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- Constituent Parts - Cathy Della Lucia and Nicholas Anthony Mancini in DialogueAll day
- Trasluz / Translucent - Works by Juan José Barboza-Gubo and Michael ZacharyAll day
- It's Not (Just) About the Money: Pay and the Value of Working Conditions in Teaching9:15 am
- Composer in Residence: Sarah Nemtsov9:30 am
- CFA Stress Reliever: Healthy Eating Cooking Demo 12:00 pm
- Hospitality Innovation & Student Wellbeing Innovation Competition Info Session12:00 pm
- Resume & Cover Letter Drop-Ins 12:00 pm
- [External event] Meet the Science Policy Fellows1:00 pm
- Beyond Project 2025: An Action Hub to Advance Our Future3:00 pm
- Educational Policy Seminar Series: Constance Lindsay3:00 pm
- Composer in Residence: Sarah Nemtsov5:00 pm
- Arts & Crafts Night6:00 pm
- “Science Across Borders” Featuring Tim Ritchie6:00 pm
- January Black Box Reading7:00 pm
- BU Consulting Group: Info Session 17:30 pm
- DEI Office Hours12:00 pm
- IS&T RCS Tutorial - Introduction to BU's Shared Computing Cluster (Hands-on)12:00 pm
- MPI Seminar: Elizabeth Draganova, PhD12:00 pm
- Navigating Your Career Transition: Key Success Factors12:00 pm
- [HMCRS] Discover the Fundamentals of U.S. Pharmaceutical Regulation12:00 pm
- IS&T RCS Tutorial - Introduction to Linux (Hands-on)2:30 pm
- Sargent Choice Test Kitchen4:45 pm
- Taking Care of You: The Wellbeing Experience5:00 pm
- [Innovate@BU] MA Climatetech Community5:30 pm
- Game Night6:00 pm
- First-Gen Spring Orientation (Zoom)7:00 pm
- BU Consulting Group: Info Session 27:30 pm
It's Not (Just) About the Money: Pay and the Value of Working Conditions in Teaching
This paper quantifies the extent to which teachers are “overpaid”—i.e., “earning rents”—explicitly accounting for both pay and non-wage job attributes. Using quasi-experimental designs, administrative data, and a choice experiment, I estimate the teaching rent as the sum of the pay gap and the working conditions gap between teaching and teachers' next-best jobs. A fuzzy regression kink design exploiting variation in Kentucky teaching certification shows teaching pays $18-21,000/yr (33-40% of salary) more than teachers’ next-best options. Event studies around teacher exits yield similar estimates. Importantly however, teaching conditions are relatively poor. Fielding a choice experiment to Kentucky teachers, I estimate that teachers are willing to pay 29-35% of their salary to switch to their next-best job solely for better conditions. My results indicate that teaching does not pay rents, but rather pays a large premium to compensate for poor teaching conditions. Extending these estimates to other states suggests that over $145 billion is spent annually to offset poor teaching conditions, consistent with reports of teacher shortages
| When | 9:15 am - 10:30 am on 28 January 2025 |
|---|---|
| Building | Wheelock, Room 411, 2 Silber Way |