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Ryan, Michael P.; Cude, Brenda J. – Journal of Financial Counseling and Planning, 2021
Most private sector employees have access to defined contribution retirement plans while public sector employees often may choose defined benefit or defined contribution plans. This research utilized a survey of faculty to analyze retirement plan satisfaction. Advice from a financial planner was positively associated with satisfaction with…
Descriptors: Risk, Money Management, Retirement, Retirement Benefits
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Salifu, Inusah – Educational Gerontology, 2023
This research examined the decisions of retiring university teachers to continue work after retirement in the same profession or leave for other employment or non-paid activities. The study used a questionnaire to collect data from 231 respondents purposively drawn from 20 Ghanaian public universities. Analyses of the data revealed that most…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Retirement, Decision Making, Career Change
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Loyola-Hernández, Laura; Kahigi, Christine; Wangari-Jones, Peninah; Farrera, Abraham Mena – Educational Review, 2022
Based on in-depth interviews, surveys and autoethnography we explore ways in which staff responded to the COVID-19 pandemic in three Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) based in Kenya (University of Nairobi), Mexico (El Colegio de la Frontera Sur) and the United Kingdom (University of Leeds). HEIs are dependent on staff's resilience and goodwill…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Activism, College Faculty, Cross Cultural Studies
June, Audrey Williams – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
A growing proportion of the nation's professors are at the same point in their career: still working, but with the end of their careers in sight. Their tendency to remain on the job as long as their work is enjoyable--or, during economic downturns, long enough to make sure they have enough money to live on in retirement--has led the professoriate…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Retirement, Expertise, Aging (Individuals)
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Academe, 2011
According to the National Bureau of Economic Research, the Great Recession began in December 2007 and ended in June 2009. With a duration of eighteen months, this recession was almost double the length of the average post-World War II economic downturn. Although the worst recession since the Great Depression is now technically over, this analysis…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Economic Climate, Economic Status, Economic Impact
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Adelman, Saul W.; Cross, Mark L. – Academe, 2007
The Ohio State Teacher Retirement System (STRS) provides retirement, survivor, and disability benefits to public school (K-12) teachers, college and university professors employed by state institutions, and the spouses and eligible dependents of these employees. In doing so, it operates much like other state retirement systems. The money to…
Descriptors: Teacher Retirement, Health Care Costs, Health Insurance, Public School Teachers
White, Gloria W. – Journal of the College and University Personnel Association, 1981
A bridge benefit plan designed to provide an adequate income at age 65 so that faculty and senior administrators at Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri, can choose to retire at an early age, while deferring receipt of their TIAA-CREF annuity benefits during the bridge period, is described. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Financial Needs, Fringe Benefits, Higher Education
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Shapiro, Larry E. – Journal of College and University Law, 1980
Important considerations for institutions wanting to establish supplementary early retirement benefits to encourage the practice are outlined. Regulations concerning pension plans, tax-sheltered annuities, and deferred compensation are reviewed. Individually negotiated early retirement supplements are not recommended. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Federal Legislation, Federal Regulation, Higher Education
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Morrell, Louis R. – Academe, 1992
College and university employees are exposed to considerable risk in the management of their retirement funds, but there are also extraordinary opportunities for careful investors. Colleges should help employees gain knowledge of investing and ensure that a broad range of adequate investment options are available. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Higher Education, Income, Investment
Halperin, Daniel – AAUP Bulletin, 1975
In supporting the principle of equal monthly retirement benefits for women and men faculty, the author examines legal and other questions involved in determining whether separate mortality tables are equitable and whether equal contributions or equal monthly benefits is the proper measure of equality. (JT)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Criteria, Higher Education, Income
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Lewis, W. Cris – Journal of Higher Education, 1996
Retirement programs for college faculty are evaluated in terms of both their wealth-creation attributes and the incentives they provide for retirement. Wealth accumulation and relative cash flow from working compared to retirement are evaluated at various ages under alternative assumptions about rates of return and contribution rates. The nature…
Descriptors: Age Differences, College Faculty, Higher Education, Incentives
Jenny, Hans H.; And Others – 1979
Changes in higher education employee benefit plans brought about by the extension of the mandatory retirement age to 70 are the focus of the monograph. Chapter one summarizes the volume and presents some major recommendations that institutions may find helpful in benefit and personnel planning. Chapter two sketches the meaning of the new law (1978…
Descriptors: Bibliographies, College Faculty, Comparative Analysis, Cost Effectiveness
Jenny, Hans H. – 1981
The adequacy of pension plans for persons retiring from colleges and universities is considered. Data are presented showing that people who retired in the late 1960s and early 1970s from higher education institutions at ages 65 and 68 spent most of their working lives earning less than $10,000 a year. The phenomenon of low pensions in an age of…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Economic Factors, Higher Education, Income
Green, Martin – Business Officer, 1990
A national survey of over 19,000 higher education retirees and 125 colleges and universities investigated the availability of retirement counseling and services, relationship between retiree and institution, timing and reasons for retiring, institutional financial health, sources of retirement income, and retiree insights into important retirement…
Descriptors: College Administration, College Faculty, Counseling Services, Higher Education
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Schoenfeld, Clay – Academe, 1992
A variety of ways in which retired college faculty benefit from social services and commercial and professional perquisites, in addition to retirement income, are discussed. It is proposed that these faculty are benefiting at the expense of their younger colleagues and should in turn participate in volunteer public service. (MSE)
Descriptors: Age Differences, College Faculty, Economic Change, Higher Education
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