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Andrew Camp – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
The four-day school week is a school calendar that has become increasingly common following the COVID-19 pandemic. Proponents of the calendar often claim that offering teachers a regular 3-day weekend will help schools better retain existing teachers and recruit new teachers to their district without incurring additional costs due to higher…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, Teacher Effectiveness, School Schedules, Faculty Mobility
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Shannon Borum; Peter B. Swanson – Rural Educator, 2025
U.S. schools, including those in rural America, have struggled with a shortage of world language teachers for decades. Using Bandura's framework of self-efficacy teaching languages, the researchers conducted a study using the same methods as an earlier study of rural world language teacher attrition in Georgia. Contrary to those findings, results…
Descriptors: Language Teachers, Second Languages, Rural Schools, Faculty Mobility
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Cordelia Azumi Yates – Critical Questions in Education, 2025
This study examines the relationship between teacher agency, autonomy, and teacher attrition and shortage challenges in U.S. K-12 education. Utilizing a quantitative approach, a survey was carried out to 200 teachers in Iowa, achieving a 52% response rate. Findings indicate a positive correlation between teacher empowerment and reduced attrition…
Descriptors: Professional Autonomy, Faculty Mobility, Teacher Shortage, Elementary Secondary Education
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Leah Natasha Glassow – Journal of Education Policy, 2024
Student performance data is increasingly used to monitor and evaluate teachers. This study examines whether the turnover intentions -- if teachers would change schools given the chance -- of teachers in socioeconomically disadvantaged classrooms are moderated by teacher appraisal practices based on student academic performance data at the school…
Descriptors: Faculty Mobility, Disadvantaged Schools, Teachers, Career Change
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Dan Goldhaber; Cyrus Grout; Kristian L. Holden; Josh B. McGee – Online Submission, 2024
Retirement plans can create strong financial incentives that have important labor market implications, and many states have adopted alternative plan designs that significantly change these incentives. The authors use longitudinal data to investigate the impact of Washington State's 1996 introduction of a hybrid retirement plan on late-career…
Descriptors: Retirement Benefits, Incentives, Faculty Mobility, Teacher Employment Benefits
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Reece Mills; Terri Bourke; Simone White; Martin Mills; Matthew Readette; Lisa van Leent; Craig Wood – Asia-Pacific Journal of Teacher Education, 2025
Career change teachers (CCTs) are heralded in international education policies as key to addressing teacher shortages and increasing quality and diversity in the profession. Using a qualitative approach inspired by Ball's discursive facet of policy enactment, interview responses from 23 Australian teacher educators were examined. The aim was to…
Descriptors: Career Change, Teacher Educators, Foreign Countries, Teacher Shortage
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Xinwei Hong; Lulu Xue; Yue Ma; Hang Fan; Zhengdong Chen; Lipeng Chen – European Journal of Education, 2025
The high turnover rates of primary and secondary school teachers have become a serious problem in many countries, including China. To date, studies on the relationship between harmonious passion and turnover intention amongst primary and secondary school teachers remain scarce. Based on the conservation of resources theory, this study explored the…
Descriptors: Faculty Mobility, Elementary School Teachers, Secondary School Students, Foreign Countries
Josh Lerner; Henry J. Manley; Carolyn Stein; Heidi L. Williams – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2024
University-based scientific research has long been argued to be a central source of commercial innovation and economic growth. Yet at the same time, there have been long-held concerns that many university-based discoveries never realize their potential social benefits. Looking across universities, research and commercialization activities such as…
Descriptors: Commercialization, Institutional Characteristics, Colleges, Research
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Christy Jean Kotze – International Journal of Mentoring and Coaching in Education, 2025
Purpose: Scholars have been sounding the alarm of novice teacher turnover crises for decades. South Africa is soon to be facing an educational catastrophe because of a shortage of experienced teachers. Globally and in South Africa, novice teacher attrition is high, and teachers entering the classroom often described feeling isolated and…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Mentors, Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge
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Erin E. Hamel; Pearl Avari; Holly Hatton-Bowers; Rachel E. Schachter – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2025
Early childhood (EC) teacher turnover is a chronic issue for the field that affects children, teachers, and programs; yet some teachers choose to remain in the profession. We interviewed EC teachers with the goal of identifying salient motivators and challenges to teaching in their EC workplace and the field generally. Teachers reported parts of…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Early Childhood Teachers, Faculty Mobility, Teacher Persistence
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Lautaro Vilches – Higher Education Quarterly, 2025
This study explores how mobile and immobile academics enact research collaborations in Centres of Excellence (CoEs) in the Social Sciences and Humanities (SSH). Modelled on Big Sciences and underpinned by human capital assumptions, CoEs aim to foster both local and international collaborations, driven by academic mobilities. Based on critical…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teacher Researchers, Social Sciences, Humanities
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Allison N. Herman; Tracy Dearth-Wesley; Robert C. Whitaker – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2024
Turnover of early childhood education (ECE) professionals negatively impacts program costs, staff morale, and relationships with children. We determined whether the presence of work as a calling was associated with less intention to leave the ECE field. From an online survey administered to 265 ECE professionals in Pennsylvania, a calling score…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Teachers, Work Attitudes, Career Choice, Faculty Mobility
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Kaitlyn O. Holshouser; T. Scott Holcomb; Adriana L. Medina – Education and Urban Society, 2024
Bronfenbrenner's Ecological Framework was utilized to examine the complexity of the teacher turnover problem in regard to structural inequalities within education that need to be dismantled to create equitable outcomes for all students. Hierarchical cluster analysis was implemented to investigate school report card data of elementary schools in a…
Descriptors: Faculty Mobility, Urban Schools, Rural Schools, Institutional Characteristics
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Zhaohui Yin; Xiaomeng Jiang; Peiru Tong – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2024
Under pressure to establish world-class universities, higher education institutions are competing for high-level talent and developing increasingly strict performance assessment mechanisms, which may cause academic staff turnover and potential talent loss. This study focuses on academic staff turnover in the context of reforms to the Chinese…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Faculty, Faculty Mobility, Personnel Management
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Nazgul Sulaimanova; Erzsébet Csereklye; János Gordon Gyori; László Horváth – European Journal of Higher Education, 2025
Within the framework of the higher education internationalisation agenda, academic mobility has become a prevailing policy pillar in most universities, engaging both students and teaching staff. A growing body of literature investigates students' experiences as the outcome of various mobility programmes. However, the encounters of teaching staff…
Descriptors: Faculty Mobility, Faculty, Foreign Countries, Institutional Characteristics
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