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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
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)
Ludger Woessmann – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
The multitude of tasks performed in the labor market requires skills in many dimensions. Traditionally, human capital has been proxied primarily by educational attainment. However, an expanding body of literature highlights the importance of various skill dimensions for success in the labor market. This paper examines the returns to cognitive,…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Job Skills, Employment Potential, Career Readiness
David Blazar; Melinda Adnot; Max Anthenelli; Xinyi Zhong – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
Teacher evaluation systems and their associated incentives have produced fairly mixed results. Our analyses are motivated by theory and descriptive evidence that accountability systems are highly racialized, and that individuals are less likely to respond to incentives when they have low expectations of success (and vice versa). Using a regression…
Descriptors: Teacher Evaluation, Incentives, Expectation, Racial Differences
Michael D. Bloem; Xiaowen Hu; Michael Hurwitz – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
Using the detailed college level data from the College Scorecard on students' post-college earnings from the near universe of four-year colleges, we assess the usefulness of going beyond comparing colleges based only on median earnings and analyze the descriptive relationship between college selectivity and earnings outcomes and how this…
Descriptors: College Graduates, College Admission, Selective Admission, Salary Wage Differentials
Andrew J. Morgan; Minh Nguyen; Eric A. Hanushek; Ben Ost; Steven G. Rivkin – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2023
Efforts to attract and retain effective educators in high poverty public schools have had limited success. Dallas ISD addressed this challenge by using information produced by its evaluation and compensation reforms as the basis for effectiveness-adjusted payments that provided large compensating differentials to attract and retain effective…
Descriptors: Teacher Recruitment, Teacher Persistence, Disadvantaged Schools, Teacher Effectiveness
Gema Zamarro; Andrew Camp; Josh McGee; Taylor Wilson; Miranda Vernon – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
Attracting and retaining high-quality teachers is a pressing policy concern. Increasing teacher salaries and creating more attractive compensation packages are often proposed as a potential solution. Signed into law in March 2023, the LEARNS Act increased Arkansas's minimum teacher salary from $36,000 to $50,000, guaranteed all teachers a minimum…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Faculty Mobility, Labor Turnover, School Districts
Jason Cook; Stéphane Lavertu; Corbin Miller – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2020
We explore how teachers unions affect education production by comparing outcomes between districts allocating new tax revenue amidst collective bargaining negotiations and districts allocating tax revenue well before. Districts facing union pressure increase teacher salaries and benefits, spend down reserves, and experience no student achievement…
Descriptors: Collective Bargaining, Unions, Tax Allocation, Revenue Sharing
Eric Brunner; Joshua Hyman; Andrew Ju – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2018
School finance reforms caused some of the most dramatic increases in intergovernmental aid from states to local governments in U.S. history. We examine whether teachers' unions affected the fraction of reform-induced state aid that passed through to local spending and the allocation of these funds. Districts with strong teachers' unions increased…
Descriptors: Finance Reform, Unions, Resource Allocation, Educational Finance
Jason A. Grissom; Jennifer D. Timmer; Jennifer L. Nelson; Richard S. L. Blissett – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2020
We investigate the male-female gap in principal compensation in state and national data: detailed longitudinal personnel records from the state of Missouri and repeated cross-sections from the nationally representative Schools and Staffing Survey (SASS). In both data sets, we estimate substantively important compensation gaps for school leaders.…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Principals, Salaries, Compensation (Remuneration)
Joshua Bleiberg; Eric Brunner; Erica Harbatkin; Matthew A. Kraft; Matthew G. Springer – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
Federal incentives and requirements under the Obama administration spurred states to adopt major reforms to their teacher evaluation systems. We examine the effects of these reforms on student achievement and attainment at a national scale by exploiting their staggered implementation across states. We find precisely estimated null effects, on…
Descriptors: Teacher Evaluation, Teacher Salaries, Compensation (Remuneration), Incentives