The personal statement within your application form can be of any length, but you are often offered one side of A4 with space for another, which immediately indicates that you are expected to write a great tome of a thousand words, and that fellow candidates will do so also.
Whilst your qualifications and experience get you through the door, the personal statement is an important opportunity for you to tell the decision maker who you are and exactly why you fit that role.
Include your research
Firstly, do the research about the college. Use their career site or webpage to get to know their values and priorities. This will allow you to include in your statement exactly why you’re right for that college. Don’t be afraid to refer to their mission statement or Ofsted report.
Always personalise
Yes, you do need to personalise your statement every time you apply to a different teaching job.
Fit the specifications
Relate your experience to their job specifications, and give examples. E.g. if they are looking for ‘ability to engage successfully with parents’, your statement must show how you meet that requirement, such as: ‘I maintain an open-door policy for parents after teaching hours and have found that two-way conversation results in a more joined-up approach to learning and behaviour between college and home.’ This will then form the basis of your interview questions so be ready with the actual example of a student you have supported this way.
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Keep it coming
Don’t be tempted to write War and Peace. A 400-word statement that gives focussed information is more powerful than a 1,000-word demonstration of your supercalifragilistic literary powers. That said, use a varied vocabulary – after all, a lecturer should be able to find alternative words for ‘enthusiastic’.
Stay logical
As a lectuter (of any subject) your literacy is expected to be high so there should be no spelling or grammar errors. Organise it into logical paragraphs and get someone else to spell-check it manually. There should certainly not be any evidence that you have cut and pasted from an application for another college. Errors such as this are a quick way for a Head to cut down their pile of applicants.
Talk about your subject
Enthuse about your subject or specialism. If you enjoy it, say why. This is critical in leadership roles where you will be responsible in translating the curriculum into a real learning programme.
Focus on what you have learnt
Explain what you have learned from the different colleges you have worked in but avoid criticising anyone, no matter how tempting it may be!
Highlight your transferable skills
Include transferable skills from inside and outside of the classroom. If you have come from another industry, don’t be afraid to say so. Your recent and relevant training in technology or a trade is in fact of great benefit to colleges so explain what you think you bring to the table.
Mention your future plans
Include your long term plans – much of what a college is looking for includes the person you are going to become.
Be selective with your hobbies
Don’t bother telling them that you love socialising. If you want to include hobbies, relate each to the value it portrays, be it health, papercraft, music, performance or family or community.
If you aren’t sure what skills could be of use to the college, your recruitment consultant can help.
Perfected your personal statement? View our CV advice to ensure your application is ready to go!
This article was originally published on eTeach.