
- support for diverse learners
When teachers feel connected to the broader purpose of a school, they are far more likely to remain engaged and committed over time.
For schools, clearly communicating these values during the recruitment process can make a meaningful difference in attracting educators who genuinely align with the environment.
What This Means for Schools
Recruitment in education is rarely just about filling a vacancy.
More often, it involves finding the right alignment between a school’s culture, expectations and long-term direction, and the motivations and strengths of the educators considering the role.
Schools that recognise this shift often approach recruitment with a broader perspective. Rather than focusing solely on job specifications, they focus on communicating the environment teachers would be joining.
Leadership visibility, workload transparency, professional support and shared values all influence how teachers interpret an opportunity.
Supporting Schools and Educators to Find the Right Fit
Education recruitment works best when both schools and educators feel confident about the long-term fit.
At Inspired Recruitment, we see our role as supporting both sides of that conversation. For schools, that means offering practical insight into the current education workforce and helping shape recruitment strategies that attract the right candidates.
For educators, it means understanding their priorities, career goals and teaching philosophy, and helping them identify environments where they can thrive.
In schools, the success of an appointment often comes down to fit. When teachers join environments where the leadership, culture and expectations align with how they work best, they are far more likely to stay and contribute over the long term.
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To discuss your school’s recruitment needs or explore opportunities within the education sector, contact Inspired Recruitment here.












