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Education Resource Strategies, 2022
As the COVID pandemic has led many Americans to reevaluate the status quo and expand their sense of possibility about new ways to organize work, it's time to reimagine the fundamentals of the teaching job. Reimagining the teaching job demands that leaders at all levels reconsider the ways in which people, time, and money in schools and school…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Teaching (Occupation), Teacher Recruitment, Teacher Salaries
Kevin Proudfoot – Educational Assessment, Evaluation and Accountability, 2024
This article examines a national policy of performance-related pay for teachers in the educational context of England, as understood in relation to the concept of New Public Management. Using a mixed methods approach employing surveys and in-depth interviews, the article considers the perspectives of working teachers, thus engaging directly with…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Attitudes, Teacher Salaries, Personnel Evaluation
Julie M. Cavallario; Thomas R. Campbell; Cailee E. Welch Bacon – Athletic Training Education Journal, 2024
Context: Low salary is a frequently cited reason for attrition from the athletic training profession. Researchers have determined that athletic trainers (ATs) entering the first hiring process, usually newly credentialed graduates of professional athletic training programs (ATPs), are the least likely to negotiate, resulting in lowered earning…
Descriptors: Negotiation Agreements, Lecture Method, Teaching Methods, Athletics
John Roth; Rachel Cooke; William W. Reynolds – Journal of Faculty Development, 2024
Adjunct faculty at colleges and universities in the U.S. are quickly outnumbering full-time faculty. This new faculty majority often struggles with low pay and sub-par working conditions. Recognizing this issue has a number of negative impacts for higher education, researchers at a comprehensive university in the southeastern United States…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Adjunct Faculty, Academic Rank (Professional), Salary Wage Differentials
Megan H. Wickstrom; Christian Lopez-Mercado; Hyunyi Jung – Mathematics Teacher Educator, 2024
Social justice mathematical modeling is powerful in helping teachers build awareness of social issues, critique existing systems, and engage in rich mathematical reasoning. In this article, we document a task in which 28 preservice teachers (PSTs) explored if teacher pay is fair and how to define "fair" mathematically. Through…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Preservice Teacher Education, Mathematical Models, Social Justice
Alvin O. Insorio – International Journal of Research in Education and Science, 2024
The study aimed to investigate the teachers' research characteristics, competencies, motivation, and challenges in conducting research, which served as a basis for developing a research manual. Explanatory sequential design was employed to elicit quantitative and qualitative data. Nine hundred teacher respondents using convenience sampling and…
Descriptors: Teacher Characteristics, Teacher Researchers, Teacher Competencies, Teacher Motivation
Shirin A. Hashim; Mary E. Laski – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
Researchers have posited various theories to explain supposed declines in teaching quality: the expansion of labor market opportunities for women, low relative wages, compressed compensation structures, and substituting quantity for quality. We synthesize these previous theories and expand on the current literature by incorporating a useful…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Labor Market, Labor Force, Teacher Effectiveness
Exit Strategy or Springboard for Career Development? The Case of University Executives' Remuneration
Alice Civera; Erik E. Lehmann; Michele Meoli; Jonah M. Otto; Stefano Paleari – Higher Education Quarterly, 2024
The steady increase of chief executives' compensation in both public and private universities has long been at the centre of public debate and has received a lot of criticism in the UK. As higher education is considered as an industry, a pay for performance relationship is expected. This paper differs by demonstrating that UK Vice Chancellors…
Descriptors: Career Development, Career Change, Salaries, Universities
Lina M. Adwer; Taylor Nelson; Kristy Carlson – Educational Research: Theory and Practice, 2024
The landscape of medical specialty choice is dynamic, undergoing significant changes as students' progress through undergraduate and graduate medical training. These shifts are influenced by various factors, with financial considerations becoming increasingly relevant among medical students' preferences. This study conducts a retrospective…
Descriptors: Physicians, Labor Supply, Primary Health Care, Medical Education
Edward M. Babcock – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The problem addressed in this study was the negative impact salary has on adjunct faculty job satisfaction and under what conditions adjunct faculty experience job satisfaction in higher educational institutions in the United States. The purpose of this study was to explore adjunct faculty attitudes and perceptions of how salary impacts adjunct…
Descriptors: Salaries, Job Satisfaction, College Faculty, Adjunct Faculty
Garver, Karin – National Institute for Early Education Research, 2020
An all too common complaint in the early childhood field is that low salaries for preschool teachers and lack of pay parity with K-12 teachers in the public schools creates serious problems. These include low morale and difficulty recruiting and retaining strong preschool teachers. State policies can contribute to or resolve these problems in…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Teachers, Teacher Salaries, Salary Wage Differentials, Faculty Mobility
Soon, Jan-Jan; Lim, Hock-Eam; Ismail, Russayani – Journal of Education and Work, 2021
The paper compares the worth of public and private university education. We develop a Public-Private University Worth parity index and provide empirical estimations to lend rigour in testing our main hypothesis that the type of university education does not matter in determining salaries and skills' value-added. Using data from a recent…
Descriptors: Salaries, Salary Wage Differentials, Value Added Models, Outcomes of Education
Fuesting, Melissa A.; Schmidt, Anthony – College and University Professional Association for Human Resources, 2021
The skilled craft workforce possesses the in-demand, highly specialized skills that are necessary to maintain and improve campus. However, campus, the heart of many colleges and universities, may be in trouble: The higher ed skilled craft workforce is aging, and there are not enough younger workers to take the place of older employees as they…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Skilled Workers, Labor Force, Aging (Individuals)
Binder, Ariel J.; Dillon, Michaela; Milan, Lynn; Phou, Kelly – National Science Foundation, 2023
The number of college graduates in the United States reached nearly 68.6 million in 2021, of which approximately 68 million had ever held a job, with nearly 52 million currently employed and 16 million not employed. Although the number of employed college graduates increased by 1.2 million (2.5%) between 2019 and 2021, the number of nonemployed…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Employment Patterns, Income
Cory Koedel; Trang Pham – SAGE Open, 2023
We study the conditional gender wage gap among faculty at public research universities in the U.S. We begin by using a cross-sectional dataset from 2016 to replicate the long-standing finding in research that, conditional on rich controls, female faculty earn less than their male colleagues. Next, we construct a data panel to track the evolution…
Descriptors: Wages, Gender Differences, Gender Issues, Faculty