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Showing 1 to 15 of 83 results Save | Export
Boren, Megan – Southern Regional Education Board (SREB), 2020
To help states retain teachers and recruit the next generation into the profession, this brief examines teacher compensation policies in states and how adjustments could help reverse teacher shortage trends. The report looks at teacher compensation packages as a whole, including data on salary, health insurance, retirement and other benefits. It…
Descriptors: Compensation (Remuneration), Teacher Salaries, Health Insurance, Retirement Benefits
Roza, Marguerite – Edunomics Lab, 2015
Teacher compensation is driven largely by teacher longevity. While it's true that wages in many fields generally increase with experience, what differs in teaching is the degree to which pay is linked to seniority. And compared to other professions, teaching has more heavily back-loaded pay -- meaning a disproportionate share of earnings comes…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Compensation (Remuneration), Teacher Promotion, Tenure
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Darling-Hammond, Linda; Sutcher, Leib; Carver-Thomas, Desiree – Learning Policy Institute, 2018
Teacher shortages have been worsening in California since 2015. Growth in teacher demand as the economy has improved has collided with steep declines in the supply of new teachers, leading to significant increases in the hiring of underprepared teachers, especially in districts serving high-need students. Shortages are most severe in special…
Descriptors: Teacher Shortage, Teacher Supply and Demand, Faculty Mobility, Teacher Competencies
Martin, Katherine; DeArmond, Michael – Center on Reinventing Public Education, 2012
Common sense and recent research make it clear that successful schools need strong principals. Strong principals help drive school performance in many ways, from shaping a school's mission and culture to hiring, developing, and retaining good teachers. Even so, principals often get short shrift in today's debates about human capital in public…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Eligibility, Retirement, Principals
DeArmond, Michael; Ouijdani, Monica – Center on Reinventing Public Education, 2012
When people talk about human capital or talent in public education, they generally focus on teachers, not principals. That's a mistake. School districts and states generally don't take a strategic approach toward managing their principal workforce. Often, they lack even the most basic information about who is leading their schools: Where do most…
Descriptors: Retirement, Principals, Human Capital, Public Education
DeAngelis, Karen J.; White, Bradford R. – Illinois Education Research Council, 2011
This report is the second in an Illinois Education Research Council series on public school principals in Illinois. This study focuses on principals' movements during the 2001 to 2008 time period, thereby providing recent information on principal retention and turnover during a time marked by increasing school accountability and public scrutiny of…
Descriptors: Accountability, Principals, Labor Turnover, Public Schools
National Commission on Teaching and America's Future, 2010
Working with Richard Ingersoll, professor of Education and Sociology at the University of Pennsylvania, the National Commission on Teaching and America's Future (NCTAF) examined and analyzed data from the "Schools and Staffing Survey" (SASS), the largest and most comprehensive source of data on teachers, gathered from a nationally…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Teacher Retirement, Baby Boomers, Retirement Benefits
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Swanson, Peter B. – High School Journal, 2011
There is a shortage of educators and there are various factors that account for the lack of teachers. Millions of new teachers will be needed in the near future and the present study juxtaposes the vocational personality profiles of adolescents (N = 262) participating in Future Educators of America programs in Georgia to in-service teachers'…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Personality, Adolescents, Teacher Shortage
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Ingersoll, Richard; Merrill, Lisa – Educational Leadership, 2010
Analyzing long-term demographic data from the Schools and Staffing Survey, Ingersoll and Merrill found a number of intriguing trends in the teaching force that they say "appear to have been little noticed by researchers, policymakers, and the public." The number of teachers, they write, is growing at a rate that far outpaces increases in student…
Descriptors: Rural Schools, Teacher Persistence, Faculty Mobility, Academic Ability
Costrell, Robert M.; Podgursky, Michael – Urban Institute (NJ1), 2007
This paper examines the pattern of incentives for work versus retirement in five state teacher pension systems. We do this by examining the annual accrual of pension wealth from an additional year of work over a teacher's career. Accrual of wealth is highly nonlinear and heavily loaded at arbitrary years that would normally be considered…
Descriptors: Teacher Retirement, Exhibits, Retirement Benefits, Teacher Supply and Demand
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Hancock, Carl B. – Journal of Research in Music Education, 2009
This study was designed to estimate the magnitude of retention, migration, and attrition of music teachers; the transfer destinations of those who migrated; the career path status of those who left; and the likelihood that former music teachers would return to teaching. Data, which were analyzed for music (n = 881) and non-music teachers (n =…
Descriptors: Music Teachers, Labor Force, Teacher Persistence, Teacher Transfer
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Ingersoll, Richard M.; Perda, David – American Educational Research Journal, 2010
This study seeks to empirically ground the debate over mathematics and science teacher shortages and evaluate the extent to which there is, or is not, sufficient supply of teachers in these fields. The authors' analyses of nationally representative data from multiple sources show that math and science are the fields most difficult to staff, but…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, Teacher Supply and Demand, Teacher Shortage, Science Teachers
McDonald, Jean G. – 1988
School systems must be able to attract high quality teachers and, if necessary, to attract them across state boundaries. Pension portability, which allows workers to change jobs and retirement systems without losing retirement benefits, is essential to accommodate an increasingly mobile work force. This paper reviews the National Governors'…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Labor Turnover, Occupational Mobility, Personnel Policy
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Burkhauser, Richard V.; Quinn, Joseph F. – New Directions for Higher Education, 1989
An analysis of the impact of increasing the minimum mandatory retirement age on the retirement patterns of older adults across the entire economy suggests that because of the strong disincentives to work embedded in social security and many employee pensions, most workers will continue to retire in their early sixties. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Comparative Analysis, Employment Patterns, Federal Legislation
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Harris, Douglas N.; Adams, Scott J. – Economics of Education Review, 2007
It is commonly believed that teacher turnover is unusually high and that this is a sign of failure in the education system. Previous studies have tested this idea by comparing teacher turnover with that of similar professions, but have come to contradictory conclusions. We provide additional evidence by comparing teachers with professionals from…
Descriptors: Faculty Mobility, Teacher Persistence, Social Work, Nurses
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