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Jack Stripling – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Private-college presidents often draw scrutiny for their hefty compensation packages, but most of them have a ready comeback: I could make a lot more money in the corporate world. While this statement is surely sometimes true, it is also true that some of the nation's top-paid presidents continue to receive perks that their corporate counterparts…
Descriptors: College Presidents, Compensation (Remuneration), Fringe Benefits, Private Colleges
June, Audrey Williams – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
A growing proportion of the nation's professors are at the same point in their career: still working, but with the end of their careers in sight. Their tendency to remain on the job as long as their work is enjoyable--or, during economic downturns, long enough to make sure they have enough money to live on in retirement--has led the professoriate…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Retirement, Expertise, Aging (Individuals)
Wheeler, David L. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
At colleges, presidents, provosts, and even faculty senates are taking a fresh look at how to manage professors' retirements. A few institutions that have sought to trim their tenured-faculty ranks for other reasons offer early lessons for those institutions that want to encourage retirements. Many institutions are doing just that, using…
Descriptors: Working Hours, Retirement, Governance, College Governing Councils
Lichtenstein, Nelson – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2011
When he was still President Obama's chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, now mayor-elect of Chicago, famously quipped: "Never allow a crisis to go to waste." Republican governors in Wisconsin, New Jersey, Ohio, and other states have certainly taken that advice to heart. By emphasizing, and in some cases manipulating, the red ink flowing through…
Descriptors: Municipalities, Social Class, Private Sector, Collective Bargaining
Wheeler, David L. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
With the average age of faculty members going up and the number of students expected to go down, many colleges are encouraging professors to retire. That is not a universal urge--in some regions of the country, like the Southwest, colleges anticipate rising enrollments, and in some disciplines, like nursing, skilled faculty members are in short…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teacher Retirement, College Administration, Personnel Management
June, Audrey Williams – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
This article reports on the University of North Carolina's "phased-retirement" plan, which lets professors formally ease their way into retirement. The challenges of personnel planning in the North Carolina system, made tougher when higher education was stripped of a mandatory retirement age 14 years ago, have lessened because the…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teacher Retirement, College Administration, State Universities
Dotinga, Randy – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Faculty members and administrators should not assume that their colleges will pick up their medical bills during their retirement. Medicare benefits are not guaranteed that they will remain the same. Experts believe that the Medicare trust fund that pays for retiree hospital care will go bankrupt by 2019. As such, insurance experts are now urging…
Descriptors: Retirement Benefits, Health Insurance, Health Care Costs, College Faculty
Trachtenberg, Stephen Joel – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Something is wrong with tenure, and one needs to make it right. Abolishing it is not feasible, but it doesn't mean that one shouldn't at least consider changing some of the ways that tenure works. In this article, the author proposes that a better way to change tenure is to offer an implied contract of about 30 years. A 30-year contract would…
Descriptors: Tenure, Academic Freedom, Faculty, College Faculty
McCormack, Eugene – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
This article discusses how community colleges respond to the rising number of faculty members who are eligible for retirement. Many faculty members at community colleges are near retirement largely because many of the colleges were created and did the bulk of their hiring between 1965 and 1975, when the first group of baby boomers was entering the…
Descriptors: Retirement, Community Colleges, Teacher Shortage, Baby Boomers
Goldstein, Evan R. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
According to a recent article in The New York Times, the political makeup of academe may be changing. In 2005 more than 54 percent of full-time faculty members in the United States were older than 50, compared with just 22.5 percent in 1969. Patricia Cohen, a reporter for the "Times," couples that with another intriguing fact: Recent studies…
Descriptors: Baby Boomers, Faculty, Retirement, Political Attitudes
Wilson, Robin – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Results of a new survey of family-friendly benefits by the Center for the Education of Women at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor show that stopping the tenure clock has become the most common family-friendly benefit in higher education, following paid maternity leave. Other family-friendly policies that top the list in academe allow…
Descriptors: Family Work Relationship, Fringe Benefits, Personnel Policy, School Surveys
Dotinga, Randy – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
When it came to benefits for employees, higher education used to be at the head of the class. Back in the 1950s, academe was one of the first fields to embrace health-insurance coverage for illnesses that do not require hospitalization, and it later led the way toward long-term disability insurance. Universities and colleges approved…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Employee Assistance Programs, Fringe Benefits, Retirement Benefits
June, Audrey Williams – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Keith Hoeller is an adjunct professor. He teaches philosophy for a living at Green River Community College, just outside Seattle. He has also spent much of the last two decades ruminating about the bigger picture for those at his level of the professorial pecking order. Over the years, Hoeller has lobbied relentlessly for adjunct-friendly…
Descriptors: Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Salary Wage Differentials, Retirement Benefits, Adjunct Faculty