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Trista Casey – ProQuest LLC, 2024
This study investigated the factors influencing retention among Catholic private school teachers in the Pacific Northwest, focusing on motivational and external elements. Employing a mixed-methods approach, including surveys and interviews with five teachers, I delved into the impact of intrinsic motivators like leadership and school culture as…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, Faculty Mobility, Catholic Schools, Catholic Educators
Chimier, Chloé; Tournier, Barbara – UNESCO International Institute for Educational Planning, 2019
Since the 1990s, in both high- and low-income countries, ministries of education have found it difficult to attract and retain capable and motivated educators, with negative effects on the quality of education and ultimately on student performance. The reasons for this decline in status are different in high- and low-income countries. In the…
Descriptors: Career Pathways, Teaching (Occupation), Teacher Attitudes, Educational Change
Chimier, Chloé; Tournier, Barbara; Childress, David – UNESCO International Institute for Educational Planning, 2019
When designing attractive teacher career structures, policymakers have to take a series of complex decisions. These decisions are related not only to the number of steps within the career ladder and their associated responsibilities, but also to how these positions are articulated with the salary scale and to opportunities for professional…
Descriptors: Faculty Mobility, Teacher Evaluation, Faculty Development, Incentives
Chimier, Chloé; Tournier, Barbara – UNESCO International Institute for Educational Planning, 2019
An increasing number of countries are moving to second-generation teacher career models, where differentiation is made between teachers on the basis of their performance rather than on their qualifications or length of service. Career structures that widen the opportunities available to teachers appear to be the most promising for teacher…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Faculty Mobility, Educational Change, Teaching (Occupation)
Lisa McLachlan – ProQuest LLC, 2020
Widespread critical shortages of high-quality teachers in the United States (Sutcher, Darling-Hammond, Carver-Thomas, 2016) has prompted considerable research on staffing trends within the teaching profession. Research suggests both an increase in the demand for teachers and a "chronic and relatively high annual turnover compared with many…
Descriptors: Teacher Supply and Demand, Labor Turnover, Faculty Mobility, Beginning Teachers
Podolsky, Anne; Kini, Tara; Bishop, Joseph; Darling-Hammond, Linda – Learning Policy Institute, 2016
One of the most pressing issues facing policymakers is how to staff classrooms with a stable teaching force responsive to complex student needs and the growing demands of the knowledge economy. Recurrent teacher shortages are a function of both declines in entrants to teaching and high rates of teacher attrition, especially in low-income schools.…
Descriptors: Teacher Shortage, Teacher Recruitment, Teacher Persistence, Faculty Mobility
Miller, Luke C. – Journal of Research in Rural Education, 2012
Expanding accountability systems that impose policies across all schools have amplified assertions that rural teacher labor markets differ from non-rural labor markets in meaningful ways that complicate rural schools' efforts to comply with the policy directives. The analysis presented here examines this claim by exploring teacher labor market…
Descriptors: Rural Schools, Labor Market, Beginning Teachers, Experienced Teachers
Hanson, Havala; Yoon, Sun Young – Regional Educational Laboratory Northwest, 2018
Many school districts in the United States are facing severe teacher shortages (Bordonaro, 2017; Palmer, 2017; Seattle Pacific University, 2017; Whaley, 2017). In several states--including Idaho--the difficulty of hiring qualified candidates has expanded beyond historical high-need content areas such as special education and mathematics to include…
Descriptors: School Districts, Teacher Shortage, Teacher Qualifications, Teacher Persistence
Hamilton, Laura S.; Engberg, John; Steiner, Elizabeth D.; Nelson, Catherine Awsumb; Yuan, Kun – RAND Corporation, 2012
In 2007, the Pittsburgh Public Schools (PPS) received funding from the U.S. Department of Education's Teacher Incentive Fund (TIF) program to implement the Pittsburgh Urban Leadership System for Excellence (PULSE), a set of reforms designed to improve the quality of school leadership throughout the district. A major component of PULSE is the…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Public Schools, Incentives, Principals

McElrath, Karen – Journal of Higher Education, 1992
A survey of 314 male and female faculty in criminology and sociology found that faculty women are more likely than men to leave academic positions, and women who interrupt careers commonly do so for a job-seeking spouse. Women experience significant losses in tenure and earnings as a result of career disruptions. (MSE)
Descriptors: Career Change, Career Development, College Faculty, Criminology
Murnane, Richard J.; Steele, Jennifer L. – Future of Children, 2007
Richard Murnane and Jennifer Steele argue that if the United States is to equip its young people with the skills essential in the new economy, high-quality teachers are more important than ever. In recent years, the demand for effective teachers has increased as enrollments have risen, class sizes have fallen, and a large share of the teacher…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Teacher Effectiveness, Teacher Persistence, Economically Disadvantaged
Murphy, Michael J.; And Others – 1984
A career ladder for teachers has been used in Great Britain for over 40 years. The ladder contains five steps with teachers progressing up the ladder by competitive promotion. This study investigated the historical development, structure, and consequences on teacher behavior of the career ladder system used in the United Kingdom. The study was…
Descriptors: Career Choice, Career Ladders, Differentiated Staffs, Faculty Mobility
Russell, Alene Bycer; Ruppert, Sandra S. – 2001
This compendium describes nearly 100 national, regional, and state resources, including data sources, initiatives, Web sites, studies, and reports related to teacher mobility. It offers policymakers, researchers, and educators information and approaches to guide research and focus policy discussions on particular aspects of teacher mobility.…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Faculty Mobility, Personnel Selection, Retirement Benefits
Swift, Doug – 1984
Recruiting and retaining qualified, competent teachers is an ongoing problem for small school administrators. The reasons for high turnover are numerous and complex, e.g., preservice preparation is presently more suitable for large, metropolitan schools than for small, rural schools; career orientations fail to recognize that experience in small…
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Definitions, Elementary Secondary Education, Faculty Mobility
SERVE Center for Continuous Improvement at UNCG, 2006
In 2004-2005, North Carolina's average teacher turnover rate was nearly 13 percent, ranging from a high of 29 percent to a low of 4 percent. Turnover among teachers in low-performing schools was substantially higher, with a low of 12 percent and a high of 57 percent. North Carolina has put strategies in place to address teacher retention but how…
Descriptors: Middle Schools, Teacher Effectiveness, Teacher Persistence, Faculty Mobility
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