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Severns, Roger – Journal of College Teaching & Learning, 2012
Like many states, Minnesota has incurred large budget deficits during the past two years. Those deficits have, in turn, led to changes in a number of areas of state government, particularly higher education. Faculty have incurred pay freezes and layoffs, programs have closed, and tuition increased. Campuses within the MnSCU system have been…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Financial Problems, Job Layoff, State Government
Lawrence, Kendall E. – ProQuest LLC, 2012
Purpose: The aging of the professoriate may be the most important issue in higher education today. When faculty members will choose to retire and how effectively they are replaced is a crucial problem for many institutions. Yet very little data are available on faculty retirement timing. The purpose of this study was to test life-span trajectory…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Higher Education, Life Satisfaction, Teacher Retirement
Tysinger, P. Dawn; Diamanduros, Terry D.; Tysinger, Jeffrey A. – Communique, 2010
According to recent literature, the field of school psychology is facing a major shortage of trainers at present and in the near future. Although this is not a new issue facing the field, faculty retirements are increasing, and fewer doctoral candidates in school psychology are choosing an academic path for their careers, resulting in many faculty…
Descriptors: School Psychologists, School Psychology, Teacher Retirement, Career Education
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Van Ummersen, Claire; Duranleau, Lauren; McLaughlin, Jean – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2013
It has been almost ten years since the American Council on Education (ACE) began to raise awareness of the importance of workplace flexibility in faculty careers and to encourage colleges and universities to support faculty in better integrating their professional and personal lives. With the generous support of the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, ACE…
Descriptors: Teacher Retirement, Family Work Relationship, Work Environment, Transitional Programs
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Kilpatrick, Bob G. – Contemporary Issues in Education Research, 2011
If you're like me, a "senior" faculty member at a public state university facing significant budget cuts, recently you've probably thought about leaving your current position for another faculty position in a different state. A possible reason for considering jumping ship is envisioning a clearer picture of your retirement as it nears on…
Descriptors: Teacher Retirement, Retirement Benefits, Personnel Policy, Preretirement Education
Wheeler, David L. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
With the average age of faculty members going up and the number of students expected to go down, many colleges are encouraging professors to retire. That is not a universal urge--in some regions of the country, like the Southwest, colleges anticipate rising enrollments, and in some disciplines, like nursing, skilled faculty members are in short…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teacher Retirement, College Administration, Personnel Management
June, Audrey Williams – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
This article reports on the University of North Carolina's "phased-retirement" plan, which lets professors formally ease their way into retirement. The challenges of personnel planning in the North Carolina system, made tougher when higher education was stripped of a mandatory retirement age 14 years ago, have lessened because the…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teacher Retirement, College Administration, State Universities
Thornton, Saranna – American Association of University Professors, 2010
Rough financial seas had been buffeting many colleges and universities for years before the recession that began in late 2007. Then in mid-September 2008, an economic tsunami crashed into campuses, challenging their ability to provide the accessible, high-quality education necessary to achieve long-term national goals. As the economy weakened at…
Descriptors: Academic Rank (Professional), Economic Status, College Faculty, Annual Reports
Trachtenberg, Stephen Joel – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Something is wrong with tenure, and one needs to make it right. Abolishing it is not feasible, but it doesn't mean that one shouldn't at least consider changing some of the ways that tenure works. In this article, the author proposes that a better way to change tenure is to offer an implied contract of about 30 years. A 30-year contract would…
Descriptors: Tenure, Academic Freedom, Faculty, College Faculty
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Finch, J. Howard; Allen, Richard S.; Weeks, H. Shelton – Journal of Education for Business, 2010
One of the most important aspects of growing and improving business education is replacing departed faculty members. As the baby-boom generation approaches retirement, the supply of available replacement faculty members is diminishing. The result is a competitive market for replacement faculty that features increasing starting salary levels. In…
Descriptors: Salaries, Labor Market, College Faculty, Teacher Salaries
Krupar, Karen; Cook, Susan L. – Online Submission, 2010
The purpose of this study was to examine the changing demographics among higher education faculty across the country and the impact of these changing demographics on faculty perceptions of assimilation, engagement, and participation in shared governance. Coupled for a review of the secondary survey and demographic data online, the researchers…
Descriptors: Higher Education, College Faculty, Demography, Educational Change
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Golde, Chris M. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2008
The concern that doctoral programs in the arts and sciences do not adequately prepare students for careers as faculty members is hardly a new one, but it has become urgent. Colleges and universities in United States are facing the impending retirement of large numbers of faculty members and need to replace them with qualified professionals, on or…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Doctoral Programs, College Faculty, Faculty Recruitment
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Beidler, Peter G.; Van Vliet, Louise – Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 2008
This article is a revised and abbreviated version of a session that the authors presented at the 25th annual Lilly Conference on College Teaching, November 19, 2005, in Oxford, Ohio. It arose from their joint conviction that while teaching is the greatest job in the world, teachers do not need to stay in it until death do them part. Beidler and…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teacher Retirement, Older Workers, Time Management
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Yakoboski, Paul – Academe, 2007
In 2005, TIAA-CREF sponsored its first-ever "Retirement Confidence Survey of College and University Faculty" to discover the answer to this question: How well are faculty members taking advantage of employer-sponsored pension plans and saving for retirement? An additional objective of the project was to compare the survey's findings for higher…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teacher Retirement, Teacher Surveys, Planning
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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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