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Margolis, Jason – Teachers College Record, 2008
Context: Drawing from Ingersoll's (2001) study of teacher attrition, Huberman's (1989) study of the professional life cycle of teachers, and recent retention/attrition literature across the professions, this study seeks to make sense of the complexities of contemporary teachers' careers in light of changes in social and economic forces, the…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Qualitative Research, Teaching (Occupation), Teacher Persistence
Shakrani, Sharif – Education Policy Center at Michigan State University, 2008
Research studies have documented a strong link between perennial high rates of beginning teacher attrition and teacher shortages that impact teaching, especially in the major urban areas of the United States. It is widely concluded that one of the pivotal causes of inadequate school academic performance is a teacher shortage and the resulting…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Disadvantaged Schools, Teacher Persistence, Academic Achievement
Ladd, Helen F. – National Center for Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Education Research, 2009
This quantitative study uses data from North Carolina to examine the extent to which survey based perceptions of working conditions are predictive of policy-relevant outcomes, independent of other school characteristics such as the demographic mix of the school's students. Working conditions emerge as highly predictive of teachers' stated…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Teacher Surveys, Teacher Attitudes, Statistical Analysis
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Wilkinson, Gayle A. – Research in Comparative and International Education, 2009
The revolving door appropriately describes the attrition among beginning teachers. Especially high attrition plagues our urban schools where highly qualified teachers are most crucial. Even though research over 3 decades has provided the basis for intricate induction programs, not all new teachers experience them. Effective mentoring has provided…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Teacher Persistence, Alternative Teacher Certification, Beginning Teachers
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Nieto, Sonia M. – Educational Leadership, 2003
Case study explores why a group of seven excellent urban high school teachers in Boston Public Schools have stayed in teaching. Finds teachers shared several common characteristics, such as love of teaching, hope and faith in their students, anger at student injustices including racism and poverty. (PKP)
Descriptors: Faculty Mobility, Secondary Education, Teacher Effectiveness, Teacher Persistence
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Edgar, Eugene; Pair, Anne – Teacher Education and Special Education, 2005
Special education teacher attrition has been a major concern for over fifteen years. There have been numerous studies and proposals to explain this problem and suggestions offered for interventions. In general, the studies have reported that approximately 50% of newly certified special education teachers leave the field during the first five years…
Descriptors: Faculty Mobility, Teacher Persistence, Special Education, Special Education Teachers
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Imazeki, J. – Economics of Education Review, 2005
This paper examines teacher labor mobility within and out of the teaching profession. Previous studies of teacher mobility treat attrition as a binary choice where inter-district transfers are grouped with stayers or exits. Either case ignores the possibility that transfer attrition may be influenced by different factors than exit attrition. Using…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Faculty Mobility, Teacher Persistence, Teacher Salaries
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Marvel, John; Lyter, Deanna M.; Peltola, Pia; Strizek, Gregory A.; Morton, Beth A.; Rowland, Renee – National Center for Education Statistics, 2007
The objective of the Teacher Follow-up Survey (TFS) is to provide information about teacher mobility and attrition among elementary and secondary school teachers who teach in grades K-12 in the 50 states and the District of Columbia. In pursuit of this objective, TFS examines the characteristics of those who stay in the teaching profession and…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Secondary School Teachers, Faculty Mobility, Teacher Persistence
Harper, Melinda L. – ProQuest LLC, 2009
U.S. society proposes that all students should have equal opportunities to achieve academically; therefore, urban and rural schools that serve socio-economically disadvantaged students must employ highly qualified teachers who are prepared to teach in those particular school environments. Recruitment practices, teacher preparation programs, and…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Rural Schools, Teacher Effectiveness, Teacher Persistence
Allensworth, Elaine; Ponisciak, Stephen; Mazzeo, Christopher – Consortium on Chicago School Research, 2009
This report reveals that about 100 Chicago schools suffer from chronically high rates of teacher turnover, losing a quarter or more of their teaching staff every year, and many of these schools serve predominantly low-income African American children. In the typical Chicago elementary school, 51 percent of the teachers working in 2002 had left…
Descriptors: African American Children, High Schools, Elementary Schools, Teacher Persistence
Adams, Edgar D. – ProQuest LLC, 2008
The purpose of this study was to determine if there was a significant difference between teachers' perceptions of principals' use of consideration and initiating structure and elementary school student achievement as measured by academic growth according to the results of North Carolina End of Grade tests for reading and math during the school…
Descriptors: Public School Teachers, Teacher Persistence, Statistical Analysis, Grade 5
Center for Comprehensive School Reform and Improvement, 2007
Teacher retention is a persistent issue in school improvement. While it is true that some degree of teacher turnover in schools is both healthy and inevitable, the exodus of large numbers of teachers over time diminishes the capacity of a school to serve its students and creates new problems related to recruiting and inducting new teachers. States…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, Faculty Mobility, Educational Facilities Improvement, Teacher Recruitment
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Wright, Michael D. – Journal of Technology Education, 1991
Responses from 24 of 49 state associations and 32 of 51 state supervisors surveyed identified the following sources of technology teacher dissatisfaction: lack of administrative support, salaries, budget restrictions, and teaching assignments. Administrative practices and professional activities to improve retention were recommended. (SK)
Descriptors: Faculty Mobility, Job Satisfaction, Secondary Education, Secondary School Teachers
Hirsch, Eric; Emerick, Scott – Center for Teaching Quality, 2007
Governor Easley of North Carolina has made a sustained commitment to listening to educators and reforming schools to create the working conditions necessary for student and teacher success. With three iterations of the working conditions survey and about 150,000 responses to critical questions about their workplace, analyses have been consistent…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, Academic Achievement, Educational Change, Faculty Mobility
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Brown, Kathleen M.; Wynn, Susan R. – Journal of School Leadership, 2007
Beginning teachers continue to exit the classroom in alarming numbers, despite numerous recruitment and retention strategies. High teacher turnover rates result in a deficit of quality teachers and instruction; a loss of continuity and commitment; and time, attention, and funds devoted to recruitment versus support. The purpose of this empirical…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, Focus Groups, Leadership Styles, Faculty Mobility
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