Assessment Questions
1. Give me an example of a performance assessment.
2. Explain how you use assessments as a way to improve student learning (click here to read a possible response).
3. What methods have you used or would you use to assess student learning?
4. What standards of measure will you use to access your students? Will you use state, national, or local standards?
5. Other than tests, how do you assess student learning?
6. How do you prepare your students for standardized tests?
Background Questions
1. Why did you become a teacher?
2. Are you a risk taker? (Give an example.)
3. Are you a positive and energetic person? (Give an example to back up your answer.)
4. Tell me about yourself. (Click here to read a possible response)
5. Are you an empathetic person? Give an example.
6. How can you tell that a person is a good listener?
7. Are you an objective person? Give an example.
8. What motivates you?
9. What do you want to do with your life?
10. What was the most frustrating thing that happened to you as a student teacher?
11. What are your strengths? What are your weaknesses?
12. What is the role of the principal? Does a conflict exist between your perception of a principal’s role and his/her role as your evaluator?
13. Describe your student teaching experience.
14. During your student teaching, were you ever involved with a situation at school involving racial tension? If so, how did you handle it?
15. What subjects have you taught?
16. Are you patient? Give an example.
17. Do you ever feel angry towards your students?
18. What is your educational philosophy? (click here to read a possible response, an excert from Road to Teaching)
19. If you could create the ideal school, what would it be like?
20. Do you like to be challenged? (Give an example to back up your answer.)
21. What do you like most/dislike most about teaching?
22. How do your life experiences prepare you for teaching?
23. What teams and/or clubs did you belong to as a student?
24. What activities would you coach or advise as a member of this staff?
25. Why did you choose to be a teacher? (Click here to read a possible response)
26. What do you like most about a teaching career?
27. Describe “professionalism.” What does it mean to you?
28. Why should you be hired for this position?
29. Tell us/me about your planning habits. If there a particular format that you use? Do you plan on a weekly basis?
30. Scheduling is tricky and difficult at times. How do you approach conflicts that arise in regard to scheduling with your colleagues?
31. State your educational philosophy. How do you incorporate it into your daily instruction?
32. What are the three most important characteristics of an effective educator/teacher?
33. Why do you feel you are qualified for the position for which you are applying?
34. How would you handle difficult parents?
35. What three words would your students use to describe you?
36. If a student comes into school with a bruise on their face that you did not notice the day before and that student comes up to you and says I need to tell you something but you have to promise not to tell anyone. What do you do? (Click here to read a possible response)
37. What does it mean to be a teacher?
38. What is the ideal relationship between a teacher and student?
39. What motivates you to achieve your goals to be successful?
40. How would you describe yourself as a team member?
41. How would others describe you as a team member?
42. Why are you leaving your current position? (Click here to read a possible response)
43. Why do you want to teach in this district? (Click here to read a possible response)
44. What are some characteristics that you would find favorable when dealing with administration?
45. What is a challenge that you feel you recently overcame (in your teaching career)? How did you search out resources to help you do so?
46. Describe an extraordinary teacher. (Click here to read a possible response, an excerpt from Road to Teaching) (Also read this example of an extraordinary teacher)
47. How do you manage stress? (Click here to read related posts)
48. Are you fluent in any language other than English?
49. What else would you like to share about yourself?
50. What experience have you had working with at-risk students?
51. How would you deal with an uncooperative colleague?
52. What would you expect your students to have gained after having you as a teacher?
53. How would you handle a parent that disagrees with your grading method or an assignment?
54. How do you keep parents informed of student progress?
55. How would you describe a gifted student?
56. Have you earned an honor or an award anytime in your life? If so, what was it?
57. What part of teaching do you look forward to most?
58. What part of teaching do you look forward to least?
59. What are your endorsements in?
60. How would contribute to building and improving staff morale?
61. How do you manage (cope with) stress? (Click here to read a possible response)
62. Describe a motivating teacher. (Click here to read a possible response, an excerpt from Road to Teaching)
63. Why should we hire you over other applicants? (Click here to read a possible response, an excerpt from Road to Teaching)
64. Where do you see yourself in 5 years?
65. What do you know about AVID and would be interested in doing it?
66. Does a student being at risk have to do with his/her intelligence level? (Click here to read a possible response)
Classroom Management Questions
1. If a student said she thought you were the worst teacher she ever had, what would you say?
2. If a student came to you and said, “None of the other students like me,” what would you tell him/her?
3. How do you feel if a student does not meet a deadline?
4. Do you believe you should build rapport with students? If yes, how?
5. How do you feel about noise in the classroom? How do you handle noise in the classroom?
6. How do you organize your classroom?
7. Describe the first five minutes of your class.
8. Give me an example of a rule or procedure in your classroom?
9. You have a child with autism in your classroom who has a hard time with transitions. How do you accommodate this child?
10. Provide an example of how you handled a peer conflict.
11. What is your approach to classroom management? (Click here to read a possible response, an excerpt from Road to Teaching)
Discipline Questions
1. Some people say you should demand respect. Do you agree or disagree?
2. It is the first day of class, you are writing something on the board and a paper wad hits you in the back, what would you do? Later the same day, if all the students drop their pencils, what do you do?
3. How do you handle a child who seems gifted, but is a discipline problem?
4. Describe your discipline plan.
5. How do you curb student misbehavior? (Click here to read a possible response, an excerpt from Road to Teaching)
6. Describe a troubled student and how you helped him/her.
7. How would you handle a student that constantly disrupted the learning environment?
8. How would you handle a student that was caught cheating on a test? (Click here to read a possible response)
9. You witness a student bullying another student in the hallway. How would you respond?
10. A student throws a book at another student during class. How would you respond?
11. A student swears in class. How do you respond?
Pedagogy Questions
1. What will you do to engage parents? How will you get them actively involved in their child’s education?
2. How do you give your students recognition? Do you think a student can have too much recognition?
3. What are various reading strategies you use?
4. How would you incorporate math into your curriculum (for non-math teachers)?
5. What strategies would you use to enhance students’ writing skills?
6. What are various vocabulary strategies you use?
7. What’s the difference between a good and a great teacher?
8. How would you handle making a difficult phone call to a parent?
9. Explain how you use differentiated instruction in the classroom?
10. Describe two to three instructional tools you need in the classroom?
11. What role do standards play in your classroom?
12. Describe your teaching style.
13. Describe your ideal lesson.
14. Have you team-taught? What’s your opinion on it?
15. Describe a teaching strategy you used to maximize the learning potential of all students.
16. How would you decide what should be taught in your classroom?
17. Describe any multicultural, gender fair classroom practices you have used in the past and how you would ensure equality among your students.
18. What is your philosophy on homework? (Food for thought)
19. Describe your use of auditory, visual, and hands-on teaching techniques.
20. Provide an example of a successful lesson that you created and used.
21. How do you keep your students engaged 90-100% of the time
22. Describe adaptations have you used with students with special needs.
23. Full inclusion is part of the educational environment. How would you meet the needs of a full inclusion child and design a program?
24. How do you inspire creativity in your classroom?
25. A student continually fails to turn in their homework. How do you respond to this?
26. How would you meet the needs of English Language Learners in your classroom?
27. Describe how you plan your lessons. (Click here to read a possible response, an excerpt from Road to Teaching)
28. How will you ensure students understand your lesson’s learning objectives? (Click here to read a recent post from Road to Teaching’s blog)
29. How does your philosophy translate to the types of lessons you actually have students complete in your classroom?
30. What are some of your strategies for differentiating lessons?
31. Scenario: There are students from four different ethnic groups in middle school the principal added a student with pretty severe emotional/behavior problems and a student with cerebral palsy in a wheelchair. Students from the ethnic groups stick together ,never making friends with outsiders. Many of the subgroups communicate in their native language. The emotionally distubed student is making matters worst by telling ethnic jokes to anyone who is listening. There are rumors of an ambush after school to teach the emotionally disturbed student a lesson. You agree that the whole class for that matter needs a lesson, but not this kind. Critically think how you could handle this situation? How would you teach the class to feel more comfortable together? What is your first goals in working on this problem? And how could these issues affect the grade level you teach? (Thanks Debra for your question).
Professional Development Questions
1. What are your goals for next year?
2. What is the last book you read or conference you attended that benefited you professionally? (Click here to review Road to Teaching’s recommended books)
3. How do you keep abreast of your field?
4. What will you be doing in five years?
5. What is the most significant professional development you have received?
6. How do you evaluate your own teaching?
7. What professional development workshops would you like to attend?
8. What will make you a great teacher in 5-10 years? (Click here to read a possible response, an excerpt from Road to Teaching)
Student Learning Questions
1. How do you use technology to enhance student learning? (Check out this link for 100 Free Web Tools for Teachers for ideas)
2. How would you rank these in importance and why? Planning, discipline, methods, evaluation.
3. How do you encourage students to learn? Can a student be forced to learn?
4. Do you make learning fun? Give an example.
5. How do you encourage students to be active in learning?
6. How do you communicate your student learning expectations?
7. How do you know that your students are learning?
8. How do you support 501 students’ and special services students’ learning?
9. What is the number one factor that contributes to student learning?
10. How do you motivate your students? (Click here to read a possible response, an excerpt from Road to Teaching)
Behavior-Based Interview Questions
Read more about behavior-based interview questions and how to answer by clicking here.
Curriculum
1. Describe the experiences you have had in implementing a standard-based curriculum.
2. Describe a unit of curriculum that you have taught.
3. Tell me about an individual lesson that went well.
Methods and Planning
1. How have you divided large amounts of material to be covered? (Hint: Show a sample curriculum or discuss how you would use a curriculum map that includes learning objectives, assessments, activities, and standards)
2. How would you write a plan and what is included in each plan?
Classroom Management
1. Describe classroom management plans that you have used.
2. How have you motivated your students?
Homework and Grading
1. Describe a grading system that has worked well for you in the past?
2. How have you dealt with students who do not complete their homework?
Communication and Professionalism
1. Describe how you conduct a parent/guardian conference?
2. Share an example of a communication with a parent that helped you in dealing with the child.
3. What have you read/studied recently that led to a change in your classroom?
4. What parts of your teacher training do you use the most? (Hint: Avoid saying anything negative. Anything like you were bored or not engaged will lead the interviewer to believe you will act the same in staff meetings, etc. Rather, describe 1-2 positive areas of your training, how you used it, and it’s impact)
Elementary
1. What are the most important things a child should be learning in kindergarten?
2. What type of reading program did you use in student teaching?
3. If I walked into your classroom during reading time, what would I see?
4. Tell me what you know about the 4-block Literacy Model.
5. How would you handle difficult parents?
6. Tell me what you know of the reading first grant?
7. Tell me what learning strategies you know that are research-based?
8. How would you help a child who is unable to read or comprehend? (answer varies based on grade level) (Click here to read a possible response)
- Special thanks to TexasJenn
9. What math programs do you use (or plan to use) in your classroom?
10. How do you teach writing? (Click here to read a possible response)
11. What are educational issues or trends affecting elementary teaching?
12. How would you teach the alphabet? Give examples. (provided by irishangelkris) (Click here to read a possible response)
13. How would you teach your class that a nickle is worth five cents? (provided by irishangelkris) (Click here to read a possible response)
14. What are the list and describe the 5 reading components? (provided by irishangelkris)
15. All of your teaching experience so far is in lower elementary grades, do you feel you are capable to teach the upper elementary grades (3,4,5) and why?
Please email us your elementary specific teacher interview questions at eric@road2teaching.com
Middle School
1. You teach middle school Reading. The class has to read a required class reading book. How do you get the student who says that they hate this book and refuse to read it to read this book? (Click here to read a possible response)
2. If you had to choose two required reading books for middle school, what two would they be?
3. How will keep middle school students engaged 90-100% of the time?
4. Why do you want to teach at middle school?
5. What are the benefits and challenges to working at the middle school level?
6. How would you respond if you saw a student being bullied in the hallway?
7. How would you describe middle school students?
8. What makes you well-suited to teach middle school students?
9. What activities have you have implemented that reflect your philosophy of education as it relates to middle school students?
Please email us your middle school specific teacher interview questions at eric@road2teaching.com
Secondary – Career and Technical Education
1. How do you keep abreast of current business trends?
2. Give an example of a lesson or unit that teaches one or more employability skills.
3. How would you incorporate leadership into your classroom? (Click here to downloard some leadership ideas for the classroom from WAME)
4. What are the most desired skills employers want to see in their new hires? How do you as a teacher address this?
5. How will you connect your curriculum to the real-world?
6. How will you build partnerships within the local and business community?
8. How important are soft skills compared to hard skills? How will you teach soft skills?
9. Career exploration is important. How will you incorporate this into your class?
10. Describe your technical expertise.
Please email us your career and technical education specific teacher interview questions at eric@road2teaching.com
Secondary – Foreign Language
General Questions
1. With what frequency do you foresee using the various components of learning a language into your lessons? (listening, reading, writing, speaking and culture)
2. In foreign language classes, when students begin to fall behind it can be detrimental to their performance because so much learning is built on previous knowledge. What interventions will you use to help the students who are not achieving academically in your classroom?
3. If you HAD to pick one out of the five (speaking, writing, listening, reading, culture), which do you think is the MOST important? Why?
4. Going on your response to #3, what do you do to help students with that everyday in your room? What activities force students to do that “thing” (speak, write, etc.)?
5. What is your belief on the best way to learn a language? Which do you think is ideal following a book, taking a grammatical/translation approach, utilizing TPRS, or having a mix? (Be aware of what that school district uses here!)
- Special thanks to MLK1684
Spanish Questions
1. Que libro leíste el ano pasado que de que era?
2. Como puedes apoyar los alumnos en sus vidas personales sin ser sus amigos?
- Special thanks to lola.
3. If you are teaching a lesson and a native Spanish speaking
student kept blurting out the answers what would you do? Or
how would you handle it?
4. How would you increase students learning experience if they
have a negative attitude towards the class?
5. Describe a situation where you had to put a team of students
together (mixed, with both native and non-native
Spanish-speaking students) to work on a Spanish project
successfully. Or if Spanish has never been taught before
describe how you think it could/would be done.
6. The person in this position needs to be innovative and
proactive. Can you describe some things you have done or
that could be done to demonstrate these qualities to create
enthusiasm and motivation towards learning Spanish?
- Special thanks to Ms. Beltran
7. ¿Cómo aprendió Ud. su español?
Please email us your foreign language specific teacher interview questions at eric@road2teaching.com
Secondary – English Language Learners
1. How would you welcome a student who is new to the country into the school?
2. How do you incorporate cultural awareness and sensitivity into the curriculum?
3. How do you communicate classroom expectations to a group with varying language abilities?
Please email us your ELL specific teacher interview questions at eric@road2teaching.com
Secondary – Language Arts / English
1. What strategies would you use to help struggling readers in the Language Arts classroom?
2. What strategies will you use to teach grammar?
3. Give us an example of a unit designed to teach the elements of fiction?
4. Describe a unit you designed for the classroom and focus on the process of designing the unit from beginning to end.
5. How will you incorporate culturally diverse literature in your class?
- Special thanks to thegreekness
6. Discuss the last author/book you have read?
7. How do address plagiarism in your classroom?
8. What is your approach to teaching literature and/or language arts?
Please email us your LA specific teacher interview questions at eric@road2teaching.com
Secondary – Mathematics
1. What manipulatives do you use? How effective are they?
2. Give an example of a topic (i.e. fractions) that students tend to have conceptual difficulties with. Now teach me this topic (and show me how you would handle dealing with the conceptual problems).
- Special thanks to Marisa
3. How will you make math relevant to the students? (Click here for a PDF that lists math relevancy websites)
4. What is your opinion on using calculators?
Please email us your math specific teacher interview questions at eric@road2teaching.com
Secondary – Science
1. What is your philosophy on teaching science to elementary kids? Teenagers? Economically disadvantaged kids?
2. Why do you want to be a science teacher?
3. What Science organizations are you involved with (as a member or other)?
4. Tell me about a current science event that you have read about this week? How would you use this in the classroom?
5. In which field of science do you feel particularly strong? Explain.
6. In which field of science do you feel the least knowledgeable/competent in? Explain.
7. If you were hired to teach starting this September, how would you go about setting up your science program?
8. What science curriculum do you have experience with? What do you like or dislike about them?
9. What role do you believe that the adopted Science book should serve in your classroom?
10 Where do you find resources other than the Science book in order to keep your students current on the constantly evolving knowledge of science?
11. What do you understand the inquiry method to be in science?
12. Why would or would not you use lab groups or lab partners in your class? How would your establish lab groups/lab partners (what criteria would you use)?
13. How would you evaluate lab groups/partners to be to know that each student is learning and participating?
14. How would you integrate technology into your science teaching? How would you integrate math? Reading? Writing? Social Studies?
- Special thanks to Science Gal
15. How will you make your subject(s) relevant to the students?
16. How important is hands-on lab and inquiry lessons?
- Special thanks to Suz
17. What lab safety methods do you implement in your program?
18. What is your type of assessment for lab groups?
- Special thanks to Bonnie B.
Please email us additional science specific teacher interview questions at eric@road2teaching.com
Secondary – Special Education
1. What do you believe are the three major challenges facing special education today?
2. A special education teacher must be both organized and flexible. Give examples of ways that you have demonstrated both of these characteristics.
3. What does “teamwork” mean to you as a special education teacher?
4. How would you communicate with the parents of your students? What issues would prompt you to contact them?
5. How would you delegate responsibilities to a paraprofessional and monitor his/her performance?
6. How do you evaluate your own teaching skills to insure continual growth and refinement?
7. Paperwork/documentation is a strong concern in the area of special education. How will you manage those demands, in addition to your teaching responsibilities?
8. Describe the components of a reevaluation report.
9. Describe the main components of an IEP and what should go into each section.
10. One of the challenges for a special education teacher is documentation. How would you collect and record necessary data for the students’ ERs, IEPs, and NOREPs?
11. Describe how you would determine and deliver appropriate individualized instruction to the students.
12. What types of assessment have you used? What assessments would you use to document student learning and plan for future instruction? How would you use assessment to develop and modify IEP goals?
13. Unfortunately, there are some negative elements that you will encounter within the profession. How will you interact with those individuals so they will not alter focus?
14. To what specific area of special education are you most attracted and why?
15. Aside from your coursework, what additional reading have you done that is pertinent to your field?
16. The US Department of Education now recommends that schools use the RTI (“Response to Intervention” or “Response to Instruction”) Model rather than the Discrepancy Model to identify children with specific learning disabilities. Tell us what you know about this model.
17. How do you integrate technology into your teaching? Have you had any experience with specific technology to support the needs of special education students?
18. Given a wide range of ability levels in a classroom, how do you assure compliance with each child’s IEP?
19. Have you had any experience supporting students with IEPs in the regular classroom? How have you or would you do this?
20. What are your views on inclusion versus self-containment of special education students?
21. What would you do to address inclusionary support with the general education staff? How would you deal with a general education teacher who refused to honor IEP modifications for the special education students in their classrooms?
22. A general education teacher is concerned that a child with an IEP does not belong in her classroom due to behavior problems. How do you respond?
23. What do you feel is the best service delivery model for special education students?
24. How familiar are you with the IDEA guidelines for special education? What are some of the timelines related to IEPs?
25. Explain the impact of the Gaskins’ settlement on special education in the public school setting.
26. Describe both a successful and a challenging collaboration experience with a general education teacher.
27. How will you coordinate/facilitate instruction to meet Adequate Yearly Progress goals?
28. Why do you want to work in this district/IU? Why should we hire you? What distinguishes you from the other candidates who applied for this position?
- Special thanks to Barbara Olsen
Please email us your special education specific teacher interview questions at eric@road2teaching.com
Secondary – Social Studies
1. Have you collaborated with another teacher in the same grade-level, but a different subject, e.g. Language Arts? If so, please describe this.
2. Do you make it a habit of watching the news or reading newspapers or news magazines? Do you watch local or national news programs?
3. Do you consider yourself well aware of current world issues and politics?
4. How would you integrate a school wide curriculum on a social issue such as gay rights into your classroom?
5. How do you relate social studies skills to jobs and careers?
6. Give an example of a history lesson you have done with your students.
Please email us your social studies specific teacher interview questions at eric@road2teaching.com
Let’s keep growing! Please email me (eric@road2teaching.com) or post comments of general, grade, or content specific teacher interview questions and I will post them on the website for all to see. Also, if you have an interview strategy or a story that you think would benefit other student teachers, please email me or post a comment.
Additional Resources
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