All posts by Brad Grey

Biology Teacher Interview Questions

Biology Teacher Interview Questions

In this post, I will discuss some Biology teacher interview questions, how to prepare for an interview, and land the job with the contract you want.

Whether this is your first interview for a Biology teaching position or your 21st you need to do what you can to prepare to give yourself the best shot at landing a job.

Being prepared for your Biology teaching interview questions is going to help set your answers apart from your competition and help you be more confident and relaxed.

Finding your Job

One strategy I used when trying to find a job near my family in another state was to identify all of the schools within driving distance of where I would live.

Next, I add the school’s employment pages to my favorites. You could also pin the tabs and have all of the pages open every time you open the browser. Either strategy will work, just make sure you check in frequently since the deadlines for submitting your application are very short.

Applying for Your Biology Teaching Job

Have multiple packets of your clearances, reference letters, resume, certification documents, transcripts, and any other documents that you will need. Your cover letter and resume must be free of typos!

I have taken it a step further and included things like a copy of a newspaper article written about an award I received for exemplary employee of the year and even an article about specific projects I did with students.

When applying at a job fair, I had a photo of myself in a suit on the top right of my resume. I did it because I want to set myself apart and stand out from the crowd of people that were also interviewing. One of the recruiters commented “your a smart guy” when he saw my resume. Several days later, I was signing a contract with that district, and years later I was recruiting other teachers with the same guy!

Below are some interview questions you can expect. When you practice answering the questions be sure to respond using specific examples from your own experiences. If you get caught off guard by a question just answer honestly.

Remember to dress to impress, relax (but not too much), have good posture, make eye contact, and talk professionally.

Interview Questions for Biology Teachers

Tell us a little bit about yourself and why you want to work here.
  • Tip- Do not go on forever telling your life story, tell the interviewer information that is relevant to the position like your education, work history, and personal history connected to the school if applicable.
In what way do you plan instruction to engage students?
  • Use specific examples of ways you have engaged students.
What do you believe is the most important part of classroom management?
  • Developing positive relationships with students and procedures. Explain specific examples of how you have done these.
Describe a lesson that you think went well. What do you think made it successful? How do you know if it was successful?
  • Be specific about a lesson. When talking about why it was successful you may want to mention how you designed the lesson (i.e 5E model, differentiated for all learners), predicted areas where students would struggle and provide the necessary support and scaffolding at the right times, used specific questions techniques that fostered higher level thinking. You know it was successful because you use a variety of assessment strategies (be specific to your lesson). Check out this assessment strategy for an excellent model.
Where do you see yourself in 5 years?
  • Describe how you see yourself in their school, working towards a higher degree, fine-tuning the curriculum, having a well-established positive reputation, coaching, sponsor a club. Ect.
Note: We offer a FULL YEAR of Biology Lesson Plans.  Detailed plans for every day, every worksheet, lab, assessment, and presentation. Every day is planned for you.  Sign up here to get email reminders, updates, and free activities in your inbox.
How do you handle a student who is disrespectful to you?
  • This is an opportunity to talk about how you manage the class. Mention that though you work hard at establishing an environment of respect, students do have bad days and act out. If you have not checked out the classroom management form <–click here and look it over. It is a specific tool you can mention in the interview.
How do you handle a student who has a negative attitude toward Biology?
  • Foster a positive relationship. Admit that not every student is going to love the subject as much as you do but you will try your best to get them to love it. Your passion is going to help them become passionate.
If I walked into your classroom yesterday, what would I have seen?
  • Describe the component of your lesson from start to finish. Describe your lesson in a way that shows your interview that you can design cohesive instruction.
What made you want to become a Biology teacher?
  • I can’t help you here. Just avoid saying “I couldn’t find a job anyway else with my biology degree”
Provide an example of how you have differentiated instruction.
  • Here you will want to discuss high differentiation and lower differentiation. Check out this activity to get an idea of what higher differentiation can look like.
Describe two strengths and two weaknesses you have as an educator.
  • This is a balancing act. Make your negatives sound positive. For example, instead of saying I struggle with classroom management say sometimes I care too much about the small behaviors that can get my students off task, however, I am learning how to deal with them better each day (use a specific example i.e. proximity). This is probably the most difficult question.
What would you do if your lesson that involved technology did not work due to technology issues?
  • Describe a situation where you have encountered this and describe how you adjusted.
Why should we hire you over the other candidates? Why you?
  • Mention experiences you have that are unique as you worked in a title 1 school for X number of years, you have a vested interest in the school, you will outwork anyone, teaching is your passion and not a job, willing to learn, a team player.

Do not be surprised if you encounter a wild question. I recall my first ever interview being asked “if I could be any animal what would it be.”

What you could encounter in the interview.

You could be asked specific content knowledge questions. They are usually embedded into lesson design questions. For example, describe a lesson you taught on evolution. Yes, you may be asked about evolution.

As a biology teacher, you should expect this question. Regardless of how you feel about teaching evolution, for many states it is an assessed area and you must teach it.

You may be asked to answer a question (s) in writing.

After the interview

Send an email or a thank you card to the interview team.

If you are selected, you may be asked to come back and teach a lesson to the team. In fact, at my current job, I was asked to teach to the team (topic: evolution) and again to students another day (plants).

Signing the Contract

Do not sign the contract until you are comfortable with everything in it. Ask questions if you do not understand something. Ideally, you will have read the contract before your interview to help you determine if you even want to work there.

Common Contract Issues:

  • Permanent vs Temporary Position (temporary can mean full-time permanent but NOT tenured so be sure to read the contract)
  • Years of service may not be honored. You may have to negotiate your years of service. Know the contract before having this discussion.
  • Benefits-health, pension contributions. Your pay could look great however, when you look at the amount you have to pay for your health insurance, the competing school offering you $10,000 less per year may be a better financial decision.
  • Educational benefits- Most states require you to continue your education. Does the school pay for it? If so, how much? Do not be afraid to negotiate here.
    • If you get the job, you may want to take classes during the summer. Ask the school to pay for those classes even before your contract begins.

Finding your Job

One strategy I used when trying to find a job near my family in another state was to identify all of the schools within driving distance of where I would live.

Next, I add the school’s employment pages to my favorites. You could also pin the tabs and have all of the pages open every time you open the browser. Either strategy will work, just make sure you check in frequently since the deadlines for submitting your application are very short.

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Punnett Squares

Inheritance Patterns: Punnett Squares

Recently, my class was finishing up the unit on genetics and learning how to do a variety of punnett squares  and  I knew I needed to create a better way to review this concept.

So… I created this Punnett Square Challenge that my students love.

Click here for to receive an email copy of this lesson.

Prior to completing this punnett square activity, students should have had exposure to examples, of complete dominance, incomplete dominance, co-dominance, multiple alleles and dihybrid crosses.

After students have had some practice with  punnet squares, this activity will serve as a review or a great gauge for \their understanding of the content.

In this activity,  students will complete each punnett square (1 through 6) in order.

Student will only receive one punnett square at a time and will only get the next one when they have correctly completed the preceding punnett square.

I have found that students generate great conversation when working together to complete these punnett squares, although it can be done independently.

Each new punnett square will add a degree of difficulty as they progress through the activity. I walk around with folders that contain the problems. As they get them correct I give them the next problem.

If students complete the activity within  first or second I offer them a homework pass or bonus points. I have done this as a race and timed and both way worked well. The homework pass incentive takes their effort up a notch.

Student always enjoy this and the discussions that take places are amazing.

Click here to receive this activity directly to your inbox!

If you like this you will love our Biochemistry boxing activity!

The Best Assessment Strategy to Increase Achievement in Biology

The Best Assessment Strategy to Increase Achievement in Biology

One of my favorite models for assessing students in Biology comes from my current district. Even throughout my Master’s Degree in Curriculum and Instruction, I have not seen a better method for assessing students and holding them to a high standard.

In the assessment model that we currently use in the Science department, we allow students to complete retakes on quizzes that consist of about one chapter/topic worth of content.

There are multiple versions of each quiz i.e. version a,b, and c which are all the same questions just ordered differently for quiz and exam security and authenticity purposes.

Note: Students have been known to take pictures of quizzes/tests and sell them to other students. Be vigilant. NO PHONE or DEVICES when a quiz/exam is being used.

In addition, there are re-quiz versions that are mostly different questions with the same content. If a student fails a quiz and wants to improve their grade they can. However, students must complete test corrections and tutoring one day and re-quiz the following day. (ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING)

Re-quiz  Procedures:
  • Students can only achieve up to 90% on a re-quiz.
  • They can only re-quiz once.
  • For me, re-quizzes are slightly more difficult because I want them to know their stuff if they are going to make me put time into regrading I want them to know their stuff. I let them know they are slightly more difficult.
  • If they get a lower score they do not take the lower score but I mention that if it occurs more than once I may change that.
What can’t they redo?

After we cover a unit of study, usually 3 or 4 chapters/topics, we take a Unit Exam worth 3 times more than a quiz grade. These are NOT able to be retaken. This is where students demonstrate what they know. (ASSESSMENT OF LEARNING)

The Unit Exams offer me the ability to say confidently that the student knows their stuff if they get an A in my course which demonstrates mastery of the content.

This assessment model also holds them accountable for actually learning the content even if they do not do well on a particular topic.

A 2-3 day review/reteaching is done before the exam through labs and various activities such as Quizlet Live and Kahoot. Again, this is another opportunity for students to solidify their content knowledge or relearn areas they struggled in.

Pros and Cons
Pros
  • Students have an opportunity to improve their learning and their grades.
  • It is extremely helpful at parent conferences to mention that re-quizzes are available to the student.
  • Increase the pass rate for the state assessments.
  • Puts the pressure on the students to achieve and takes pressure off of the teacher if they do not.
Cons
  • Not all students care enough to take advantage of it.
  • Some students care too much about a single point to get to the 90% and you will have to regrade a whole quiz for one point!
  • It requires a lot of work and time up-front to create multiple versions of high-quality assessments.
  • It requires a lot of regrading = more time. However, I rewrote many quizzes to use Zipgrade and it has saved tons of time.
  • Your school schedule may not easily accommodate time for tutoring and re-quizzes. We have a 30-minute study period built in.

What are your thoughts or strategies? Comment Below.

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Evolution Activity

Teaching evolution is a difficult topic for a variety of reasons however, this is one activity that my students truly enjoy.

To begin the class period, I give the students each several pieces of printer paper. I keep them in suspense about what they are actually going to do with it.

After all the students are ready I reveal my “artistic” rendition of a fish by revealing a PPT slide with my drawing on it like the one below.

 

 

 

 

 

After 60 seconds (formally 90 seconds. 60s gives more variation)  of drawing students are instructed to put their pencils down and tape their fish to the board.

I explain to them that the fish they drew represents it’s offspring and as they can see there are variations between them.

I continue to explain that though the differences in our fish are quite exaggerated, in sexually reproducing organisms variations exist. I then mention that environmental pressures also exist.

I ask the students to share some thoughts about what type of environmental pressures exist.

After the students identify the types of environmental pressure I then take the role of environmental pressure and start ripping their “beautiful” fish drawings off of the board to indicate that they have died and are not able to  reproduce.

In the end, 2 fish remain and the original female fish dies (old age or eaten by predator). At this stage, I ask the students to look at the two drawings and create an offspring fish drawing from the 2 parents. Students are given 90 seconds to complete their drawing. Again, they tape it to the board.

For round 2 of environmental pressure I include students as predators and also mention that some fish just die from freak accidents. This is done until only  2 fish remain. Sometimes I stop here and already have enough substantial structural differences in the fish to show how organisms change over time as a result of environmental pressure.

If more generations are needed and time permits the students will want to continue.

Students love this activity and you (teacher) will always have something to reference as you continue the discussion on how organisms change over time (evolve).

I start the class with this quick five question kahoot that touches on different pieces of evidence for evolution.

 

 

 

Food Web Activity

Food Web Activity

In this hands-on food web activity, students use manipulative to correctly arrange the food web using the descriptions of the organisms provided.

After students correctly arrange the food web they have to identify the trophic levels and the energy levels based on the given energy units.

In addition, I have students identify the carnivores, omnivore, herbivores, parasites, consumers and heterotrophs.

This activity is great for a review or teaching the content to them the first time. There is a worksheet that goes along with it. It is amazing how much students do not remember even though they have had this concept in the middle school.

All of the misconceptions are exposed during this activity. Check out the video I use below to introduce the topic and engage my students. It is incredible.

Click here to Download
Organisms have been update to color!

Battle at Kruger

Each year I use this video to introduce ecology. It definitely is one of the most engaging videos I show. Watch it all the way through. So much happens!