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Economics of Education Review61
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Showing 1 to 15 of 61 results Save | Export
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Goldhaber, Dan; Walch, Joe – Economics of Education Review, 2012
Denver Public Schools utilizes one of the nation's highest profile alternative teacher compensation systems, and a key element of Denver's Professional Compensation System for Teachers (ProComp) is pay for performance. This study analyzes the student achievement implications of ProComp utilizing matched student- and teacher-level data from 2003 to…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Urban Schools, Teacher Salaries, Merit Pay
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Leigh, Andrew – Economics of Education Review, 2012
Can changes in teacher pay encourage more able individuals to enter the teaching profession? So far, studies of the impact of pay on the aptitude distribution of teachers have provided mixed evidence on the extent to which altering teacher salaries represents a feasible solution to the teacher quality problem. One possible reason is that these…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Academic Aptitude, Career Choice, Preservice Teachers
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Woessmann, Ludger – Economics of Education Review, 2011
The general-equilibrium effects of performance-related teacher pay include long-term incentive and teacher-sorting mechanisms that usually elude experimental studies but are captured in cross-country comparisons. Combining country-level performance-pay measures with rich PISA-2003 international achievement micro data, this paper estimates…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Merit Pay, Academic Achievement, Foreign Countries
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West, Kristine Lamm; Mykerezi, Elton – Economics of Education Review, 2011
This study examines the impact that collective bargaining has on multiple dimensions of teacher compensation, including average and starting salaries, early and late returns to experience, returns to graduate degrees, and the incidence of different pay for performance schemes. Using data from the School and Staffing Survey (SASS) and a more recent…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Collective Bargaining, Unions, Compensation (Remuneration)
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Sansani, Shahar – Economics of Education Review, 2011
In this paper I estimate the relationship between school quality and mortality. Although many studies have linked the quantity of education to health outcomes, the effect of school quality on health has yet to be examined. I construct synthetic birth cohorts and relate the quality of education they attained to their mortality rates. I find that…
Descriptors: Educational Quality, Health, Mortality Rate, Teacher Salaries
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Muralidharan, Karthik; Sundararaman, Venkatesh – Economics of Education Review, 2011
The practical viability of performance-based pay programs for teachers depends critically on the extent of support the idea will receive from teachers. We present evidence on teacher opinions with regard to performance-based pay from teacher interviews conducted in the context of an experimental evaluation of a program that provided…
Descriptors: Merit Pay, Teacher Salaries, Teacher Attitudes, Opinions
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Sims, David P. – Economics of Education Review, 2011
Despite a large literature examining the effect of litigation on education finance and student achievement, there is relatively little recent evidence about how extra resources generated by litigation are spent. This paper uses national data to examine the effects of high court finance rulings from 1991 to 2002 on school districts' education…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Educational Finance, School District Spending, Resource Allocation
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Faria, Joao Ricardo; Mixon, Franklin G., Jr.; Salter, Sean P. – Economics of Education Review, 2012
Workplace bullying or mobbing can be defined as the infliction of various forms of abuse (e.g., verbal, emotional, psychological) against a colleague or subordinate by one or more other members of a workplace. Even in the presence of academic tenure, workplace mobbing remains a prevalent issue in academe. This study develops an economic model that…
Descriptors: Bullying, Interprofessional Relationship, College Faculty, Administrators
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Chingos, Matthew M.; West, Martin R. – Economics of Education Review, 2011
We use a unique administrative database from the state of Florida to provide the first evidence that promotion and other job reassignments within school districts are systematically related to differences in teacher effectiveness in raising student achievement. We follow the career paths of a cohort of almost 25,000 classroom teachers during the…
Descriptors: Public Schools, School Districts, Teacher Promotion, Teacher Placement
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Guarino, Cassandra M.; Brown, Abigail B.; Wyse, Adam E. – Economics of Education Review, 2011
This study investigates how school demographics and their interactions with policies affect the mobility behaviors of public school teachers with various human capital characteristics. Using data from North Carolina from 1995 to 2006, it finds that teachers' career stage and human capital investments dominate their decisions to leave public school…
Descriptors: Faculty Mobility, Public School Teachers, Human Capital, Teacher Persistence
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Gilpin, Gregory A. – Economics of Education Review, 2012
This study investigates the relationship between salaries and scholastic aptitude for full-time public high school humanities and mathematics/sciences teachers. For identification, we rely on variation in salaries between adjacent school districts within the same state. The results indicate that teacher aptitude is positively correlated with…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Academic Aptitude, Teacher Characteristics, Public School Teachers
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Goldhaber, Dan; Destler, Katharine; Player, Daniel – Economics of Education Review, 2010
Some scholars and policymakers who are concerned about the inequitable distribution of quality teachers suggest offering financial incentives for working in hard-to-staff schools. Previous studies have estimated compensating differentials using hedonic modeling, an approach potentially undermined by district-wide salary schedules and the lack of…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Teaching Conditions, Incentives, Labor Market
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Gilpin, Gregory A. – Economics of Education Review, 2011
Most empirical teacher attrition research focuses on estimating the effect of either the alternate occupation opportunities or the teacher work environment on teacher attrition. In this paper, we use non-teaching wages of former teachers to estimate the determinants of teacher attrition, including the wage differential between teaching and…
Descriptors: Student Teaching, Wages, Teacher Persistence, Salary Wage Differentials
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Gronberg, Timothy J.; Jansen, Dennis W.; Taylor, Lori L. – Economics of Education Review, 2012
Charters represent an expansion of public school choice, offering free, publicly funded educational alternatives to traditional public schools. One relatively unexplored research question concerning charter schools asks whether charter schools are more efficient suppliers of educational services than are traditional public schools. The potential…
Descriptors: Evidence, Charter Schools, Educational Objectives, School Choice
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Martin, Stephanie M. – Economics of Education Review, 2010
Most public school districts in the United States use a salary schedule to determine compensation for teachers within the district. However, some school districts have implemented incentive pay schemes that allow flexibility at the school or even individual teacher level. These compensation schemes in some ways may more closely approximate a…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Private Schools, Labor Market, School Districts
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