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Showing 31 to 45 of 307 results Save | Export
Bohling, Joseph – School Business Affairs, 2012
What's the main factor coloring employee satisfaction? Many organizations' leaders think the answer is salary, yet in reality, employee benefits packages are one of the biggest incentives an employer can offer. Educational institutions have done well in providing benefits to employees. However, with an unpredictable economic climate and a complex…
Descriptors: Job Satisfaction, Retirement Benefits, Fringe Benefits, Health Insurance
Jack Stripling – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Private-college presidents often draw scrutiny for their hefty compensation packages, but most of them have a ready comeback: I could make a lot more money in the corporate world. While this statement is surely sometimes true, it is also true that some of the nation's top-paid presidents continue to receive perks that their corporate counterparts…
Descriptors: College Presidents, Compensation (Remuneration), Fringe Benefits, Private Colleges
Sawchuk, Stephen – Education Week, 2013
For years, the St. Louis school district has experienced the convergence of two trend lines school superintendents hope never to see: rising employee-pension costs and falling student enrollment. Despite years of fully funding its share of the teacher-pension plan, the proportion of the St. Louis district's budget tied up in paying benefits for…
Descriptors: School Districts, Educational Trends, Retirement Benefits, Costs
Corcoran, Bruce – School Business Affairs, 2012
The landscape of public education retirement plans is in an upheaval. A variety of economic, demographic, and political factors make it increasingly difficult for defined-benefit pension plans alone to provide educators with an adequate retirement. As a result, for the nearly seven million educators in America's public primary and secondary…
Descriptors: Public Education, Best Practices, Misconceptions, Teacher Employment Benefits
Herriot-Hatfield, Jennie; Monahan, Amy; Rosenberg, Sarah; Tucker, Bill – Education Sector, 2012
Just 18 minutes before the midnight signing deadline on May 15, 2010, Minnesota state legislators breathed a sigh of relief. Their bipartisan pension reform legislation, which passed both chambers by large margins and aimed to help shore up a potentially failing pension system, had just escaped a veto threat. Under pressure from his Republican…
Descriptors: Legal Problems, State Legislation, Legislators, Courts
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Koedel, Cory; Ni, Shawn; Podgursky, Michael – Education Next, 2013
It is widely recognized that teacher quality is the central input in school performance. This insight has put human resource and compensation policies, including performance pay, tenure, alternative route recruitment, and mentoring, at center stage in school reform debates. Some school administrators have been innovators and reform leaders in…
Descriptors: School Administration, Teacher Employment Benefits, Retirement Benefits, Personnel Policy
Kevin, John – School Business Affairs, 2012
As school districts continue to seek administrative efficiencies and cost reductions in the wake of severe budget pressures, the resources they devote to creating or expanding retirement plan consortia is increasing. Understanding how to structure a retirement plan consortium is paramount to successfully achieving the many objectives of…
Descriptors: Retirement, School Districts, Consortia, Efficiency
Mitchell, Bernadette – School Business Affairs, 2012
There's not a school business official in the country who isn't dealing with budget cuts and trying to do more with less. This article shares some proven strategies to help school districts reduce spending and address personnel issues associated with retirement plans. Because public education employers are exempt from the Employee Retirement…
Descriptors: Retirement, School Districts, Public Education, Wages
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Kersten, Thomas A. – Kappa Delta Pi Record, 2011
For teachers, in particular, the importance of early retirement investing has never been more critical. The reality is that, decades from now, when teachers arrive at retirement age, their current state teacher retirement plan may have changed substantially. As a result, they do not want to reach retirement and regret that they never considered…
Descriptors: Teacher Retirement, Retirement Benefits, Social Planning, Social Change
Blanton, Rebecca E.; Foster, Lisa K. – California Research Bureau, 2012
Women veterans' needs have been subsumed under the needs of veterans in general for many years. Because women veterans make up less than ten percent of the total current veteran population, their unique needs have been obscured by this, but this is beginning to change. The federal Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), the California Department of…
Descriptors: Females, Veterans, Surveys, Services
Sparks, Sarah D. – Education Week, 2013
Boosting early retirement in cash-strapped districts does not hurt students' math and reading scores, according to new studies released at the American Economic Association meeting, but pension-incentive programs may cost schools some of their most effective teachers. Separate studies of teachers in California, Illinois, and North Carolina paint a…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Experienced Teachers, Teacher Retirement, Incentives
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Klugman, Stuart; Long, Gena – PRIMUS, 2014
The Society of Actuaries (SOA) is the world's largest actuarial organization. This article describes the SOA with particular attention paid to its education and qualification processes and resources available for university and college programs.
Descriptors: Risk Assessment, Professional Associations, Organizational Theories, Qualifications
Richwine, Jason – Heritage Foundation, 2012
Despite ongoing debates over the adequacy of teacher compensation, the design of merit pay systems, and the structure of pension benefits, there is broad agreement that teacher pay should be designed to recruit--and retain--the highest-quality teachers in a cost-effective manner. Policymakers should avoid across-the-board pay increases, and focus…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Merit Pay, Teaching (Occupation), Teacher Effectiveness
Halfond, Jay A.; Horwitz, Lois K. – New England Journal of Higher Education, 2012
An academic discipline and a profession eventually converge through the relationship, division of labor and trust between universities and professional associations--and their mutual respect for the authority and the respective roles of one another. Sometimes, professional associations evaluate academic programs or even provide an examination at…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disciplines, Probability, Professional Associations, Insurance
Cavanagh, Sean – Education Week, 2011
Teachers' unions find themselves on the defensive in states across the country, as governors and lawmakers press forward with proposals to target job protections and benefits that elected officials contend the public can no longer afford academically or financially. Many of those efforts are being driven by newly elected Republicans, who have…
Descriptors: Unions, State Officials, Legislators, Politics of Education
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