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Rachel Jarrold-Grapes; Patten Priestley Mahler – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2024
Teacher vacancies have been a long-standing issue in U.S. public schools, only made worse by the COVID-19 pandemic. Vacancies tend to be concentrated in high-poverty, high-minority schools and hard-to-staff subjects like special education and STEM. States have implemented various policies to decrease turnover, including offering teachers bonuses…
Descriptors: Teacher Retirement, Teachers, Teacher Salaries, Older Workers
Dan Goldhaber; Cyrus Grout; Kristian L. Holden – Journal of Education Human Resources, 2024
Defined benefit (DB) pension plans incentivize "salary spiking," where sharp increases in pay are leveraged into significantly higher levels of retirement compensation. While egregious instances of salary spiking occasionally make headlines, there is little guidance on the definition of salary-spiking behavior or understanding of its…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Retirement Benefits, Teacher Retirement, Compensation (Remuneration)
Sarah F. Anzia – Education Finance and Policy, 2024
State and local government decisions about how school funding is raised and allocated have profound impacts on American public education, and in recent years, experts have documented large increases in one type of spending in particular: public pensions. Because most data on school district pension expenditures are at the state level, it has so…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Retirement Benefits, School Districts, School District Spending