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Podgursky, Michael; Aud Pendergrass, Susan; Hesla, Kevin – Education Next, 2018
Public school districts are facing twin challenges: maintaining a labor supply of qualified teachers while shoring up the deteriorating system that compensates them. Keeping public-school teachers' pensions plans flush is expensive, and it accounts for a growing share of education spending. In some states, public charter schools provide an…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Innovation, Teacher Retirement, Retirement Benefits
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Ehlert, Mark; Koedel, Cory; Parsons, Eric; Podgursky, Michael – Education Next, 2014
State education agencies and school districts are increasingly using measures based on student test-score growth in their systems for evaluating school and teacher performance. In many cases, these systems inform high-stakes decisions such as which schools to close and which teachers to retain. Performance metrics tied directly to student…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Achievement Rating, Achievement Gap, Achievement Gains
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Koedel, Cory; Ni, Shawn; Podgursky, Michael – Education Next, 2013
It is widely recognized that teacher quality is the central input in school performance. This insight has put human resource and compensation policies, including performance pay, tenure, alternative route recruitment, and mentoring, at center stage in school reform debates. Some school administrators have been innovators and reform leaders in…
Descriptors: School Administration, Teacher Employment Benefits, Retirement Benefits, Personnel Policy
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Costrell, Robert M.; Podgursky, Michael; Weller, Christian – Education Next, 2011
Teacher benefits, once a sleepy question primarily of interest to actuaries, have become a flash point in the education debate. With individual states on the hook for tens or hundreds of millions in unfunded pension and health insurance obligations, state leaders are trying to determine the severity of the situation and the appropriate response.…
Descriptors: Health Insurance, Change Strategies, Retirement Benefits, Personnel Policy
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Costrell, Robert M.; Podgursky, Michael – Education Next, 2010
Teacher pensions consume a substantial portion of school budgets. If relatively generous pensions help attract effective teachers, the expense might be justified. But new evidence suggests that current pension systems, by concentrating benefits on teachers who spend their entire careers in a single state and penalizing mobile teachers, may…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Public School Teachers, Retirement Benefits, Retirement
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Costrell, Robert; Podgursky, Michael – Education Next, 2009
The ongoing global financial crisis is forcing many employers, from General Motors to local general stores, to take a hard look at the costs of the compensation packages they offer employees. For public school systems, this will entail a consideration of fringe benefit costs, which in recent years have become an increasingly important component of…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Public Schools, Fringe Benefits, Teacher Retirement
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Costrell, Robert M.; Podgursky, Michael – Education Next, 2008
Pensions have long been an important part of compensation for teachers in public schools. However, the incentive structures of teacher pension systems are not widely understood, even though they can have powerful effects on the composition of the teaching force and on public finance. In their research, the authors have found that teacher pension…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Income, Retirement Benefits, Educational Finance
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Podgursky, Michael – Education Next, 2006
In the flurry of activity surrounding the implementation of No Child Left Behind's (NCLB) student proficiency mandates, the federal requirement to have a "highly qualified" teacher in every classroom by 2005 seemed like an impossible goal. However, 2005 has come and gone and the highly qualified teacher crisis never happened. In this…
Descriptors: Standards, Federal Legislation, Compensation (Remuneration), Teacher Salaries
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Podgursky, Michael – Education Next, 2003
Uses statistics from the National Center for Education Statistics and the Bureau of Labor Statistics to examine teacher salaries and benefits. Discusses compensation of teachers compared with nonteachers. Asserts that statistics from the American Federation of Teachers and the National Education Association underestimate teacher compensation…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Employment Statistics, Fringe Benefits, Statistical Data