Publication Date
In 2025 | 0 |
Since 2024 | 0 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 2 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 8 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 21 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
Gray, Mary W. | 3 |
Henkel, Jan W. | 3 |
Hyman, Ronald T. | 2 |
Luna, Andrew L. | 2 |
Thomas, Stephen B. | 2 |
Weeks, Kent M. | 2 |
Wood, Norman J. | 2 |
Zakariya, Sally Banks | 2 |
Allard, Celia | 1 |
Andrews, Judith L. | 1 |
Antonucci, Mike | 1 |
More ▼ |
Publication Type
Education Level
Elementary Secondary Education | 8 |
Higher Education | 7 |
Postsecondary Education | 3 |
Two Year Colleges | 1 |
Audience
Practitioners | 13 |
Administrators | 11 |
Policymakers | 7 |
Researchers | 3 |
Teachers | 1 |
Location
Tennessee | 3 |
Washington | 3 |
Australia | 2 |
Florida | 2 |
Alabama | 1 |
Brazil | 1 |
California (San Jose) | 1 |
Canada | 1 |
China | 1 |
Idaho | 1 |
Illinois | 1 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Perloff, Andrew – Education Next, 2022
For decades, college athletes have been barred from using their name, image, and likeness (NIL) to earn money through the sort of lucrative endorsement deals that professional athletes commonly sign. The ban by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), which sets the rules for college sports, was intended to reflect students' official…
Descriptors: College Athletics, Reputation, Competition, Intercollegiate Cooperation
Henig, Jeffrey R.; Lyon, Melissa Arnold – Education Next, 2019
Teachers unions have had a "muscular" presence in some states, but in others, especially in the South and Southwest, the unions have held little power in recent decades, and the growing dominance of conservative Republicans in state legislatures and statehouses was creating a hostile environment with right-to-work (RTW) laws. The…
Descriptors: Unions, Teacher Associations, Teacher Strikes, Court Litigation
Feldman, Ariel; Costa, Daihana Maria dos Santos – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2021
This paper aims to analyze the temporary teachers' hiring policy in Cametá, during the last two municipal administrations (2013-2020). The main focus is the interface between disputes for local power and the municipal administration of education. This is a case study using a qualitative approach, employing the procedures of documental analysis,…
Descriptors: Teacher Selection, Temporary Employment, Municipalities, School Districts
Mason-Williams, Loretta; Bettini, Elizabeth; Peyton, David; Harvey, Alexandria; Rosenberg, Michael; Sindelar, Paul T. – Teacher Education and Special Education, 2020
In this article, the authors describe the complexity of special education teacher (SET) shortage, how shortage undermines equal educational opportunity, and strategies that school districts and state and federal governments have used to combat them. The authors consider the economic consequences of shortage and describe how school budgets are…
Descriptors: Special Education Teachers, Teacher Shortage, Students with Disabilities, Poverty
Roach, Bonnie L. – Forum on Public Policy Online, 2014
There is ample evidence that there still is a pay gap amongst men and women and the situation is no different if academia. Many studies have examined various types of gender discrimination in academia and two areas in particular are problematic--salaries and representation of female faculty in upper ranks of academia. This paper examines the past…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Disproportionate Representation, Gender Differences, Salary Wage Differentials
Antonucci, Mike – Education Next, 2016
For 50 years, American education policy has often danced to the tune of labor realities. "Friedrichs v. California Teachers Association" is a case that awaits hearing by the U.S. Supreme Court that could dramatically change this picture. The case, if decided for the plaintiffs, could end the practice of "agency" fees--money…
Descriptors: Unions, Fees, Collective Bargaining, Teacher Salaries
Hale, Jon – Journal of Negro Education, 2018
This article provides a history of Black southern teacher associations and the civil rights agenda they articulated from Reconstruction through the desegregation of public schools in the 1970s. Black teacher associations demonstrated historic agency by demanding a fundamental right to an education, equal salaries, and the right to work during the…
Descriptors: African American Teachers, Teacher Associations, Geographic Regions, School Segregation
Unearthing and Bequeathing Black Feminist Legacies of "Brown" to a New Generation of Women and Girls
Loder-Jackson, Tondra L.; Christensen, Lois McFadyen; Kelly, Hilton – Journal of Negro Education, 2016
This article highlights the overshadowed contributions that Marion Thompson Wright, Ruby Jackson Gainer, and Mamie Phipps Clark made to the landmark "Brown v. Board of Education" case. Arguably, "Brown" would not have materialized without their legal and scholarly activism. Yet their legacies were eclipsed by legendary race men…
Descriptors: School Desegregation, Desegregation Litigation, Females, Womens Education
Henderson, Michael B.; Peterson, Paul E.; West, Martin R. – Education Next, 2016
In May and June 2015, the ninth annual "Education Next" survey was administered to a nationally representative sample of some 4,000 respondents, including oversamples of roughly 700 teachers, 700 African Americans, and 700 Hispanics. The 2015 survey posed many new questions exploring opinion on curricular and other issues that have never…
Descriptors: Teacher Surveys, Standardized Tests, Common Core State Standards, Unions
Sims, David P. – Economics of Education Review, 2011
Despite a large literature examining the effect of litigation on education finance and student achievement, there is relatively little recent evidence about how extra resources generated by litigation are spent. This paper uses national data to examine the effects of high court finance rulings from 1991 to 2002 on school districts' education…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Educational Finance, School District Spending, Resource Allocation
Ash, Katie – Education Week, 2013
Educators and policy observers are keeping a close eye on two controversial experiments in private management of public schools now unfolding in the western Michigan city of Muskegon Heights and in the Detroit-area community of Highland Park. Citing chronic budget woes in the communities' low-performing school districts, Gov. Rick Snyder of…
Descriptors: School Districts, Public Schools, Educational Administration, Privatization
Jackson, C. Kirabo; Johnson, Rucker C.; Persico, Claudia – Education Next, 2015
This study addresses limitations in a study conducted by James Coleman in 1966, which analyzed aspects of educational equality in the United States--including the relationship between school spending and student outcomes--as well as other studies covering the same topic that stemmed from Coleman's Report. Coleman found that variation in school…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Expenditure per Student, Educational Resources, Outcomes of Education
Shircliffe, Barbara J. – History of Education Quarterly, 2012
In 1941, members of the local unit of the Florida State Teachers Association (FSTA) met in Tampa to plan a lawsuit against Hillsborough County's school board for paying African-American teachers less than white teachers. Hilda Turner, who taught history and economics at Tampa's historically black high school, agreed to serve as plaintiff; she was…
Descriptors: Evidence, Rating Scales, Racial Discrimination, African American Teachers
Frizell, Julie A.; Shippen, Benjamin S., Jr.; Luna, Andrew L. – New Directions for Institutional Research, 2008
This article reviews multiple regression analysis, describes how its results should be interpreted, and instructs institutional researchers on how to conduct such analyses using an example focused on faculty pay equity between men and women. The use of multiple regression analysis will be presented as a method with which to compare salaries of…
Descriptors: Institutional Research, Courts, Multiple Regression Analysis, Higher Education
June, Audrey Williams – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Keith Hoeller is an adjunct professor. He teaches philosophy for a living at Green River Community College, just outside Seattle. He has also spent much of the last two decades ruminating about the bigger picture for those at his level of the professorial pecking order. Over the years, Hoeller has lobbied relentlessly for adjunct-friendly…
Descriptors: Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Salary Wage Differentials, Retirement Benefits, Adjunct Faculty