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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
Kathryn Anne Edwards; Lisa Berdie; Jonathan W. Welburn – RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, 2024
Reparations policies that seek to make amends for a harm incurred face exigent challenges. In this article we focus on what makes reparations successful and what policy components are necessary, if not sufficient, for success. To study the success of reparations policy design we employ a case study approach. Our analysis investigates the…
Descriptors: African American History, African Americans, Slavery, Compensation (Remuneration)
Sarah L. Merkle; Justin Ingels; Daniel Jung; Michael Welton; Andrea Tanner; Sharunda Buchanan; Sarah Lee – Journal of School Nursing, 2024
Many school nurses experienced increased work burden and stress during the COVID-19 pandemic. This analysis examined data from a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention cross-sectional, nationwide survey of school nurses in March 2022 to examine associations between school nurses' ability to conduct their core responsibilities and selected…
Descriptors: School Nurses, Responsibility, COVID-19, Pandemics
Kristine A. Miller – Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council, 2023
The National Collegiate Honors Council's "Shared Principles and Practices of Honors Education" (2022) outlines the level of commitment, pedagogical innovation and inclusivity, mentoring, and intellectual leadership that honors programs and colleges expect from their faculty. These high expectations require institutional support…
Descriptors: Honors Curriculum, College Faculty, Professional Recognition, Mentors
Hill, Tanya Kennedy – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Teacher attrition has plagued U.S. schools for decades, causing more and more teachers to leave the classrooms and resulting in a significant teacher shortage. Since 1989, the percentage of teachers leaving the profession has significantly increased. The purpose of this study was to determine if achieving National Board Certification attributes…
Descriptors: Teacher Certification, National Standards, Teacher Persistence, Faculty Mobility
Carly D. Robinson; Katharine Meyer; Chasity Bailey-Fakhoury; Amirpasha Zandieh; Susanna Loeb – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
College students make job decisions without complete information. As a result, they may rely on misleading heuristics ("interesting jobs pay badly") and pursue options misaligned with their goals. We test whether highlighting job characteristics changes decision making. We find increasing the salience of a job's monetary benefits…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Career Choice, Tutoring, Compensation (Remuneration)
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
Sharolyn D. Chitwood – ProQuest LLC, 2024
High teacher turnover and a pervasive teacher shortage has the education industry investigating new ways to attract and retain talent. Texas, specifically, has invested in compensating teachers for performance in hopes of retaining top teachers in the classroom through the Teacher Incentive Allotment (TIA), which was established and authorized by…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, Incentives, Urban Schools, School Districts
Anh Thi Tram Le; Thao Viet Tran; Trang Mai Tran; Thao Huong Phan – SAGE Open, 2024
Scientific research is the important task of lecturers in universities. However, university lecturers often struggle to balance research and teaching and focus more on teaching than research. In addition, the motivation for lecturers to do research is a little. This article surveys lecturers at some universities in Vietnam to find the factors that…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teacher Motivation, Teacher Researchers, Scientific Research
Audrey Simango; Matthew Stadler; Alison Turner – Community Literacy Journal, 2023
In this collaborative essay Audrey Simango, Matthew Stadler, and Alison Turner--Reader/Advisor/Editors (RAEs) at The GOAT PoL--explore the subject of money. Most discussions about money have focused on "debates over compensation" of research subjects (Snow et al. 54), or connections between community writing and well-funded projects,…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition), Writing Research, Educational Finance
Yamuel Perez-Sanchez – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Teachers in Puerto Rico are more than just educators--they serve as mentors and guides and play a significant role in shaping their students' lives as they lead them towards transformative changes. As teachers consider transitioning from their jobs to other objectives outside the academic field, they must prioritize their students' best interests.…
Descriptors: Teacher Retirement, Influences, Compensation (Remuneration), Poverty
O'Sullivan, Margo – Prospects, 2022
We know that learning is in crisis. We know that teachers are key to addressing the crisis. Yet, the significant investments in supporting teachers to improve learning have not enabled improved learning outcomes. This article examines a key reason for this: teacher absenteeism. Poor teacher motivation is highlighted as an explanation for teacher…
Descriptors: Teacher Attendance, Teacher Motivation, Compensation (Remuneration), Incentives
Melissa Arnold Lyon; Matthew A. Kraft; Matthew P. Steinberg – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
The U.S. has witnessed a resurgence of labor activism, with teachers at the forefront. We examine how teacher strikes affect compensation, working conditions, and productivity with an original dataset of 772 teacher strikes generating 48 million student days idle between 2007 and 2023. Using an event study framework, we find that, on average,…
Descriptors: Unions, Strikes, Activism, Compensation (Remuneration)
Goldhaber, Dan; Holden, Kristian L. – Educational Researcher, 2023
How much do teachers value compensation deferred for retirement (CDR)? This question is important because the vast majority of public school teachers are covered by defined benefit pension plans that "backload" a large share of compensation to retirement relative to the compensation structure in the private sector, and there is scant…
Descriptors: Teacher Retirement, Teacher Employment Benefits, Retirement Benefits, Compensation (Remuneration)

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