Several JC members were hired during this workshop. For future reference to those who will be applying, here's my experience:
Written: Pretty intense test. Most people left thinking they did poorly on it. It was one of the hardest tests I've taken. Seems to me Kent Lovelace wrote it (from the civil war references).
Interview: Not a bad interview. 3 person panel consisting of a lead flight instructor and 2 other instructors. Here's some of the questions I remember..
"Why did you apply at UND?"
"Why should we hire you over the other 200+ applicants?"
"What has been your greatest accomplishment?"
"How will you know you've done a good job with your students?"
"How will you keep your students on template?"
Then I had to teach a preflight briefing. I got to pick from power on stalls, power off 180 landings, steep turns, or a couple other maneuvers (can't remember the others right now).
Roundtable: Tues morning they did the roundtable discussion and scored us. I'm not certain what all they talked about in this, but I've heard they take into consideration grades, stage check pass performance, on time completion, previous instructor comments, etc.
Sim: Tues afternoon they posted a list of us that made the cut after the written/interview/roundtable. We were conditionally hired at this time, pending the successful completion of a sim and flight exam. The sim was pretty straight forward. VOR 11R at KVRB. Take off of 11R, heading 300 to intercept the 330 radial to the 7 DME arc, shoot the approach.
Flight: Pretty relaxed flight test. I had to do steep turns, power on stalls, cross controlled stalls, simulated engine failure, S-turns, short field landing, soft field landing, power off 180 landing, and the aerodynamics demo was demonstrated to us.
So that's pretty much the process. Congrats to all of you who made it! Perhaps the other JC folks who were hired will chime in with their experience.