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Showing 1 to 15 of 16 results Save | Export
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Goldberg, Carole E.; Baldwin, Roger G. – New Directions for Higher Education, 2018
Creative approaches to academic retirement can yield benefits for retirees, their institutions, and society at large.
Descriptors: College Faculty, Retirement, Creativity, Retirement Benefits
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Thripp, Richard – International Society for Technology, Education, and Science, 2019
New teachers are facing lower pay and less generous retirement benefits than the prior generation, yet their financial and retirement knowledge, concerns, and preferences have received little attention. To investigate these areas, the author developed a 39-item survey instrument and administered it to 314 preservice teachers in undergraduate…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Knowledge Level, Investment, Money Management
Thripp, Richard – Online Submission, 2019
New teachers are facing lower pay and less generous retirement benefits than the prior generation, yet their financial and retirement knowledge, concerns, and preferences have received little attention. To investigate these areas, the author developed a 39-item survey instrument and administered it to 314 preservice teachers in undergraduate…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Knowledge Level, Investment, Money Management
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Ryan, Michael P.; Cude, Brenda J. – Journal of Financial Counseling and Planning, 2021
Most private sector employees have access to defined contribution retirement plans while public sector employees often may choose defined benefit or defined contribution plans. This research utilized a survey of faculty to analyze retirement plan satisfaction. Advice from a financial planner was positively associated with satisfaction with…
Descriptors: Risk, Money Management, Retirement, Retirement Benefits
Purcell, James; McGill, Robin; Brodeur, Philip; Hall, Erin – New England Journal of Higher Education, 2016
The relationship between employer and employee has changed significantly over the past 40 years. One of the greatest changes in this relationship is in the nature of employee retirement. While pension reform at public and private colleges has helped ensure institutional financial viability, retirement security for employees has declined. With the…
Descriptors: Retirement, Employees, Risk Management, Retirement Benefits
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Fishman, Seth Matthew – Academe, 2012
The silver tide of faculty retirement continues to ebb and flow. While much of today's scholarship on faculty retirement focuses on the financial implications for colleges and universities, arguing that older faculty members clog up the faculty pipeline, cost more in salary and benefits, and are ineffective teachers who fear technology, little…
Descriptors: Retirement, College Faculty, Teacher Retirement, Interviews
Harnisch, Thomas L. – American Association of State Colleges and Universities, 2010
Given the overarching ramifications that financial literacy plays in the modern economy, this paper contends that a renewed emphasis on financial literacy is central to individual, family and communal economic security. New responsibilities and opportunities given to consumers, such as retirement planning, have increased the need for more…
Descriptors: Retirement, State Colleges, Money Management, College Role
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Toutkoushian, Robert K.; Bathon, Justin M.; McCarthy, Martha M. – Journal of Education Finance, 2011
Although benefits can be a sizable part of an educator's total compensation, there has been little scholarly inquiry into the state pension plans for educators. Despite the fact that all defined benefit plans rely on the same basic formula for calculating annual pensions, they vary across states in the multiplier used, the method for calculating…
Descriptors: Retirement, Labor Market, Retirement Benefits, Cost Effectiveness
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Murphy, Carole H. – Academe, 2009
About 25 percent of faculty working in the United States will reportedly consider retiring in the next five to seven years. As one of this 25 percent, the author has been researching what she needs to know to retire. What she found initially was a lot of misinformation. To complicate matters, the world has changed over the past year, causing those…
Descriptors: Financial Services, Retirement, Economic Climate, Human Resources
Wheeler, David L. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
At colleges, presidents, provosts, and even faculty senates are taking a fresh look at how to manage professors' retirements. A few institutions that have sought to trim their tenured-faculty ranks for other reasons offer early lessons for those institutions that want to encourage retirements. Many institutions are doing just that, using…
Descriptors: Working Hours, Retirement, Governance, College Governing Councils
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Dorfman, Lorraine T. – Educational Gerontology, 2009
Little is known about the impact of the end of mandatory retirement on professors over the long term. This follow-up study investigated the ten-year experience of professors who chose not to retire from a major research university after the elimination of the age 70 mandatory retirement in 1994. The initial interview study was conducted in 1998…
Descriptors: Tenure, Research Universities, Content Analysis, Followup Studies
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Howton, Shawn; Howton, Shelly – CUPA-HR Journal, 2005
Many college and university faculty members work on nine-month contracts and, as such, are given the option of receiving their pay either over nine months or over the entire calendar year. Although many choose the latter, the authors of this article explain how opting for a nine-month pay period can significantly boost the size of a retirement…
Descriptors: Retirement, College Faculty, Compensation (Remuneration), Retirement Benefits
Biggs, John H. – Trusteeship, 2008
In the late 1990s, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation made grants to study people's attitudes toward retirement and to determine what factors influenced their decisions to retire. Although faculty were not talking to college administrators or human-resources departments about health care, the researchers found to their surprise that when they…
Descriptors: Retirement, Health Insurance, Older Adults, Educational Finance
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Janson, Natasha – New Directions for Higher Education, 2005
Phased retirement policies are more or less attractive financially and more or less accommodating of individual differences. They are also implemented in varying ways, variations that especially affect departments and academic programs.
Descriptors: College Faculty, Retirement, Individual Differences, Educational Policy
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Allen, Steven G.; Clark, Robert L.; Ghent, Linda S. – New Directions for Higher Education, 2005
The implications of the policy choices made in setting up a phased retirement system are demonstrated by its variety of outcomes. (Contains 5 tables.)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Retirement, Age Discrimination, Individual Differences
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