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Fuesting, Melissa A. – College and University Professional Association for Human Resources, 2023
This report provides a deep dive into higher ed admissions employees, who play a key role in the future sustainability of colleges and universities. In addition to highlighting the pay and size of the admissions workforce, the report focuses on time in position, diversity, and pay equity. Taken together, we find that colleges and universities have…
Descriptors: College Admission, Admissions Officers, Labor Force, Wages
Claire Kovach; Muhammad Maisum Murtaza; Stephen Herzenberg – Keystone Research Center, 2024
As we approach this Labor Day, the Pennsylvania economy is growing steadily. Working families are sharing in prosperity in a more sustained way than at any point since 1980--although many families still struggle to make ends meet and, in our polarized nation, a big partisan divide exists in perceptions of whether the economy is better than four…
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Economic Development, Trend Analysis, Labor Market
Herzenberg, Stephen; Kovach, Claire; Murtaza, Maisum – Keystone Research Center, 2022
The COVID-19 pandemic brought unprecedented economic and policy challenges to the United States and other countries. Navigating out of the pandemic slowdown is another novel experience, which makes it more difficult to answer the question addressed each year in the "State of Working Pennsylvania": How is the Pennsylvania economy…
Descriptors: Economic Development, Wages, Unemployment, Employment Patterns
Emily R. Wiegand; David McQuown; Robert M. Goerge – Administration for Children & Families, 2023
Child care and early education (CCEE) educators typically have low levels of compensation; limited opportunities for education, training, and professional development; inconsistent working conditions; and high levels of stress and burnout. There are also high rates of job turnover, which can strain remaining educators and decrease the quality of…
Descriptors: Child Caregivers, Child Care Centers, Child Care Occupations, Early Childhood Teachers
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Choi, Sun-Ki; Hur, Hyungjo – Education Economics, 2020
This study analyzes college graduates in the workplace to evaluate the effects of horizontal mismatches between education and jobs on wages and mobility. Using the Heckman-Lee and probit models, this study shows that a gender wage gap still exists. However, the size of the gender wage differential depends on the extent of mismatch. Specifically,…
Descriptors: College Graduates, Education Work Relationship, Wages, Labor Turnover
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Todd Hall; Isabelle Fares; Anna J. Markowitz; Kate Miller-Bains; Daphna Bassok – Education Finance and Policy, 2024
Child care teachers support young children's learning and development and parents' ability to work. However, they earn far less and turn over at far higher rates than K-12 teachers. COVID-19 exacerbated staffing challenges, and the child care workforce was 5.9 percent smaller in January 2023 than in January 2020. While low compensation likely…
Descriptors: Child Caregivers, Compensation (Remuneration), COVID-19, Pandemics
Bose, Soumita; Lauderback, Eleanor; Sandstrom, Heather; Kuhns, Catherine; Casas, Michelle – Urban Institute, 2023
In 2021, the DC Council established the Early Childhood Educator Pay Equity Fund ("Pay Equity Fund") to improve compensation for early educators in licensed child development centers and homes. The fund leverages a tax on individuals earning more than $250,000 a year to sustainably fund supplemental payments to early educators in efforts…
Descriptors: Parent Attitudes, Teacher Salaries, Child Care Centers, Early Childhood Teachers
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Abraham, Lisa; Mulhern, Christine; Greer, Lucas – RAND Corporation, 2023
Manufacturing employers often cite challenges to finding and hiring a sufficient number of highly skilled and diverse workers, so it is important to understand how pathways into manufacturing and the retention of manufacturing workers may be improved. The authors of this report address this research gap by examining the pipeline between Ohio's…
Descriptors: Postsecondary Education, Labor Force Development, Education Work Relationship, Labor Supply
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Todd Hall; Isabelle Fares; Anna J. Markowitz; Kate Miller-Bains; Daphna Bassok – Grantee Submission, 2023
Child care teachers support young children's learning and development and parents' ability to work. However, they earn far less and turn over at far higher rates than K-12 teachers. COVID-19 exacerbated staffing challenges, and the child care workforce was 5.3% smaller in January 2023 than in January 2020. While low compensation likely drives…
Descriptors: Child Caregivers, Compensation (Remuneration), COVID-19, Pandemics
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Pettingell, Sandra L.; Houseworth, James; Tichá, Renáta; Kramme, Julie E. D.; Hewitt, Amy S. – Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, 2022
Direct support professionals (DSPs) provide a range of supports in a variety of settings to people with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) who count on these supports to live, work, and contribute in their communities. Despite this, high annual DSP turnover rates are problematic. DSP turnover is disruptive to people who receive…
Descriptors: Incentives, Wages, Caregivers, Intellectual Disability
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Abraham, Lisa; Mulhern, Christine; Greer, Lucas – RAND Corporation, 2023
The U.S. manufacturing industry is experiencing a resurgence and faces a growing need for highly skilled workers. Recent reports project that demand for highly-skilled manufacturing workers will outpace supply in coming years, and this shortage may grow as the U.S. manufacturing industry grows and its labor needs shift. Furthermore, manufacturing…
Descriptors: Skilled Workers, Manufacturing Industry, Labor Supply, Postsecondary Education
Schochet, Owen – Mathematica, 2023
Despite the contributions of their work to the learning and development of young children, child care and early education (CCEE) educators are among the lowest paid workers in the United States and have high rates of turnover in their jobs. In a pioneering effort, Washington, DC has launched the nation's first large-scale, publicly funded program…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Teachers, Teacher Salaries, Public School Teachers, State Programs
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Butson, Michael; Tower, John; Schwarz, Eric C. – Australian Journal of Career Development, 2021
Employee turnover is the loss of talent in the workforce. High employee turnover is expensive and disruptive. Young employees are more likely to leave one job for a better one and are often less attached to an organisation while they are completing their education. The aquatics industry has been described as being in a crisis, experiencing…
Descriptors: Aquatic Sports, Recreational Facilities, Employer Attitudes, Labor Turnover
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Pettingell, Sandra L.; Bershadsky, Julie; Anderson, Lynda Lahti; Hewitt, Amy; Reagan, John; Zhang, Alicia – Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, 2023
Direct support professionals (DSPs) and frontline supervisors (FLSs) have critical roles in home and community-based services for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Low wages and high levels of responsibility created a long-term crisis in recruitment and retention and are exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. A national…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disability, Developmental Disabilities, Allied Health Personnel, Supervisors
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Robert, Catherine – Journal of Education Human Resources, 2022
Clerical staff in the campus office (secretaries and registrars) perform critical functions essential to the operation of schools, yet do not receive research attention regarding their contributions. This study describes turnover rates of K-12 campus clerical employees in order to establish base information in the field. Eight years of employment…
Descriptors: Clerical Workers, School Personnel, Elementary Secondary Education, Labor Turnover
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