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Trend of Teachers' Salaries

Trend of Teachers' Salaries
Author: Don Clifford Rogers
Publisher:
Total Pages: 34
Release: 1923
Genre: Teachers
ISBN:

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Teachers' Salaries and Salary Trends in 1923

Teachers' Salaries and Salary Trends in 1923
Author: National Education Association of the United States. Salary Committee
Publisher:
Total Pages: 124
Release: 1923
Genre: Teachers
ISBN:

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Trends of School Costs

Trends of School Costs
Author: Warren Randolph Burgess
Publisher:
Total Pages: 152
Release: 1920
Genre: Education
ISBN:

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The Teaching Penalty

The Teaching Penalty
Author: Sylvia A. Allegretto
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2008
Genre: Australia
ISBN: 9781932066302

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Unlike the United States, Canada, Australia, and the United Kingdom have developed (3z (Bvalue-added (3y (B immigration policies designed to boost GDP and per-capita incomes. These countries accept the proposition that markets are valuable institutions. But they also recognize that in highly competitive globalized economies, markets untempered by moderating policies and institutions will produce declining real incomes for many or most workers and unsustainable inequalities in income and wealth. In Value-Added Immigration Ray Marshall details how these three major U.S. trading partners developed their immigration policies, how these policies work, and what specific features can be adapted for the creation of a high-value-added U.S. immigration policy. Marshall, professor emeritus at the LBJ School of Public Affairs, University of Texas at Austin, served as secretary of labor in the Carter administration.


Teacher Pay and Teacher Quality

Teacher Pay and Teacher Quality
Author: Dale Ballou
Publisher: W. E. Upjohn Institute
Total Pages: 208
Release: 1997
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

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This book asks whether higher salaries have improved the quality of newly recruited teachers. It reviews data on the characteristics of beginning teachers and shows how important features of the labor market for teachers systematically undermine efforts to improve teacher quality. The text also offers a comparison of personnel policies and staffing patterns in public and private schools, focusing on national trends in teacher recruitment. It discusses ways to measure teacher quality, examines several indicators of quality, such as student achievement and principals' ratings of their staffs, and then uses these findings to assess the evidence on salary growth and teacher recruitment. It looks at what has gone wrong with teacher recruitment and offers an analysis of the operation of the teacher labor market so as to interpret findings. These results are used to review the implications for teacher recruitment of various other reforms of current interest. The text also describes the prospects for reform by examining salary differentiation and rising standards and assesses personnel policies in the private sector to see whether private schools offer a model for reforming public education. This section details teacher quality, working conditions, and compensation policies. The book concludes with a summation of its major points. (Contains an index, approximately 315 references, 12 data tables and 17 figures.) (RJM)


How Does Teacher Pay Compare?

How Does Teacher Pay Compare?
Author: Sylvia A. Allegretto
Publisher:
Total Pages: 72
Release: 2004
Genre: Teachers
ISBN:

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Reviews recent analyses of relative teacher compensation and provides a detailed analysis of trends in the relative weekly pay of elementary and secondary school teachers. Shows that teacher compensation lags that of workers with similar education and experience, as well as that of workers with comparable skill requirements, like accountants, reporters, registered nurses, computer programmers, clergy, personnel officers, and vocational counselors and inspectors. Finds that teachers' weekly wages have grown far more slowly than those for these comparable occupations; teacher wages have deteriorated about 14.8 percent since 1993 and by 12.0 percent since 1983 relative to comparable occupations.