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Fish, Wade W.; Stephens, Tammy L. – Remedial and Special Education, 2010
This study identified factors that contributed toward the decision of 57 special educators from one metropolitan region of a southwestern state to initially pursue special education careers in addition to influences that contributed toward their decision to remain on the special education career path. Participants surveyed also provided…
Descriptors: Incentives, Disabilities, Special Needs Students, Attitude Measures
Rice, Suzanne M. – Educational Research for Policy and Practice, 2010
Of the school-level factors that have an impact on student learning, one of the most powerful appears to be the effectiveness of the individual teacher. The most effective teachers are, therefore, one of the most important tools schools and systems have at their disposal to lift the achievement of socio-economically disadvantaged students and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Effectiveness, Disadvantaged Schools, Economically Disadvantaged
Werhan, Carol R. – Journal of Family and Consumer Sciences, 2010
This study explores, within the framework of the literature on men in nontraditional occupations, why men choose to enter the gendered career field of family and consumer sciences (FCS) education and their experiences as FCS teachers. A better understanding of this contemporary phenomenon may facilitate men filling the national shortage of FCS…
Descriptors: Nontraditional Occupations, Family Life Education, Consumer Science, Males
Romanik, Dale – Research Services, Miami-Dade County Public Schools, 2009
Pay-for-performance plans have become popular as school districts search for ways to improve teacher quality and student academic achievement. There is a need to develop systems that are sensitive to the market and are performance based whereby higher performing teachers receive greater financial compensation and recognition. The sense of…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Teacher Effectiveness, Teacher Competencies, Teacher Collaboration
Hancock, Dawson R.; Muller, Ulrich – International Journal of Educational Research, 2009
In the United States and Germany, effective school leadership is pivotal to a school's success. Yet in each country, attracting and retaining qualified school leaders is a formidable challenge. This study compares the influence of possible motivators and inhibitors that impact teachers' decisions to become principals in the two countries. Survey…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Instructional Leadership, Principals, Academic Achievement
Sohn, Kitae – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2009
One neglected aspect of the teacher labor supply is a recent increase in the proportion of minority teachers. Using the Schools and Staffing Survey and the Teacher Follow-up Survey, one can estimate the relationship between workgroup racial diversity and the turnover of White teachers. This approach finds that young White teachers are more likely…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, Minority Group Teachers, Faculty Mobility, Labor Supply
Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation (NJ1), 2010
Created in 2007, the Teaching Fellowship builds on Woodrow Wilson's sixty-five-year commitment to strengthen American education by bringing talented individuals into education careers. The Woodrow Wilson Teaching Fellowship seeks both to recruit and prepare new teachers with outstanding records of achievement and to transform the college and…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Employment Patterns, Teacher Recruitment, Talent
Koenig, Darlene – Teaching Tolerance, 2010
Jodi Fletcher is a teacher on special assignment in curriculum instruction and assessment for Falcon School District 49 in Colorado. Serving about 12,500 students across 16 schools, the district encompasses the northeastern portion of Colorado Springs and the rural area of Falcon. About 30 percent of students in the district are from military…
Descriptors: School Districts, Rural Schools, Immigrants, Social Change
Opfer, Darleen – Educational Administration Quarterly, 2011
Purpose: This study makes a distinction between a school having high attrition and one having difficulties in hiring. It does so by exploring the relationship between definitions of hard-to-staff schools, school demographics, and school conditions that are often associated with a school being hard-to-staff. Research Design: The study relies on a…
Descriptors: Personnel Selection, Organizational Theories, School Culture, Social Exchange Theory
Tellez, Kip – Teaching Education, 2011
In this article I share the results of a seven-year case study of an educator who began his career without formal preservice teacher education, as a participant in Teach for America. Steven (a pseudonym) began teaching mathematics in an urban middle school, later teaching social studies to English language learners, and is currently a principal of…
Descriptors: Teacher Education Programs, Alternative Teacher Certification, Role of Education, Teacher Recruitment
Gappa, Judith M. – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2008
The work of colleges and universities is carried out each day by committed, talented faculty members. The faculty's intellectual capital, taken collectively, is every institution's principal asset. Today, as higher-education institutions are faced with new challenges that only seem to grow more difficult the importance of all faculty members in…
Descriptors: Tenure, College Faculty, Nontenured Faculty, Diversity (Faculty)
Roellke, Christopher; Rice, Jennifer King – Leadership and Policy in Schools, 2008
In this article, we examine how the federal, state, and district policy environments affect the decisions and work of principals and teachers. Specifically, we examine principal and teacher perceptions of policies and practices focused on: (1) increasing the overall supply of qualified teachers; (2) recruiting qualified teachers; (3) distributing…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Federal Legislation, Teacher Qualifications, Principals
Zascavage, Victoria; Schroeder-Steward, Jennifer; Armstrong, Philip; Marrs-Butler, Kelly; Winterman, Kathy; Zascavage, M. L. – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2008
According to the U.S. Department of Education, Office of Special Education Programs (2004), the United States is lacking 41,141 certified special educators. Texas is no exception to the national trend; in Texas alone, there is a shortage of 5,024 certified special educators (U.S. Department of Special Education). Any successful remediation of this…
Descriptors: Special Education Teachers, Teacher Recruitment, Student Recruitment, Special Education
Bubb, Sara; Porritt, Vivienne – Management in Education, 2008
Chartered London Teacher (CLT) status is a unique scheme designed by London Challenge to recognise and reward teachers' achievements and provide a framework for professional development. As well as having the prestige of being a Chartered London Teacher for life, educators receive a one-time payment of 1,000 British pounds from the school budget…
Descriptors: Urban Teaching, Professional Development, Urban Areas, Foreign Countries
Hess, Frederick M. – Journal of Teacher Education, 2009
The state of teaching and teacher education is the result of more than a century of compromises and adjustments demanded by the exigencies of another era. During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the teaching profession was designed to match the rapid expansion of schooling. It relied on a captive pool of inexpensive, educated female labor…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Educational History, Females, Human Capital