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Tag: Teacher Pay Total: 9 results found.
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Save BIG with 2016 Teacher Appreciation Discounts
posted by: Garry | May 04, 2016, 03:47 PM

Teacher Appreciation Week is a week dedicated to giving teachers the recognition they deserve! Don’t miss these great discounts. KANAAE appreciates YOU!

 

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Welcome to National Employee Freedom Week 2015!
posted by: Garry | August 18, 2015, 03:23 PM

National Employee Freedom Week (NEFW) is a national campaign aimed at educating teachers and other employees about their options regarding union membership. NEFW was co-created by AAE and the Nevada Policy Research Institute (NPRI) because labor unions like the NEA don’t inform their members of their legal rights to opt-out of membership, leaving millions of teachers and other employees completely unaware that they have options.

 

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KANAAE was thrilled to host two groundbreaking meetings last week between member teachers and legislative leaders across Kansas. The KANAAE Legislative Leader Roundtables, held on Tuesday in Wichita, and Wednesday in Manhattan, were attended by nearly 60 member educators who participated in collaborative discussions about education policy with high-ranking statewide officials. Leaders from the Kansas State Senate, House of Representatives, and Governor Brownback’s office were in attendance.

 

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Navigating the Murky Waters of Reciprocity
posted by: Garry | June 10, 2015, 07:57 PM

There was a time when educators could count on being granted their license and then spending the rest of their career in a single state, district, or even school.  More and more often this is no longer the case.  As the economy changes, the teaching force continues to evolve.  This is amplified by the fact that the distribution of teachers is not even across the country.  While many communities, mostly urban, are experiencing shortages of teachers, others have a surplus.  Teachers in areas with a surplus may well move to an area with a shortage, gain experience, and then apply in their desired state once they are more established.

 

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Five Great Ways to Spend Your Summer as an Educator
posted by: Garry | May 13, 2015, 10:18 PM

Although it may be hard to believe, we’re fast approaching the end of the school year. In most districts, testing is well underway if not complete. For many of us there’s only a few weeks left to wrap up the year before the two months of reflection, planning, and downtime begin.   How you spend those months can have a great influence on what happens the upcoming year.  Here are our suggestions for relaxing, productive summer break:

 

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Are Teachers Being Shortchanged? This Report Says Yes!
posted by: Garry | July 24, 2014, 04:36 PM

In virtually EVERY industry in the nation, employees are paid based on their value in the marketplace for the numbers they increase, the skills they perfect, and the value they create for their employers. This is not the case in public education.

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Kansas Policy Institute Solicits Teachers' Ideas
posted by: Ruthie | February 25, 2014, 02:11 PM

The newest member to the Kansas Policy Institute team posted on the KPI blog, soliciting teachers' ideas, suggestions, and comments to help improve teaching and provide each, individual child with the right opportunity:

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NEA Membership Numbers Show Continued Decline
posted by: Garry | July 16, 2013, 04:20 PM

Following an eventful 2013 annual conference, the NEA's official membership numbers have hit the internet. According to the Education Intelligence Agency, the NEA has lost over 9% of its members nationwide. The 2011-12 school year absorbed the sharpest decline, with almost 104,000 fewer members in the ranks from the previous year. However, the losses continued by more than 41,000 members in the just-concluded 2012-13 school year.

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One thing on which everyone in the education community can agree is the fact that effective teachers are the key to the overall success of our school system. In light of this consensus, the Department of Education has spent the past several years studying the behavior of new teachers and their career paths, of which the findings were released last week in an ongoing study. In an effort to understand the typical career journey of a new educator, the study tracks 2,000 teachers as they begin their teaching careers and follows their behavior patterns as they continue in both elementary and secondary settings.   Continue Reading...