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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
Kan, Leslie; Fuchs, Daniel; Aldeman, Chad – Bellwether Education Partners, 2016
Illinois' pension plans have sent the state on a downward spiral. One out of every four dollars that state taxpayers send to Springfield goes toward pensions, and the vast majority of these contributions go toward paying down large pension debt, not the actual retirement benefits given to state and local workers like teachers. The teacher pension…
Descriptors: Retirement Benefits, Teacher Retirement, Debt (Financial), Educational Policy
Weeden, Dustin D. – State Higher Education Executive Officers, 2019
Higher education appropriations are often referred to as the "balance wheel" for state budgets, receiving greater than average funding reductions during economic downturns and above average increases during periods of economic growth. However, this trend has gradually diminished with each recession as higher education funding no longer…
Descriptors: Retirement Benefits, Higher Education, State Aid, Finance Reform
Johnson, Richard W.; Southgate, Benjamin G. – Urban Institute, 2015
The Teachers' Retirement System of the State of Illinois is one of the worst-funded public pensions in the nation. In 2013, it held enough assets to cover only 41 percent of its future obligations (Buck Consultants, 2014). This shortfall has led to several reforms, mostly involving benefit cuts that have undermined retirement income security for…
Descriptors: Teacher Retirement, Retirement Benefits, Public School Teachers, Retrenchment
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Dorji, N. – Journal on School Educational Technology, 2020
Teachers shortage is one of the major concerns in the public schools of Bhutan and the impact on academic achievement is very much overwhelming. The data collected within the period of five years (2015-2019) shows the increase in attrition rate by 3.98% which is a concern for the education sector of Bhutan. Yearly the voluntary resignation of the…
Descriptors: Faculty Mobility, Teacher Shortage, Teacher Persistence, Incentives
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Strom, Robert D.; Strom, Paris S. – Educational Gerontology, 2020
Public awareness of demographic change is necessary to guide individual and national planning for retirement. For the first time in American history, older adults are forecast to soon outnumber children. Accordingly, expectations for retirement should be considered in a larger than personal context, a broad perspective that implicates relatives,…
Descriptors: Peer Influence, Aging (Individuals), Retirement, Attitude Change
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Paganelli, Anthony; Cangemi, Joseph – Education, 2019
Faculty working well beyond retirement age has become an issue in higher education that includes increased expenditures in benefits and salaries, hindrance of hiring minorities and women, and teaching effectiveness. The effects of aging faculty contribute to the factors in student retention. A few factors in student success involve affordability,…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Aging (Individuals), Teacher Characteristics, Retirement
DiSalvo, Daniel – Manhattan Institute for Policy Research, 2019
After many years of labor peace, public school teachers have engaged in strikes and work stoppages in record numbers during the past two years. Chief among the demands of striking teachers was higher pay. Discontent was also expressed with working conditions, which teachers and their unions connected to flat or declining state spending on…
Descriptors: Public School Teachers, Unions, Teacher Strikes, Teacher Salaries
Goldhaber, Dan; Grout, Cyrus – Bellwether Education Partners, 2014
As states and localities across the nation consider the tradeoffs between defined benefit (DB) and defined contribution (DC) pension systems, it is important to gain insight into what implications pension reforms might have on workforce composition and teachers' retirement savings behavior. Moreover, it is also important to consider that…
Descriptors: Retirement Benefits, Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, State Legislation
Thomas, Tara; Tieken, Christopher H.; Kang, Li; Bennett, Nadia; Cronin, Sean; Torrento, Jillian – AASA, The School Superintendent's Association, 2023
The 2022-2023 AASA Superintendent Salary & Benefits Study marks the ninth consecutive edition of this study. The 2022-2023 version employed a slightly revised and updated survey instrument. The survey tracked the demographics, salary, benefits, and other elements of the employment agreements of school superintendents throughout the country.…
Descriptors: Superintendents, Salaries, Fringe Benefits, Administrator Surveys
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Geier, Brett A. – Journal of Education Finance, 2016
Since 1980, Michigan retirees have been afforded health care benefits for which they were required to pay 10 percent of the premium upon retirement--the remainder was paid for by the state. Recently, the Michigan Legislature reduced the financial obligation of the State for retiree health care benefits, placing it on the individual member. In…
Descriptors: Public Education, Public School Teachers, Teacher Retirement, Legal Problems
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Tam, Maureen – Educational Gerontology, 2018
This paper discusses retirement as a learning process, where learning, be it formal or informal, enables retirees to adjust to the transition from work to retirement. Such discussion is important given the fact that the world population is aging and that more people are retiring in the next few decades. Moreover, people are experiencing an…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Longitudinal Studies, Retirement, Preretirement Education
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Diamond, Fleur; Bulfin, Scott – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2021
The growing interest in the history of curriculum and pedagogy in subject English might be seen as a response to educational reforms that are replacing earlier, progressive understandings of subject English with narrowly technical understandings of teacher professional knowledge and practice. This essay emerges out of an intergenerational,…
Descriptors: Educational History, English Instruction, Educational Change, Pedagogical Content Knowledge
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Chmielewski, Kristen – History of Education Quarterly, 2020
Ideas and norms about disability shaped the experiences and careers of every teacher and prospective teacher in the Los Angeles public schools between 1930 and 1970. Medical doctors created and conducted the extensive medical examinations that teaching candidates and practicing teachers needed to pass to enter or remain in the classroom. The Los…
Descriptors: Teachers, Public Schools, Educational History, Teacher Characteristics
Marchitello, Max – Bellwether Education Partners, 2018
One would hope that as benefit costs increase, districts would correspondingly bump up their overall K-12 spending to ensure at least as much funding gets to classrooms as before. Unfortunately, that is not the case across the country or in the vast majority of states. In our new report, "Benefits Take Larger Bite out of District K-12…
Descriptors: Budgets, Educational Finance, Elementary Secondary Education, School Districts
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