The Teacher Contract Database includes information on 147 school districts and 2 charter management organizations in the United States including: the 100 largest districts in the country, the largest district in each state, and the member districts of the Council of Great City Schools.
Until then, explore our interactive map to see all of the districts in the sample and visit
the Teacher Contract Database to access all of our policy information and source documents.
Explore our reports and policy briefs, our flagship Field Guides to Education,
our Teacher Contract Database and more!
Over the last year, the National Council on Teacher Quality (NCTQ) has expanded the number of districts included in
the Teacher Contract Database by adding the 100 largest school districts in the country.
The Teacher Contract Database includes over 145 districts across the country, representing the 100 largest districts in the country, the largest district in each state, and member districts of the Council of Great City Schools.
Delve into the NCTQ
Teacher Contract Database and find out what is inside collective bargaining agreements and state policies for more than 145 of the largest school districts from all 50 states.
Not exact matches
Kronholz cites findings from the National Council on
Teacher Quality's
database on collective - bargaining agreements in 113 large school districts, which show that district
contracts give their
teachers an average of 13.5 days of sick and personal leave per school year.
The National Council on
Teacher Quality (NCTQ), which maintains a
database on collective - bargaining agreements in 113 large school districts, reports that the
contracts give their
teachers, on average, 13.5 days of sick and personal leave per school year.
The debate erupted in August, when The Times published a
database of the value - added scores of about 6,000 elementary school
teachers based on seven years of testing data, prompting union protests and vows by the district to raise the issue during
contract negotiations.
She pioneered projects like our
Teacher & Administrator
Contract Database, which is now visited more than 20,000 times a year, and the Field Guide to Education in Connecticut, which has reached more than 10,000 readers across the state.
The
database features answers to over 100 policy questions and provides access to
teacher contracts, salary schedules, and board policies in addition to relevant state laws governing
teachers.