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Journal articles on the topic "Physical education teachers Salaries, etc"

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Ali, Karamat, and Rana Ejaz Ali Khan. "Private Schooling - A Quality Puzzle." LAHORE JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS 7, no. 2 (July 1, 2002): 41–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.35536/lje.2002.v7.i2.a3.

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Primary school enrollment rates in Pakistan are lower than in other countries at the same level of economic development. The proportion of children reaching grade 5 is about half that in Sri Lanka and China and three-quarter that in India. Nationally, the gross primary school ratio is 74, and 101 for boys and 45 for girls. According to the National Education Policy 1992-2002, the target of literacy rate was set at 70 percent by the year 2002, which was achievable besides other measures, by inviting the private sector into education. Now, overall, private education accounts for about 10-12 percent of gross enrollments. The government of Pakistan has established a goal of universal primary enrollment by the year 2006. In the present study the quality characteristics of private schooling are discussed, i.e. qualitative aspects of schools, physical infrastructure of schools, teachers’ qualification and salaries, and fee, dropout rate, and repletion rate of the students, etc.
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Nurieva, L. M., and S. G. Kiselev. "Workload and salary as determinants of pedagogical graduates’ employment by occupation." Education and science journal 23, no. 10 (December 15, 2021): 100–128. http://dx.doi.org/10.17853/1994-5639-2021-10-100-128.

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Introduction. The problem of the effectiveness of the pedagogical education system remains one of the most discussed topics in modern professional discourse. A large proportion of leaders of the educational industry and representatives of the expert community are convinced that graduates of pedagogical universities and colleges are not sufficiently prepared for independent professional activity and deflect from work in their field. The refusal of graduates to be employed by occupation is associated mainly with the poor quality of students’ practical training in universities. Criticising the low attendance rates of young professionals in schools, analysts often ignore the conditions of employment in educational institutions. Meanwhile, the appearance of a new form of statistical observation of OO-1 and OO-2 on open access makes it possible not only to track the results of employment of graduates of the vocational education system in schools across the country, but also to compare them with the conditions for hiring: the current workload on staff and the level of teachers’ salaries.The aim of the present research was to find the dependence of the results of pedagogical graduates’ employment by occupation on the conditions of employment in schools: the level of teachers’ salaries and workload in the regions of Russia.Methodology and research methods. The research methodological framework is a structural approach based on applied research procedures (observation, description, comparison, counting, measurement, modelling, etc.), according to which general scientific (comparative, retrospective analysis, systematisation, generalisation) and statistical research methods (statistical and correlation analysis, etc.) were employed. The analysis of official documents of educational authorities of different levels and educational institutions, scientific publications and forms of federal statistical observation of OO-1 and OO-2 was conducted. The processing of regional educational statistics was carried out using the Online Analytical Processing technology, which makes it possible to obtain OLAP cubes and form analytical slices in accordance with emerging research tasks. The slices were studied in detail using the Analysis ToolPak addin procedures and the statistical functions of the Excel library. In the course of the analysis, the authors performed the calculation of measures of the statistical relationship between the studied variables and their graphic visualisation.Results. This study established a high level of pedagogical labour market segmentation by territorial and qualification-age criteria of employees. The effects of influence on the part of state and public institutions and practices, leading to systematic discrimination of certain groups of educators, were revealed. Regional data provide the examples of discrimination against young teachers in remuneration, both in the process of employment due to the lack of qualification grades, and in the process of work, as a consequence of the inaccessibility to payments from the incentive part of the salary fund of schools. It is shown that the improvement of the results of pedagogical graduates’ employment by occupation is related to the improvement of the wage system, increasing the base rates and reducing the intra-industry differentiation of earnings among workers of different ages.Practical significance. The authors are convinced that this article will clarify the approaches for adjusting the mechanism for distributing the wages fund of schools, develop measures to attract young people to teaching and ensure the elimination of the shortage of personnel in the education system.
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Podstawski, Robert, Marta Żurawik, Krzysztof Borysławski, Aneta Anna Omelan, and Anatolii Tsos. "Working conditions of physical education teachers in European higher education institutions." Physical Activity Review 10, no. 2 (2022): 111–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.16926/par.2022.10.26.

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Aim: One of the problems of modern higher education is the so-called "New core curricula", which oblige PE teachers to make many changes in the way they work. PE teachers face several restrictions to provide PE programs that improve students' physical fitness, cognitive development, and overall health. The research aimed to investigate the working conditions of university PE teachers in selected European tertiary institutions. Materials and Methods: The quantitative research employed purposive sampling. Five academics volunteered to collect information on 66 European tertiary institutions located in Poland, Slovakia, Serbia, Hungary, Czech Republic, Slovenia, Turkey, Spain, Montenegro, Croatia, Bosnia & Hercegovina, Finland and Kosovo. Quantitative data were collected using questionnaires with a set of questions concerning characteristics of tertiary institutions and various aspects of working conditions of university PE teachers. Results: Two thirds of the university PE teachers held master's degree in PE since in over 42% of surveyed institutions, a master's degree in physical education was required to conduct PE classes. The majority of PE teachers (84.4%) were employed full-time, and on average worked 38.6 days in an academic year. Significantly more PE teachers with masters and doctoral degrees (p = 0.012) were employed full-time, or fixed term in public, middle size HEIs (p <0.001). In HEIs in cities with less than 500,000 residents, PE teachers were more often encouraged for participation in CPD (p = 0.049). Significantly more public HEIs fully or partially covered the costs of CPD or conferences (p <0.001), whereas in non-public or small HEIs significantly more PE teachers had to finance the costs of CPD. Moreover, significantly more (p =0.037) universities implemented specific PE teachers’ evaluation criteria with a personal record of their achievements. Conclusion: There is a pressing need to improve qualifications of university PE teachers, as many European HEIs do not support PE teachers in CPD. Furthermore, lack of CPD opportunities, low salaries and lack of career promotion perspectives combined with lower psychological resilience, may result in professional burnout syndrome.
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Maksimović, Jasna, Branka Jablan, and Špela Golubović. "Inclusion in physical education and sport." Zbornik radova Pedagoskog fakulteta Uzice, no. 24 (2022): 191–206. http://dx.doi.org/10.5937/zrpfu2224191m.

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There is an international consensus that physical activity and sport can be used as strategies for social inclusion, as well as that people with disabilities have the capacity to participate in these activities. However, interventions based on physical activity and sport and their processes that can influence inclusive outcomes are yet to be continuously and comprehensively investigated. The aim of this paper is to point out the problems and perspectives of the development of inclusive physical education and sport by providing an overview of scientific production sources from international scientific conferences, scientific journals in the field of sports and social sciences, as well as reference literature. Data were collected by reviewing available print sources and electronic databases suh asERIC, JSTOR, and Google Scholar etc., using relevant keywords. The results indicate that there are several factors which influence physical education and its teaching methods in an inclusive educational context (attitudes of students and teachers, teachers' competencies, approachability, etc.), and that inclusion in sport is dependent on both personal (nature of the disability, health, motivation, etc.) and social environment factors (accessibility, creating and implementing planned physical activities adapted for students with disabilities, etc.).
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Roshchina, Natal’ya V. "Psychological barriers and resources of professional development of future physical education teachers." Vestnik of Kostroma State University. Series: Pedagogy. Psychology. Sociokinetics 26, no. 4 (February 24, 2021): 161–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.34216/2073-1426-2020-26-4-161-165.

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This article examines the psychological barriers of the personality that prevent the development of professionalism of the future physical culture teacher. An analysis of scientific views on the phenomenon of “psychological barrier” is presented, a working definition of this concept is formulated, the results of an empirical study conducted on a sample of students of Kostroma State University (n = 120) are presented, representing the main barriers to professionalisation and the resources to overcome them. It has been established that for future physical education teachers at the initial courses of study, the dominant external psychological barriers to professionalisation include lack of time, misunderstanding from peers, criticism from others. Senior students, more immersed in their future profession, also noted the abundance of documentation, tough competition in professional activities, and low salaries as external barriers. The dominant internal barriers to professional development for future physical education teachers are laziness, lack of experience, destructive emotions, frivolous attitude to the profession, fear of their own psychological and pedagogical incompetency, and shyness. The students named readiness for self-development, willpower, perseverance, social activity, sense of humour as the main mental resources for overcoming psychological barriers. Social resources are the effective work of university pedagogues, communication with friends, the help of a coach, family support, advice from experienced people, sports, and special literature.
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Karczewska, Wiktoria. "Expenditure on education and physical culture in the commune of Skulsk and Wilczyn in 2015-2018. Comparative analysis." Journal of Education, Health and Sport 11, no. 6 (June 30, 2021): 284–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.12775/jehs.2021.11.06.031.

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According to the Constitution of the Republic of Poland of 1997, a commune is the basic unit of local self-government. The commune realizes its own tasks and commissioned tasks, and its aim is cater to local residents needs. In both analyzed communes, the main source of expenditure were own tasks. In the balance sheet, the education department had the biggest share in the expenditure of both communes. In particular, these are expenses for kindergartens, primary schools, lower secondary schools and teachers' salaries. Expenditure on physical culture does not significantly affect the balance sheet of communes.
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Nemčíková, Magdaléna, Zuzana Rampašeková, Hilda Kramáreková, and Alena Dubcová. "Specifics of Geography Teacher Training at the Faculty of Natural Sciences Constantine the Philosopher University in Nitra." Annales Universitatis Paedagogicae Cracoviensis Studia Geographica 12 (December 1, 2018): 140–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.24917/20845456.12.11.

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The Slovak education is currently experiencing a turbulent period associated with ongoing efforts to reform the education system, under-funding of education with low teacher salaries, overworked and feminized teaching staff, low social status of a teacher in society, problems in the creation and distribution of current textbooks, insufficient interest in studying natural sciences, leaving of young people to study abroad, etc. This situation is also reflected in the training of future teachers including the geography teachers (in combination with other subjects). The aim of this study is to provide basic information on the development of future geography teacher education in Nitra, which has almost a 60-year tradition. Moreover, it characterizes the current state of this education in the context of the subject field didactics and pedagogical practice and identifies the challenges of their future preparation. Methods of text analysis, information comparison, and statistical processing of quantitative information were used in this study. Key findings include the dynamics of the number of graduates from geography teaching study programs, responding to the situation in education system and demographic decline in the population, and reduction of contact lessons at the university leading to a reduction in the professional and didactic extent of knowledge and skills of future teachers. The most important conclusions or recommendations as well as scientific contribution concern the necessity to change the attitude of teachers towards the practically oriented teaching with stronger emphasis on training students’ creativity not only through ICT, but also using creative and critical thinking strategies.
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Koriakina, I. V., A. A. Kovalchuk, O. P. Shvets, and А. А. Dyachenco. "Preparation of future teachers for the modern technologies in physical education." (Scientific Journal of National Pedagogical Dragomanov University Series 15 Scientific and pedagogical problems of physical culture (physical culture and sports), no. 2(130) (February 22, 2021): 67–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.31392/npu-nc.series15.2021.2(130).15.

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Most experts recommend as an alternative to traditional approaches to physical education of preschoolers, to use the modern pedagogical technologies, among which preference is given to various fitness directions, in particular, step aerobics, fitball aerobics, aqua aerobics, the use of modern multimedia in the educational process, innovative methods, etc. The purpose of the study is to substantiate the main recommendations of implementation the modern pedagogical technologies in physical education of preschool children for future teachers. In the process of physical education with preschoolers, the teacher must solve educational and health tasks. For the health effects of fitball-aerobics on the body of preschool children, the teacher must to follow the basic principles of physical education, select the optimal characteristics of the equipment (size, color, elasticity of fitballs) taking into account the age of children, rationally dose the load. One of the promising health technologies for the development of motor skills of older preschoolers is step aerobics. Particular attention should be paid to the selection of musical accompaniment, use the game form of step aerobics, imitation exercises, select different forms for classes, etc., taking into account the age of children. In the process of tourism, it is important to interest children in the use of new equipment for them, a certain story (for example, treasure hunt), the use of interactive methods, game forms and more. To solve educational tasks, focus attention of preschoolers to the need for mutual assistance, discipline, courage, and so on. The outlined recommendations should be used in the process of preparing future teachers for the implementation the modern pedagogical technologies in physical education with preschool children.
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Dar, Iqbal, and Sangeeta Gupta. "EFFECT OF IN-SERVICE TRAINING ON THE ATTITUDE OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION TEACHERS." International Journal of Advanced Research 9, no. 08 (August 31, 2021): 208–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.21474/ijar01/13251.

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The need for in-service training of physical education teachers cannot be underestimated. It is a necessity in enhancing work performance and motivation of teachers in their field. Absence of in-service training of physical education teachers will retard professional growth of teachers as well as missing gaps between demands and actual achievement levels. In-service training allows for such activities that may include seminars, workshops, conferences, classes, exhibitions etc that are designed to develop and improve employees in an organization from the initial employment stage to retirement. From the foregoing, it becomes imperative that every attention should be devoted to the in service training of physical education teachers to promote their professional growth and development. Therefore, the focus of this paper is to have an overview and problems of in-service training of physical education teachers in Kulgam, Jammu Kashmir. Finally, relevant suggestions were put forward to achieve a better staff development programme aimed at helping teachers to update their knowledge, expertise, skills and competence in the teaching profession.
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Moseychuk, Yu, and O. Tsybanyuk. "European experience in training physical education teachers to work individually with students." Scientific Journal of National Pedagogical Dragomanov University. Series 15. Scientific and pedagogical problems of physical culture (physical culture and sports), no. 6(151) (June 29, 2022): 102–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.31392/npu-nc.series15.2022.6(151).22.

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An analysis of the training of specialists in the field of physical education in different European countries. The authors singled out the common and general features of this process, identified problems and ways to solve them, in particular in a particular educational institution. The article proves that various aspects of the personnel problem are relevant also because the current requirements for the personality of a physical education teacher, the content of the subject, the attitude to it by teachers, parents, community, etc. are on time. Thus, the article recognizes that in addition to the main tasks to be solved in physical education lessons (promoting harmonious physical and mental development; meeting the needs of physical activity; general personality development; mastering popular sports, strengthening physical health, etc.), students get acquainted with the environment, nature, rules of social behavior, the ability to act in a community is formed. The solution of such tasks is achieved, in particular through the implementation of interdisciplinary and individual approaches to physical education lessons. Analysis of scientific and methodological and special literature on the individualization of the process of physical education of schoolchildren showed that despite the similarity of views of many scientists on this topic, taking into account the individual characteristics of students in physical education, it is not always realized in the educational process. It should be noted that there is another opinion on the individualization of school physical education.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Physical education teachers Salaries, etc"

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Howe, James D. "A national assessment of the salaries and working conditions of agricultural education teachers in the United States, 1990-1991." Diss., Virginia Tech, 1992. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/39836.

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The purpose of the study was to determine the salaries and working conditions of agricultural education teachers in the United States. To accomplish this purpose the following objectives were identified: 1. To determine the demographic characteristics of agricultural education teachers. 2. To determine the salaries, salary supplements, and monetary fringe benefits of agricultural education teachers. 3. To determine the nonmonetary benefits of agricultural education teachers. 4. To determine the major instructional and noninstructional responsibilities of agricultural education teachers. 5. To describe the work settings and working conditions in which agricultural education teachers are employed. 6. To determine the work loads of agricultural education teachers. Most agricultural education teachers reported receiving health insurance benefits. However, only a small percentage (14.7%) of respondents reported receiving fully paid health insurance for themselves and their families. In addition, fewer than one-half (41.4%) of the agricultural education teachers reported receiving fully paid major medical insurance, eye care (13.1%), dental care (20.5%), and life insurance (35.3%). Production agriculture and agricultural mechanics remain the predominant subjects taught by agricultural education teachers. However, a majority of agricultural education teachers also reported teaching agriscience. Although only a small percentage (18.8%) of agricultural education teachers advised Young Farmer chapters, most (95.8%) advised FFA chapters. Nearly all (98.4%) agricultural education teachers classified their employment status as full-time. Typically, agricultural education teachers were mployed a mean 11.3 months per year. Most (69.5%) agricultural education teachers were employed in comprehensive high schools with a mean student population of 662.4 students. Agricultural education teachers reported a mean of 6.7 periods in a typical school day and teaching load of 5.2 instructional periods per day. Nearly three-fourths of the respondents reported having one period per day allotted for planning, student visitations, or student conferences.
Ed. D.
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Armstrong, Paula Louise. "Teachers in the South African education system : an economic perspective." Thesis, Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/96998.

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Thesis PhD)--Stellenbosch University, 2015.
ENGLISH ABSTRACT: ABSTRACT Chapter 1 investigates teacher wages in the South African labour market, in order to ascertain whether teaching is a financially attractive profession, and whether high ability individuals are likely to be attracted to the teaching force. Making use of labour force survey data for the years 2000 to 2007 and for 2010, wage returns to educational attainment and experience are measured for teachers, non-teachers and non-teaching professionals. The returns to higher levels of education for teachers are significantly lower than for non-teachers and non-teaching professionals. Similarly, the age-wage profile for teachers is significantly flatter than it is for non-teachers, indicating that there is little wage incentive to remain in teaching beyond roughly 12 years. The profession is therefore unlikely to attract high ability individuals who are able to collect attractive remuneration elsewhere in the labour market. Chapter 2 deals with explicit teacher incentives in education. It provides a technical analysis of Holstrom and Milgrom’s (1991) multitasking model and Kandel and Lazear’s (1992) model of peer pressure as an incentivising force, highlighting aspects of these models that are necessary to ensure that incentive systems operate successfully. The chapter provides an overview of incentive systems internationally, discussing elements of various systems that may be useful in a South African setting. The prospects for the introduction of incentives in South Africa are discussed, with the conclusion that the systems in place at the moment are not conducive to introducing teacher incentives. There are however models in Chile and Brazil, for example, that may work effectively in a South African setting, given their explicit handling of inequality within the education system. Chapter 3 makes use of hierarchical linear modelling to investigate which teacher characteristics impact significantly on student performance. Using data from the SACMEQ III study of 2007, an interesting and potentially important finding is that younger teachers are better able to improve the mean mathematics performance of their students. Furthermore, younger teachers themselves perform better on subject tests than do their older counterparts. Changes in teacher education in the late 1990s and early 2000s may explain the differences in the performance of younger teachers relative to their older counterparts. However, further investigation is required to fully understand these differences.
AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: In Hoofstuk 1 word die lone van onderwysers in die Suid-Afrikaanse arbeidsmark ondersoek om vas te stel of onderwys ʼn finansieel aantreklike beroep is en hoe waarskynlik dit is dat mense met sterk vermoëns na die onderwys gelok sal word. Met gebruik van arbeidsmagopnamedata van 2000 tot 2007 en van 2010 word die loonopbrengs op jare onderwys en ervaring vir onderwysers, nie-onderwysers en beroepslui buite die onderwys gemeet. Die opbrengste vir hoër vlakke van opvoeding is beduidend laer vir onderwysers as vir nie-onderwysers en nie-onderwys beroepslui. Netso is die ouderdom-loonprofiel van onderwysers beduidend platter as vir nie-onderwysers, wat dui op weinig looninsentief om langer as ongeveer 12 jaar in die onderwysveld te bly. Dit is dus onwaarskynlik dat hierdie beroep baie bekwame mense sal lok wat elders in die arbeidsmark goed sou kon verdien. In Hoofstuk 2 word na eksplisiete insentiewe in die onderwys gekyk. Die hoofstuk verskaf ʼn tegniese analise van die multi-taak-model van Holstrom en Milgrom (1991) en van Kandel en Lazear (1992) se model van portuur-druk as aansporingskrag, met klem op die aspekte van hierdie modelle wat in Suid-Afrikaanse omstandighede van nut mag wees. Vooruitsigte vir die instelling van insentiewe in Suid-Afrika word bespreek, met die slotsom dat die stelsels wat tans in plek is nie bevorderlik vir die instelling van onderwysersinsentiewe is nie. Daar is egter modelle in byvoorbeeld Chili en Brasilië wat effektief in Suid-Afrikaanse omstandighede sou kon funksioneer, gegewe hulle eksplisiete klem op ongelykheid binne die onderwys. In Hoofstuk 3 word hiërargiese liniêre programmering gebruik om te ondersoek watter eienskappe van onderwysers ʼn belangrike invloed op studenteprestasie uitoefen. Met gebruik van data van die SACMEQ III studie van 2007 is ʼn interessante bevinding dat jonger onderwysers beter in staat is om die gemiddelde wiskunde prestasie van hulle student te verbeter. Verder vertoon sulke jonger onderwysers self ook beter in die vaktoetse in Wiskunde en taal as hulle ouer kollegas. Veranderings in onderwysopleiding in die laat negentigerjare en vroeë jare van hierdie eeu kan dalk die verskille in die vertonings van jonger onderwysers relatief tot hulle ouer eweknieë verklaar. Verdere ondersoek is egter nodig om hierdie verskille beter te verstaan.
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Barker, Edlow Garrett. "A cost-benefit anaylsis of investment in graduate education by Virginia public school teachers." Diss., Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 1987. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/74748.

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Public school teachers have, with few exceptions, invested four or more years in higher education to prepare themselves for the teaching profession. These four years of college education can be viewed as an investment when one realizes that the teacher had to pay for that education and could have otherwise been earning an income during that time. Some teachers make an additional investment in education by earning a master's degree or a doctorate. This study looked at the practice of teachers in Virginia who decide to make the additional investment in graduate education at selected Virginia institutions of higher education. This study used econometric methods to analyze this investment in graduate education. Social benefits and costs of education were not included in the study. Private costs included both direct and indirect acquisition costs. The salary supplements paid by school divisions to teachers who hold an advanced degree were used as the private benefits. Non-pecuniary benefits were not included in the study. Net present valuation, discounted benefits and costs, benefit-cost ratio, and internal rate of return calculations were made. Data from similar studies done in other areas of graduate study and in other areas of the nation and world were reviewed. The purpose of the study was to review the practice of all school divisions in Virginia which provide a salary supplement to teachers who hold a master's degree or a doctorate, and also to analyze the costs involved in the acquisition of such degrees. The cost-benefit analysis of the teachers' investment in graduate education provides information which can be used by teachers who are considering such an investment. The analysis can also be used by those school divisions which are currently spending considerable amounts of money for such salary supplements. The cost-benefit analysis of acquiring a master's degree with a subsequent change from the classroom to an administrative position has implications for school divisions and state level policy makers.
Ed. D.
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Gasant, Mogamad Waheeb. "Teacher responses to rationalisation in the Western Cape Education Department : implications for administration planning and policy." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 1998. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/17525.

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Bibliography: pages 72-78.
Apart from its current application in the process of transformation of South Africa's education system, interestingly, the term rationalisation is absent from the international literature. The high level of impact that the economics of education has in the provision of education presupposes that, in the "Global Village", world trends and access to international financial markets to fund transformation in education will inform the national policy making process. In South Africa macro education policy is set by the National ministry. In this regard teacher I learner ratios and funding to the provinces have been set at the highest level of government. In terms of this, it is understandable that national imperatives will influence and in many cases determine provincial policy making and the implementation thereof. This study examines educator responses to the way in which the rationalisation of teacher numbers is being applied in the Western Cape Education Department (WCED). The investigation takes into cognisance the particular historical, political and social background of the Western Cape Province. In doing so this study recognises the influence that these factors have had on the way teachers view the rationalisation policies and, more importantly, their implementation. In the apartheid era education was organised, according to "race", into four different departments. Thus the Department of Education (DET) controlled "Black" education, the Cape Education Department (CED) controlled "White" education, the House of Representatives (HOR) controlled "Coloured" education and the House of Delegates (HOD) was responsible for "Indian" education. Since the number of HOD teachers in the WCED only constitutes 0,47% of the total [WCED, November 1995], they were not taken into consideration for this study. While there is a convergence of opinion by educators of the three ex departments on many issues regarding rationalisation there is also a noticeable divergence underpinned by historical difference in funding and human and physical resourcing. Conclusions drawn point to the fact that there is a general acceptance of the policy of the rationalisation of teacher numbers in the Western Cape. Yet, while this policy might promote equality of numbers, its merit as a means to assuage the demand for the equitable redressing of the injustices of the apartheid era remains questionable.
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Bartell, Carol A. "Role-related interests and perceptions of a teacher incentive program: case studies of three elementary schools." Diss., Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 1985. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/53541.

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This study investigated the nature and impact of role-related interests on an attempt at organizational change in the school context. The change effort was an attempt to impose new teacher evaluation procedures in three elementary schools during the conduct of a pilot project. These schools implemented teacher evaluation procedures that were designed as a component of a teacher incentive program. A conceptual model guided this research. The expectation was that role-related interests would have a direct effect on the various actors' perceptions of the teacher evaluation plan. The model presented other factors that would tend to intervene between the actor's role-related interests and perceptions of the plan. These potential intervening variables were defined as: (1) experiences during the pilot, (2) interpersonal relations, and (3) assignment of ratings. The research questions for this study were defined as follows: 1. What are the role-related interests of the key actors at the school building level in the implementation of the pilot plan? 2. How are these interests related to perceptions of the plan? 3. How are perceptions of the plan influenced by experiences that occur during the pilot program? 4. How are perceptions of the plan influenced by interpersonal relations existing between key actors and significant others during the pilot program? 5. How are perceptions of the plan influenced by the actual process of assigning ratings to teachers? A multiple-case design and multiple data gathering methods were employed in addressing the problem from an organizational perspective. Collection of data was begun in the fall of 1984 and completed in the spring of 1985, spanning the duration of the pilot project, which was one school year. Data were collected through interviews, observations, and document analysis. Role-related interests were found to be related to overall initial perceptions of the plan. Those who perceived positive impacts on their own satisfactions and needs were more likely to be positively disposed toward the plan in general and more likely to feel that the plan would achieve its intended goals. The relationship between role-related interests and plan perceptions was influenced by experiences during the pilot and interpersonal relations. A change in perceptions of the plan over time was found to be related to the process of assigning ratings to teachers and to the leadership of the principal.
Ed. D.
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Maldonado, José F. "A national analysis of faculty salary and benefits in public community colleges, academic year 2003-2004." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2006. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc5451/.

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This study provides a detailed description of full-time faculty salary and fringe benefits in US public community colleges by state and by 2005 Carnegie basic classification type for the academic year 2003-2004. This classification is used to analyze data from the National Center for Education Statistics' Integrated Postsecondary Educational Data System (IPEDS). Further analysis clusters states into the following groupings: states with/without collective bargaining agreements, states with/without local appropriations, large megastates versus nonmegastates (using the methodology developed by Grapevine at Illinois State University), and the impact of California on the nation's salaries and fringe benefits. The analysis showed high level of variation of salaries paid by the type of community college (rural, suburban, and urban serving) in the US. The nation's average salary for full-time faculty was $52,598. Rural serving small institutions faculty salary was $18,754 or 45 % less than the nation's average. Salaries in colleges with collective bargaining agreement were higher than in colleges without collective bargaining agreements. Faculty teaching in suburban serving colleges with local taxation had the highest salaries, $61,822 within colleges with access to local support. Suburban serving multiple colleges in megastates had the highest faculty salary average, $64,540 as compared to $42,263 for rural serving colleges in non-megastates. California may be a state with a very high cost of living; however, that does not diminish the fact that community college faculty are among the highest paid faculty in the nation. Colleges with collective bargaining agreements, with local appropriations, and in megastates, tended to have better benefits packages for their faculty. This study includes recommendations for further research, including a recommendation that a quantitative statistical analysis be undertaken to show statistical significance in salaries and fringe benefits among collective and non-collective bargaining states, a study addressing the faculty and leadership challenges that community colleges will be facing soon should be done, and that a similar study be done that includes tribal colleges.
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Miller, Donna W. "The impact of teacher incentive pay programs on the learning gains of low-performing middle school students." Doctoral diss., University of Central Florida, 2010. http://digital.library.ucf.edu/cdm/ref/collection/ETD/id/4668.

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President Barack Obama committed hundreds of millions of dollars to the Teacher Incentive Fund (TIF), yet a few fundamental questions remain unanswered--was the federal program effective? Did student test scores improve? Since the late 19th century, teachers have been paid for their classroom services regardless of how well--or poorly--their students performed. Nearly a century later, advocates of education reform continue to champion teacher compensation policies that link salary to student achievement. Researchers have identified two motivation theories that must be present in order to have a successful incentive pay program: goal theory and expectancy theory. The presence or absence of these theories, have produced mixed results at both the federal and state levels. Although the Florida Department of Education crafted its own statewide incentive pay plan, three public school districts have received multimillion dollar awards via competitive TIF grants. The purpose of this dissertation was to determine if any differences in learning gains existed between the 2008 and 2009 Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test (FCAT) Math scores among the students of math teachers at one urban Central Florida Title I middle school who participated in TIF when compared to the students of math teachers who did not participate in TIF. The dissertation also analyzed FCAT Math scores from 2005 through 2009 in one Central Florida school district to determine if any trends existed among the Title I middle schools participating in TIF; if any trends existed among the Title I middle schools that did not participate in TIF; and if any trends existed between the two groups when compared to each other. The literature review and results of this study found that learning gains existed among students whose teachers participated in TIF. In fact, at one urban Central Florida middle school, students of math teachers who did not participate in TIF also demonstrated learning gains. In addition, seven of the ten Title I middle schools from the same Central Florida district had increased FCAT Math scores with the implementation of the TIF grant along with the three Title I middle school that were not eligible to participate. This research suggested that the teacher incentive program implemented in a Central Florida district had a positive impact on learning gains of low-performing students. The results of the independent-samples tests revealed that there was no statistical difference in the math scores based on participation in TIF. Students of the math teachers who participated in TIF demonstrated at least one year's academic growth. Likewise, the findings were similar for students of teachers who opted not to participate as learning gains increased in this group as well. As a result of these findings, recommendations for further study include end-of-the-year interviews with TIF-eligible teachers whose students had learning gains, but chose not to participate. Suggestions for additional research include surveying teachers whose students had higher scores in the absence of an incentive program, analyzing the test scores of other subject areas, and researching other school districts in Florida that were awarded the TIF grant.
ID: 028916862; System requirements: World Wide Web browser and PDF reader.; Mode of access: World Wide Web.; Thesis (Ed.D.)--University of Central Florida, 2010.; Includes bibliographical references (p. 118-126).
Ed.D.
Doctorate
Department of Educational Studies
Education
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8

Johnson, Jessica Ann. "Public Research Universities as Gendered Organizations: Institutional Rewards and the Faculty Salary Gap." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2017. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc984157/.

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Gendered organizational conditions create the context for persisting differences between men and women in the workplace. Within, higher education, this manifests as a salary gap between male and female faculty members. The academic capitalistic policy environment creates the conditions for increasing competition for external funding, especially in the areas of research and science and engineering. The change in the academic climate may sustain or intensify the gendering of universities as organizations. Universities with the highest level of research activity were chosen for this study and formed the 130 public institution sample. This study used fixed effects panel regression analysis to explore the relationship between the faculty gender salary gap and institutional emphasis on research as well as science and engineering. In addition, the relationship between institutional emphasis and the faculty gender salary gap was explored over time with the inclusion of a time trend and temporal interaction terms. Results showed that the higher the percentage of female faculty members, the greater the faculty gender salary gap for assistant professors. In addition, science and engineering emphasis over time had a significant impact on the professor salary gap with a decreasing effect both at the mean and one standard deviation above the mean, but with an increasing effect on the salary gap for institutions one standard deviation below the mean. When taking action to increase gender equity, it is important for universities to recognize that the faculty gender salary gap occurs in an organizational context impacted by institutional-level conditions.
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Liu, Ji. "The Economics of Teacher Occupational Choice in China." Thesis, 2019. https://doi.org/10.7916/d8-mrhf-bq59.

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Teachers are central to improving education quality and student learning. Yet, it is common that education systems short-pay teachers. Linking the occupational choice literature, this dissertation raises concern regarding potentially large adverse effects of holding teacher wages back from broader market levels, in terms of declining teacher aptitude and reduced student learning. Using a four-part analysis, I examine and contextualize theoretical stipulations using the case of Chinese teachers. Firstly, in Part I, I establish the causal link between teachers’ human capital level and student learning outcomes, by employing student fixed-effect models to relate differences in teachers across subjects to variations in student test scores. I find statistically significant impacts of teachers holding advanced tertiary degrees on improving student learning, at 0.033 standard deviations or adding about 1 additional month of learning over a typical 9-month academic year. Secondly, in Part II, I document relative pay gaps between teachers and comparable workers using Mincer earnings function. Between 1988 and 2013, I find sharp shifts in the relative wage attractiveness in the teaching sector, such that teachers’ mean wage levels experienced 24 percentage-points reversal, at 11 percent below the private sector levels in 2013. Also, returns to holding advanced tertiary degrees in teaching is about 11 to 15 percent less than that of the private sector in years 2007, 2008, and 2013, while this difference was statistically indistinguishable in the pre-2007 period. Thirdly, in Part III, I estimate the probability of entry to teaching by different human capital traits, and find declining trends for more educated individuals overall. In 2007 and 2013, new labor market entrants with advanced tertiary degrees are 4.7 and 5.8 percentage-points less likely than comparable workers in older cohorts to choose teaching. Similar patterns continue to hold when I use alternative human capital and skills proxies. Fourthly, in Part IV, using a national representative panel dataset containing 211 matched teachers, I track career destinations and relate it to opportunity wages and non-pecuniary outcomes. In general, I find that teacher turnover rates are high at about 35 percent, half of which are exits from the education sector entirely; there also exist positive associations between opportunity wage levels and turnover decisions, but there is no evidence of non-pecuniary gains from turnovers.
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"教师工资差异及影响因素: 基于甘肃农村的实证研究." 2012. http://library.cuhk.edu.hk/record=b5549366.

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利用“甘肃基础教育调查(The Gansu Survey of Children and Families, 2007)提供的数据,以特征工资理论(Hedonic Wage Theory)为基础,本研究建构了一个从个人特征和岗位特征两方面解读甘肃农村公办教师工资差异形成机制和潜在后果的解释框架。
本研究利用科学抽样的微观数据,以特征工资理论的投资假说和消费假说为基础,探讨甘肃农村教师收入差异的前因后果。运用多层线性技术对“特征的逐层分解凸显了环境结构变量对教师工资的层次性影响。研究的主要内容如下:(1)教师个人特征和教职岗位特征在工资及差异结构中的影响性质和强度;(2)工资和包括工作条件及生活环境在内的教职岗位特征在教师职业效用中的替代性及其办学成本意义;(3)地区政策与教师工资差异格局及其教育财政涵义。
通过对甘肃这个边远贫穷地区农村教师工资进行微观计量分析,本研究得出如下主要结论:
教师个人特征和教职岗位特征均是工资差异来源的主成因素。个人特征和岗位特征在收入差异形成过程中分别对应特征工资理论之投资性收益和消费性补偿。一方面,个人素质越高,收入越高;另一方面,与优越的岗位环境相联系的是更低的工资收入。换言之,艰苦的条件对应补偿性工资差异。
工资与教职岗位环境特征在教师职业效用偏好结构中具有替代性。岗位环境与工资的替代率介于-0.03和0.05间。负值代表教师愿意接受较低的工资以换取更优越的工作环境和社区设施,即为在某优越的县(区)工作而承受的工资损失。因此,教学条件和生活环境更艰苦的边穷地区需提供等效用的经济补偿才能保证师资质量。
出于经济补偿的考虑,扶贫政策比边远艰苦地区津补贴方案更有效地鉴别了岗位环境的恶劣程度。贫困地区的教学条件和生活环境更艰苦,由此带来的心理负效用反映在消费性补偿中。与“贫困相联系的不良岗位属性产生的负效用折合成工资约15%。
结合教师偏好和地区政策,更边远艰苦或贫困地区可以通过教师工资成本指数的形式,将额外聘用成本加权到教育财政预算中,以实现均衡发展和社会公平。国贫县聘用一名同等质量的普通合格教师,边际成本高于平均水平10%。但办学成本与边远艰苦等级的关系没有固定规律:更边远的三类地区招聘一名教师的成本只相当于平均水平的74%;而二类地区则需多花3.6-11.8%的附加成本。
本研究的政策启示包括:
第一,边远艰苦地区政策和扶贫政策的针对性不同。虽然边远艰苦地区津补贴政策所鉴定的县(区)地理属性可能具有重要的公共财政意义,但扶贫政策有更明显的区分度,可提供更清晰的教育财政政策启示。
第二,将原始资源禀赋等外部不可控因素造成的额外人员开支纳入财政方案中,并以教师工资成本指数的形式提升其预算等级,是保障各地师资配置从而实现教育均衡和机会均等的公平而有效方法。
Based on the Gansu Survey of Children and Families(GSCF, 2007), this thesis investigates the hierarchical effects of teacher personal characteristics and teaching job attributes as determinants of wages and sources of variations from the perspective of Hedonic Wage Theory.
Based on the Hedonic Wage Theory, this study has made use of a scientific sampled micro data set to analyze teacher wage disparities in rural Gansu, which is a typical less-developed northwestern remote province in Mainland China. Hierarchical Linear Modeling(HLM) is employed to study the regional effects. Major foci of this thesis consist of: (1)The nature and strength of economic values of teacher personal characteristics and teaching job attributes. (2)The substitution between pecuniary rewards from wages and non-pecuniary benefit derived from working conditions and living amenities, and its implications for teacher personnel costs. (3)How regional policies are related to teacher wage variations and what can government do to narrow the consequential gap in education service.
The conclusions of the study include:
Both teacher personal characteristics and teaching job attributes are major determining factors of wages. Human capital components proxying higher teacher quality are positively compensated, while better daily working and living conditions are paid in the form of lower wages. In other words, hardships are associated with compensating wage differentials.
Working conditions in schools and living conditions in community where the teaching position is located are substitutable with wages. The substitution between wages and job conditions varies from -0.03 to 0.05. Negative values mean that teachers are willing to accept lower wages to work in a better-off county. It costs more for hard-to-staff regions to recruit a comparable teacher.
In consideration of wage compensations, the “Helping the Poor policy can give a better indication than the “Subsidy to Remote and Difficult Districts Scheme. Dis-utilities from uncomfortable working and living environment in poor counties cost 15% extra wage expenditures.
Accounting for teacher utility preference, disadvantageous counties classified by economic-geographic features should be financially aided based on teacher cost index(TCI) to recruit and retain quality teachers. Simulation implies that counties labeled as “poor should be provided 10% more marginal personnel budget in order to hire an average teacher who meets the basic education requirements. However, fiscal assistances based on degree of remoteness do not show consistent patterns. The most remote counties can hire a comparable teacher at a cost of only 74% of the average, while those second most remote ones pay 3.6-11.8% more.
There are two major policy implications from the results of the study:
(1)The “Subsidy to Remote and Difficult Districts Scheme and the “Helping the Poor policy have different focuses. Though the former scheme may have public-goods considerations, the latter can give a clear and differentiative policy implication for education finance.
(2)It would be an equitable and efficient way to incorporate uncontrollable external factors into a teacher wage index(TCI), and to use it to adjust education financial strategies to these difficult areas.
Detailed summary in vernacular field only.
Detailed summary in vernacular field only.
Detailed summary in vernacular field only.
Detailed summary in vernacular field only.
Detailed summary in vernacular field only.
Detailed summary in vernacular field only.
Detailed summary in vernacular field only.
Detailed summary in vernacular field only.
Detailed summary in vernacular field only.
Detailed summary in vernacular field only.
馬紅梅.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2012.
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 160-173)
Abstracts in Chinese and English.
Ma Hongmei.
Chapter 第一章 --- 研究问题与背景 --- p.1
Chapter 第一节 --- 问题陈述 --- p.1
Chapter 一、 --- 研究问题 --- p.1
Chapter 二、 --- 研究目的 --- p.3
Chapter 三、 --- 研究意义 --- p.5
Chapter 第二节 --- 研究背景 --- p.7
Chapter 一、 --- 现实背景 --- p.7
Chapter 二、 --- 政策背景 --- p.12
Chapter 第三节 --- 论文结构 --- p.25
Chapter 第二章 --- 文献综述 --- p.27
Chapter 第一节 --- 特征工资理论的内容概要 --- p.27
Chapter 一、 --- 特征二因素主张 --- p.28
Chapter 二、 --- 特征的双重补偿 --- p.29
Chapter 三、 --- 职业效用最大化 --- p.32
Chapter 第二节 --- 特征工资理论之消费假说 --- p.33
Chapter 一、 --- 消费性补偿的工资理论 --- p.33
Chapter 二、 --- 消费性补偿经济学分析 --- p.34
Chapter 三、 --- 消费性补偿的现实意义 --- p.39
Chapter 第三节 --- 教师工资特征性补偿综述 --- p.44
Chapter 一、 --- 研究概况 --- p.44
Chapter 二、 --- 教师特征 --- p.47
Chapter 三、 --- 教职特征 --- p.48
Chapter 第四节 --- 教师工资分解的研究启示 --- p.50
Chapter 一、 --- 国外文献 --- p.51
Chapter 二、 --- 国内文献 --- p.52
Chapter 第三章 --- 研究设计 --- p.56
Chapter 第一节 --- 研究方法 --- p.56
Chapter 第二节 --- 数据描述 --- p.60
Chapter 一、 --- 数据来源 --- p.60
Chapter 二、 --- 样本信息 --- p.61
Chapter 第三节 --- 变量界定与分布 --- p.64
Chapter 一、 --- 因变量:教师月工资 --- p.65
Chapter 二、 --- 自变量:个人特征和岗位特征 --- p.68
Chapter 第四节 --- 研究架构 --- p.85
Chapter 一、 --- 分析结构 --- p.85
Chapter 二、 --- 模型界定 --- p.86
Chapter 第四章 --- 教师工资差异的形成机制 --- p.89
Chapter 第一节 --- 教师工资的影响因素 --- p.89
Chapter 一、 --- 教师个人特征:主导因素 --- p.89
Chapter 二、 --- 教职岗位特征:关键因素 --- p.90
Chapter 三、 --- 小结:决定教师工资的双重特征 --- p.91
Chapter 第二节 --- 基于教师个人特征的投资性收益 --- p.92
Chapter 一、 --- 解释变量:人力资本特征 --- p.92
Chapter 二、 --- 控制变量:个人背景特征 --- p.97
Chapter 三、 --- 小结:教师个人特征对工资的影响 --- p.103
Chapter 第三节 --- 基于教职岗位特征的消费性补偿 --- p.104
Chapter 一、 --- 学校实时工作环境 --- p.104
Chapter 二、 --- 县(区)社区人居环境 --- p.111
Chapter 三、 --- 小结:教职岗位特征对工资的影响 --- p.117
Chapter 第四节 --- 本章小结 --- p.119
Chapter 第五章 --- 国家政策对教师工资的影响 --- p.125
Chapter 第一节 --- 地区政策与教师工资 --- p.125
Chapter 一、 --- 边远艰苦地区政策与教师工资 --- p.125
Chapter 二、 --- 国家扶贫政策与教师工资 --- p.131
Chapter 三、 --- 小结:边穷地区政策与教师工资 --- p.134
Chapter 第二节 --- 地区政策的教育成本意义 --- p.136
Chapter 一、 --- 教师人员成本指数的建构 --- p.136
Chapter 二、 --- 边穷属性的成本指数 --- p.138
Chapter 三、 --- 小结:边穷地区政策的教育成本意义 --- p.143
Chapter 第三节 --- 本章小结 --- p.145
Chapter 第六章 --- 结语 --- p.148
Chapter 第一节 --- 主要实证结果 --- p.148
Chapter 一、 --- 教师工资差异的影响因素:个人特征与岗位特征 --- p.148
Chapter 二、 --- 教师工资差异的形成机制:特征性双重补偿 --- p.149
Chapter 三、 --- 边穷地区政策与教师工资的关系:消费性补偿 --- p.151
Chapter 四、 --- 地区政策的教育财政意义:教师工资成本指数化 --- p.152
Chapter 第二节 --- 政策启示 --- p.153
Chapter 一、 --- 教育财政意义 --- p.153
Chapter 二、 --- 完善地区政策 --- p.154
Chapter 第三节 --- 研究总结 --- p.155
Chapter 一、 --- 研究贡献 --- p.155
Chapter 二、 --- 研究不足 --- p.157
Chapter 三、 --- 研究展望 --- p.158
参考文献 --- p.160
附录 --- p.160
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Books on the topic "Physical education teachers Salaries, etc"

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The peril and promise of performance pay: Making education compensation work. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Education, 2009.

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Profit of education. Santa Barbara, Calif: Praeger, 2010.

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Paying the professoriate: A global comparison of compensation and contracts. New York, NY: Routledge, 2012.

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G, Springer Matthew, ed. Performance incentives: Their growing impact on American K-12 education. Washington, D.C: Brookings Institution Press, 2009.

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Teaching physical education: A handbook for primary & secondary school teachers. London: Kogan Page, 2001.

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Odden, Allan. Paying teachers for what they know and do: New and smarter compensation strategies to improve schools. Thousand Oaks, Calif: Corwin Press, 1997.

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Carolyn, Kelley, ed. Paying teachers for what they know and do: New and smarter compensation strategies to improve schools. 2nd ed. Thousand Oaks, Calif: Corwin Press, 2002.

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OECD Directorate for Education. Indicators and Analysis Division and OECD iLibrary, eds. Establishing a framework for evaluation and teacher incentives: Considerations for Mexico. Paris: OECD, 2011.

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C, Weidman John, Twale Darla J, Stein Elizabeth Leahy, and ERIC Clearinghouse on Higher Education, eds. Socialization of graduate and professional students in higher education: A perilous passage? New York, N.Y: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2001.

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Higher pay in hard-to-staff schools: The case for financial incentives. Lanham, Md: Scarecrow Press, 2003.

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Book chapters on the topic "Physical education teachers Salaries, etc"

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Metcalf, Tammy, and Liz Wrocklage-Gonda. "Well Teachers Teach Well." In Innovative Collaborative Practice and Reflection in Patient Education, 82–102. IGI Global, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-7524-7.ch006.

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No matter what field one enters, landing that first job and depositing that first paycheck is like no other feeling in the world. The excitement, anticipation, and demands of any career can be exceptionally challenging, and many people underestimate the toll that work—even meaningful work—can have on one's physical and mental well-being. This underestimation is especially true in the field of education, where many teachers in ever-expanding roles (teacher, mentor, counselor, etc.) work non-stop nine months out of the year only to find themselves physically and perhaps mentally exhausted. This chapter explores the teaching careers of college friends and how they have been able to break the cycle of Work/Exhaust/Repeat by recognizing, modifying, and preventing patterns that are ultimately harmful to their physical and mental well-being and make them less effective as educators.
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Conference papers on the topic "Physical education teachers Salaries, etc"

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Cohen Zilka, Gila. "The Experience of Receiving and Giving Public Oral and Written Peer Feedback on the Teaching Experience of Preservice Teachers." In InSITE 2020: Informing Science + IT Education Conferences: Online. Informing Science Institute, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.28945/4502.

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Aim/Purpose: This study examined how peer feedback, received and given face-to-face and on the course site, shapes the teacher’s image, from the student’s point of view as the one providing and receiving feedback. Background: This study examined the effect of receiving and giving peer feedback, face-to-face and on the course site, on forming the teacher’s image, from the student’s point of view as someone who provides and receives feedback. Methodology: The research question was, “How do preservice teachers experience giving and receiving public, oral and written, peer feedback on the teaching experience?” This is a qualitative study. Two hundred fifty-seven preservice teachers educated in teacher training institutions in Israel participated in the study. Contribution: The study attempted to fill the missing pieces in the experience of providing and receiving peer feedback in the process of training for a teaching certificate. The topic of feedback has been extensively researched, but mostly from the point of view of experts providing feedback to the student, whereas this study examined peer feedback. In addition, many studies have examined the topic of feedback mainly from the point of view of the recipient. By contrast, in this study, all the students both gave and received feedback, and the topic was examined from the perspective of both the feedback recipient and the feedback provider. It was found that receiving feedback and providing feedback are affected by the same emotional and behavioral influences, at the visible, concealed, and hidden levels. Findings: It was found that in oral feedback given by students face-to-face they took into account the feelings of the recipient of the feedback, more so than when feedback was given in writing on the course site. It was found also that most students considered it easier to provide feedback in writing than orally, for two reasons: first, it allowed them to edit and focus their feedback, and second, because of the physical distance from the student to whom the feedback applied. About 45% noted that the feedback they provided to others reflected their own feelings and difficulties. It was found that both giving and receiving feedback was influenced by the same emotional and behavioral layers: visible, concealed, and hidden. Recommendations for Practitioners: When an expert gives feedback, the expert has more experience than the students and wants to share this experience with others. This is not the case with peer feedback, where everybody is in the process of training, and the feedback is not necessarily expert. Therefore, clarification and discussion of feedback are of great importance for the development of both feedback provider and recipient. Recommendation for Researchers: About 45% of preservice teachers noticed that the feedback they provided to others stemmed from their own internal issues, and therefore dialogic feedback stimulated a sense of learning, empowerment, and professional development. Dialogic feedback may clarify for both provider and recipient what their habits, needs, and difficulties are and advance them in their professional development. Impact on Society: People must ask themselves whether they are in a position of conducting a dialogue or in a position of resistance to what is happening in the lesson. A sense of resistance to what is happening in the lesson may cause one to feel attacked and in need of defending oneself, and therefore to criticize. It is difficult to establish fruitful and enriching dialogue in a state of resistance, and with the desire to defend oneself and go on attack. Future Research: Knowledge of virtual feedback needs to be deepened. Does the feedback stem from the desire to advance the student who taught the lesson? Does the feedback stem from anger? etc.
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Saastamoinen, Kalle, and Antti Rissanen. "TEACHING SYSTEMS THAT CAN MIMIC DIFFERENT TEACHING-LEARNING ENVIRONMENTS." In 3rd International Baltic Symposium on Science and Technology Education (BalticSTE2019). Scientia Socialis Ltd., 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.33225/balticste/2019.194.

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Abstract:
Conventional learning guidance systems are typically automated machines for creating teaching materials: quizzes, exercises, examinations etc. In the future, systems will also offer ease of use, attention to sociality, ability to adapt to the pupil's needs and skill levels, and time savings. Ease-of-use and adaptation can be sought using systems based on Artificial Intelligence (AI). Chatbots would save teachers time by talking with students about their problems automatically. The virtual classroom would release people from the physical state and offer the opportunity to play with different roles. For the teaching of physics, the virtual classroom provides an opportunity to try out things that are not practically possible. AI could enable automatically identify students’ strengths and weaknesses and utilize them. On the other hand, AI also could allow pupils to gain strength through peer learning by bringing students of the same level from all over the world to discuss their own views and could automatically filter out sub-standard and clearly false answers. AI can also be capable of automatically creating tailor-made materials based on student-level learning using deep learning. Finally, AI can also be used to treat pupils' reviews to a large extent. In this research we will evaluate how well new technology powered by AI could respond to the demands of different teaching-learning environments. We will present a learning system that is in use and discuss its differences between opportunities of Artificial Intelligence (AI) can support different teaching-learning environments and discuss little how AI could support different learning styles. Keywords: automatic teaching machine, artificial intelligence, student centric learning, learning environment, learning style.
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