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Schools and Staffing Survey…1
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Nicole J. Britt – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Teacher retention in rural Title I schools has declined drastically over the past several years. As more teachers leave the profession and turnover is climbs to astounding rates in these schools, the quality of education in the United States continues to decline. The purpose of this qualitative phenomenological study was to explore the…
Descriptors: Teaching Experience, Beginning Teachers, Teacher Persistence, Leadership
Porscha Penn-Thomas – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Lacking a union and having a lower salary rating than most of the nation's states, North Carolina has had an increased number of teacher vacancies over the past decade. The problem addressed by this study was the lack of retention of qualified K-6 teachers across the state of North Carolina. The purpose of this qualitative narrative inquiry study…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, Teacher Transfer, Elementary School Teachers, Teacher Attitudes
Elc Estrera; Jonathan Enns; Christopher McCabe; Mark Savage; Lauren Sartain – Wake County Public School System, 2025
Districts across the country are experiencing churn and uncertainty related to school staffing. In 2021, sixteen percent of teachers left their schools (National Center for Education Statistics 2022), and districts have struggled to fill the vacancies. In North Carolina, a survey of school districts identified over 11,000 vacancies that were…
Descriptors: Principals, Administrator Role, Teacher Transfer, Labor Turnover
Michael Bates; Michael Dinerstein; Andrew C. Johnston; Isaac Sorkin – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2022
We study whether reallocating existing teachers across schools within a district can increase student achievement, and what policies would help achieve these gains. Using a model of multi-dimensional value-added, we find meaningful achievement gains from reallocating teachers within a district. Using an estimated equilibrium model of the teacher…
Descriptors: Labor Market, Teacher Supply and Demand, Academic Achievement, School Districts
Gary T. Henry; Erica Harbatkin – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2019
One in five schools loses its principal each year. Despite the prevalence of principal turnover, little empirical research has examined its effects on school outcomes. Because principal turnover may occur in response to or contemporaneous with a downturn in student achievement, the effect of a turnover is confounded with unobserved school-level…
Descriptors: Principals, Labor Turnover, Outcomes of Education, Academic Achievement
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Redding, Christopher; Henry, Gary T. – Educational Researcher, 2018
Teacher turnover occurs during and at the end of the school year, although documentation of within-year turnover currently rests on anecdotal evidence. On average, over 4.6% of teachers turn over during the school year, which amounts to 25% of total annual turnover. Teachers transfer within districts at higher rates at the beginning of the school…
Descriptors: Faculty Mobility, Teacher Transfer, Incidence, Beginning Teachers
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Papay, John P.; Bacher-Hicks, Andrew; Page, Lindsay C.; Marinell, William H. – Educational Researcher, 2017
Substantial teacher turnover poses a challenge to staffing public schools with effective teachers. The scope of the teacher retention challenge across school districts, however, remains poorly defined. Applying consistent data practices and analytical techniques to administrative data sets from 16 urban districts, we document substantial…
Descriptors: Teacher Persistence, Urban Schools, Educational Policy, Urban Teaching
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Loubert, Linda; Nelson, F. Howard – Leadership and Policy in Schools, 2010
It is commonly assumed that urban school districts hire teachers late due to issues related to district size and/or restrictions in collectively bargained teacher contracts affecting teacher hiring and transfers between schools. Our investigation of late teacher hiring and collective bargaining is based on a survey of 40 school districts that…
Descriptors: Teacher Selection, Urban Schools, School Districts, Pacing
Rice, Jennifer King – National Center for Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Education Research, 2010
In education, teacher experience is probably "the" key factor in personnel policies that affect current employees: it is a cornerstone of traditional single-salary schedules; it drives teacher transfer policies that prioritize seniority; and it is commonly considered a major source of inequity across schools and, therefore, a target for…
Descriptors: Salaries, Poverty, Academic Achievement, Teacher Transfer