International Teaching Interview Tips
Interviews for international teaching positions differ from domestic interviews in several important ways. Most are conducted online via video call (Zoom, Teams, Google Meet), often across time zones. Schools typically interview candidates from multiple countries and need to assess not just your teaching ability but your cultural adaptability, resilience, and commitment to living abroad. This guide covers the specific preparation, common questions, and strategies that help teachers succeed in international school interviews.
Interview Format
International school interviews typically follow this structure:
| Stage | Duration | Who | Focus |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initial screening | 15-20 mins | HR or recruitment coordinator | Verify qualifications, salary expectations, availability |
| Main interview | 30-45 mins | Principal / Head of School | Teaching philosophy, experience, cultural fit |
| Subject interview | 20-30 mins | Head of Department | Subject knowledge, curriculum experience, pedagogy |
| Demo lesson | 15-30 mins | Panel / students | Teaching ability (not always required) |
Some schools complete the entire process in one session; others conduct multiple rounds over 1-2 weeks. Recruitment fair interviews are typically shorter (20-30 minutes) and may lead to on-the-spot offers. Online interviews from your home may span 2-3 separate sessions.
Common Interview Questions
Teaching and pedagogy:
- How do you differentiate instruction for students with varying abilities?
- Describe a lesson that went particularly well β what made it successful?
- How do you use assessment data to inform your teaching?
- What is your approach to classroom management?
International and cultural questions:
- Why do you want to teach internationally / in the Middle East specifically?
- How would you adapt your teaching for a culturally diverse classroom?
- What challenges do you anticipate moving abroad, and how would you manage them?
- How do you handle cultural differences in a school environment?
Extra-curricular and pastoral:
- What extra-curricular activities can you contribute to the school?
- Describe your experience with pastoral care / form tutor responsibilities
- How do you build relationships with parents in a multicultural community?
Preparing Effective Answers
Use the STAR method (Situation, Task, Action, Result) for all experience-based questions. Prepare 6-8 specific examples from your teaching career that demonstrate different competencies β strong lessons, challenging behaviour management situations, successful extra-curricular leadership, parent engagement, data-driven teaching decisions, and collaboration with colleagues. Each example should be a concise, structured narrative that demonstrates your impact.
Research the school thoroughly: Read their inspection reports (KHDA, ADEK, BSO), explore their website, check social media for school culture cues, and review any available parent or teacher feedback. Reference specific aspects of the school in your answers ⠓I noticed your school has recently introduced the IB alongside the National Curriculum, which aligns with my experience at⦔ demonstrates genuine interest and preparation.
Video Interview Technical Preparation
Technical quality matters more than you might think. A poor internet connection, bad lighting, or distracting background undermines even the strongest answers.
Internet: Use a wired connection if possible. Close all other applications and browser tabs. Test your connection speed before the interview. Have a mobile hotspot as backup.
Camera and lighting: Position your camera at eye level. Sit facing a window or use a desk lamp in front of you β never behind you. Ensure your face is clearly lit without harsh shadows.
Background: A clean, uncluttered background (bookshelf, plain wall) is ideal. Avoid virtual backgrounds which can glitch. Remove anything distracting or unprofessional from the frame.
Audio: Use a headset or earbuds with a microphone β laptop microphones pick up echo and background noise. Test audio before the interview.
Questions to Ask the School
Prepare 3-5 thoughtful questions that demonstrate your interest and help you evaluate the position. Strong questions include asking about professional development opportunities, the school’s approach to staff wellbeing, class sizes and contact hours, the school community and social life for new arrivals, and upcoming curriculum developments. Avoid asking about salary and benefits in the first interview β these discussions typically happen after a provisional offer. See our demo lesson guide if your interview includes a teaching demonstration.
Frequently Asked Questions
How quickly do schools make offers?
International schools often move fast. You may receive an offer within 24-72 hours of your interview, sometimes on the same day at recruitment fairs. Have your decision-making criteria ready β salary expectations, minimum benefits, deal-breakers β so you can respond confidently. It is acceptable to ask for 24-48 hours to consider an offer. Asking for more than a week may cause the school to move to their next candidate.
What should I wear for a video interview?
Professional attire β the same standard you would wear for an in-person interview. Suit or smart professional dress, in solid or subtle colours that look good on camera. Avoid bright patterns or very light colours which can wash out on screen. Dress fully (not just the visible portion) β you may need to stand unexpectedly.