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Showing 1 to 15 of 1,111 results Save | Export
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Andrew Ju; Krishna Regmi – Education Economics, 2025
In light of growing difficulties for schools to attract teachers in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields and the continued discussions surrounding the unionization of education, this paper examines the effect of collective bargaining (CB) laws on the salary of teachers with a STEM degree. To isolate the effect of…
Descriptors: Collective Bargaining, Laws, STEM Education, Majors (Students)
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Kabria Baumgartner – History of Education Quarterly, 2024
Low and stagnant teacher pay has been a perennial issue in the United States public school system since the early decades of the nineteenth century. Women teachers, then as now, confronted the issue head-on by organizing together. For example, women primary school teachers in Boston, Massachusetts successfully petitioned for more pay in 1835, but…
Descriptors: Salary Wage Differentials, Teacher Salaries, Compensation (Remuneration), Comparable Worth
Justin B. Doromal; Eve Mefferd; Heather Sandstrom; Erica Greenberg; Laura Jimenez Parra; Victoria Nelson; Elli Nikolopoulos – Urban Institute, 2024
This fact sheet shares 2023 survey and focus group findings from early educators eligible for from the Early Childhood Educator Pay Equity Fund in the District of Columbia. Findings describe the perceived of the payments on the child care field. Early educators share that the Pay Equity Fund helps advance fair pay that reflects their credentials…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Teachers, Child Care, Teacher Salaries, Teacher Persistence
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Humphries, Veronika; Johnston, Tammy; Nelson, Paul – Administrative Issues Journal: Connecting Education, Practice, and Research, 2023
According to the Institute for Women's Policy, women in the United States working in the state of Louisiana earn sixty-nine cents on the dollar compared to their male counterparts. This is a substantial discrepancy and has been used as a call for action. However, what is really behind this variance in pay between women and men? For a large part,…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Gender Differences, Teacher Salaries, Teacher Characteristics
Quintero, Diana; Hansen, Michael; Zerbino, Nicolas – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2023
Public teacher compensation is largely determined by fixed salary schedules that were designed to avoid payment inequalities based on demographic characteristics. Yet, recent research shows female teachers earn less than their male peers after controlling for experience, education, and school characteristics. Building on this literature, this…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Salary Wage Differentials, Gender Differences, Faculty Workload
Flavio Cunha; Marcos Lee – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2023
The quality of the early environment children experience influences their human capital development. We investigate retention and compensation in the Early Care and Education workforce by merging datasets from three different government agencies in Texas. We employ non-structural methods to compare turnover and pay in Early Care and Education with…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Child Care, Labor Turnover, Salary Wage Differentials
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Pendola, Andrew – Education Finance and Policy, 2022
This study explores ways in which salary can be structured to reduce leadership shortages by investigating how comparative wage dispersion and position alter the relationship of salary to principal turnover. Using a seventeen-year longitudinal dataset covering over sixteen thousand principals in Texas, discrete-time hazard models demonstrate that…
Descriptors: Principals, Faculty Mobility, Labor Turnover, Teacher Salaries
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Rachel Rosenberg – History of Education Quarterly, 2024
This paper explores the movement of the New York City Interborough Association of Women Teachers (IAWT) for "equal pay for equal work" in teaching salaries, which it won in 1911. The IAWT's success sheds light on the possibilities and limits of women teachers advocating for change within a feminized profession. Leading the movement were…
Descriptors: Women Faculty, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Salary Wage Differentials, Sex Fairness
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Michelle Doughty – AERA Open, 2024
In 2018, a wave of educator strikes called Red for Ed swept through several states. Educators in Arizona won additional funding from the state legislature, supposedly for teacher salaries, which school boards could spend as they chose. This article quantitatively examines the participation and results of the 2018 Arizona educator strike, using…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Expenditure per Student, Pupil Personnel Workers, Unions
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Dan Goldhaber; John M. Krieg; Stephanie Liddle; Roddy Theobald – Education Finance and Policy, 2024
Prior work on teacher candidates in Washington State has shown that about two thirds of individuals who trained to become teachers between 2005 and 2015 and received a teaching credential did not enter the state's public teaching workforce immediately after graduation, while about one third never entered a public teaching job in the state at all.…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Preservice Teachers, Public School Teachers, Wages
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Andrew Camp; Gema Zamarro; Josh McGee; Taylor Wilson; Miranda Vernon – Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2024
Attracting and retaining high-quality teachers in the profession is a matter of significant policy concern. Increasing teacher salaries and creating more attractive compensation packages are often proposed to achieve this goal. However, average real teacher salaries have remained stagnant over the past decade and have not fully recovered from the…
Descriptors: Public School Teachers, Teacher Salaries, Teacher Employment Benefits, Teacher Shortage
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Praveen Aggarwal; Joseph Grant – Journal of Education for Business, 2024
Business schools frequently utilize AACSB's Salary Survey ("Staff Compensation and Demographic Survey," or the "SCDS Report") to benchmark salaries being offered by other schools. While providing averages based on a national sample, the "SCDS Report" obscures differences that might exist in salary averages between…
Descriptors: Business Schools, Business Administration Education, College Faculty, Teacher Salaries
Heather Sandstrom; Eve Mefferd; Laura Jimenez Parra; Victoria Nelson; Justin Doromal; Erica Greenberg; Elli Nikolopoulos; Rachel Lamb; Alicia Gonzalez – Urban Institute, 2024
Early childhood educators play an essential role in providing child care for families and learning and development supports for young children, yet they have long faced challenges due to low wages. Recognizing this, the District of Columbia (DC) introduced the Early Childhood Pay Equity Fund in 2022. This first-of-its-kind initiative aims to…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Teachers, Comparable Worth, Well Being, Mental Health
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Biasi, Barbara – Education Next, 2023
Empirical evidence on the effects of compensation reform is somewhat scarce. Most U.S. public school teachers are paid according to rigid schedules that determine pay based solely on seniority and academic credentials. In unionized school districts, these schedules are set by collective bargaining agreements. In 2011 when the Wisconsin state…
Descriptors: State Legislation, Teacher Salaries, Compensation (Remuneration), Public School Teachers
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Jennifer Schneider; Jacqueline Bichsel – College and University Professional Association for Human Resources, 2024
We use CUPA-HR data to analyze representation and pay equity for women and racial/ethnic minorities in higher education full-time faculty from 2016-17 to 2022-23, across tenure status, rank, discipline, and total operating expenses of institutions. Results indicate that, despite some growth in the representation of women and faculty of color in…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teacher Salaries, Compensation (Remuneration), Educational Equity (Finance)
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