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Harvey, James – Educational Leadership, 2014
The teaching profession in the United States is under assault. A regimen of reforms threatens educators with sanctions under No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top. Pay-for-performance measures are a slap in the face, implying that teachers need financial carrots dangled in front of them to ensure they work hard. And there's also the public…
Descriptors: Educational Quality, Educational Improvement, Teaching (Occupation), Teaching Conditions
Jones, Sherika; Protheroe, Nancy – Educational Research Service, 2011
This "Informed Educator" looks at recent research on teacher opinions about their working conditions to address the question "what matters to teachers?" District and school leaders can use this information to strengthen their efforts to recruit and retain high-quality teachers and, in addition, better support teacher efforts to educate students.…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Teacher Competencies, Teaching Conditions, Job Satisfaction
Lamb, Lindsay M. – Online Submission, 2010
This report summarizes AISD's REACH program teachers' attitudes toward strategic compensation, comparing results from 2008-2009 to 2009-2010.
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Teacher Participation, Teaching Conditions, Teaching Experience
Wells, John – Online Submission, 2011
Policymakers are increasingly adopting "pay-for-performance" policies in which teachers are compensated based on their performance as measured by classroom evaluations and/or student achievement test results. Prior research has produced largely inconclusive findings concerning support among teachers for these policies and their effects…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Quasiexperimental Design, Academic Achievement, Teacher Surveys
Wiegman, John R.; Binnie, David G. – Florida Educational Research and Development Council, Inc. Research Bulletin, 1985
This research bulletin contains parts of two studies dealing with the persistent problem of developing effective teachers and stimulating effective teaching. The study reported in "Attitudes toward Merit Pay for Instructional Personnel" (John Weigman) was conducted to survey, analyze, and compare the attitudes of Florida public school…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Elementary Secondary Education, Expectation, Job Satisfaction
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Bruno, James E. – Elementary School Journal, 1986
Presents an analysis of various compensation and incentive options for staffing educational programs with high-quality teachers, particularly at racially isolated schools. Questions the efficacy of merit pay policies and suggests that non-pecuniary benefits such as improved working conditions and more opportunity for advancement are as important…
Descriptors: Compensation (Remuneration), Educational Improvement, Elementary Secondary Education, Incentives
Newcombe, Ellen – 1983
This paper discusses some of the issues behind the current debate on merit pay for teachers. A brief history is presented of performance-based compensation systems. The difficulties in arriving at a consensus on a valid definition of merit pay are pointed out, and examples are presented of various merit plans, such as master teaching plans, career…
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Career Ladders, Differentiated Staffs, Elementary Secondary Education