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Tyler, Mark; Dymock, Darryl – National Centre for Vocational Education Research (NCVER), 2021
There is a lack of distinction and definition around how the vocational education and training (VET) sector in Australia might effectively recruit and retain suitably qualified teachers, trainers and assessors. The logic is clear: in order to enable and develop an immediate pool of competent and qualified workers for new and developing industries,…
Descriptors: Vocational Education, Vocational Education Teachers, Teacher Qualifications, Teacher Recruitment
Peer reviewedPaukert, Liba – International Labour Review, 1991
Analyzes the situation of women workers in Czechoslovakia in terms of working conditions, difference in earnings compared to men, and attitudes toward work. Future developments, including massive unemployment of women, are outlined. (SK)
Descriptors: Economic Change, Employed Women, Employment Patterns, Females
Peer reviewedGagliani, Giorgio – American Journal of Sociology, 1981
This critique of the "orthodox radical" interpretation of social classes argues that the predominance of middle- class wage earners and women moving into the nonmanual job market constitutes a departure from the traditional "working class". Better working conditions and wages are the nonmanual workers' incentives to ally themselves with…
Descriptors: Career Education, Economic Research, Employment Patterns, Labor
Mitchell, Stephen – 1995
Although what the work companies do and how they do it have shifted significantly, companies' reward and salary structures have remained largely the same; however, a properly designed compensation and pay system can be a strategic tool to enhance a firm's competitiveness. New approaches tie pay more closely to performance, rather than to tenure…
Descriptors: Adults, Compensation (Remuneration), Employer Employee Relationship, Employment Practices
Older Women's League, Washington, DC. – 1989
Long-term care workers (those who are paid to provide custodial care for long-term patients in nursing homes or at home) must care for a growing number of increasingly disabled or dependent persons. They are working for agencies and institutions under growing pressure to increase productivity. They face new training and competency requirements,…
Descriptors: Caregivers, Employer Employee Relationship, Employment Practices, Futures (of Society)
Cappelli, H. Peter – 1989
Relatively little is known about how unions affect employers because of a lack of data and research at the level of the firm. The little evidence available suggests that the effects are complex and go well beyond the effects associated with higher wages. In particular, a better understanding of the role that unions play in providing training and…
Descriptors: Corporate Education, Education Work Relationship, Employer Employee Relationship, Employers
Ellison, Alicia B. – 2002
In 1998, the proportion of full-time faculty at U.S. community colleges was reported to be 36%, versus 64% part time. Adjunct faculty are attractive to community colleges primarily because they provide low-cost labor. The conditions under which many community college adjunct faculty work can contribute to their marginalization as a kind of…
Descriptors: Adjunct Faculty, Aging in Academia, College Faculty, Community Colleges
Handel, Michael J. – Grantee Submission, 2003
This paper provides an extensive review of the research literature on the effects of information technology (IT) on employment levels, job skill requirements, and wages. The first sections provide historical background on earlier waves of concern regarding automation, contemporary public opinion regarding new workplace technology, and trends in…
Descriptors: Information Technology, Employment Level, Job Skills, Employment Qualifications


