AllisonP. D.1984. Event History Analysis: Regression for Longitudinal Event Data.Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publications.
2.
BeaudinB. Q.1988. “Former Teachers: A Study of the Characteristics of Teachers Who Return to the Public School Work Force,” unpublished doctoral dissertation, Harvard University.
3.
BenedettiJ., YuenK., and YoungL.1990. “Life Tables and Survivor Functions,” in BMDP Statistical Software Manual, Volume 2, DixonW. J., ed., Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
4.
Carnegie Task Force on Teaching as a Profession.1986. A Nation Prepared: Teachers for 21st Century, Washington, D.C.: Carnegie Forum on Education and the Economy.
5.
ChapmanD. W., and HutchesonS. M.1982. “Attrition from Teaching Careers: A Discriminant Analysis,”American Educational Research Journal, 7(1): 1–27.
6.
ChartersW. W.Jr.1970. “Some Factors Affecting Teacher Survival in School Districts,”American Educational Research Journal, 7(1): 1–27.
7.
College Placement Council.1988. College Placement Council Annual Surveys, 1970–1988.Washington, D.C.: National Education Association.
8.
Darling-HammondL.1984. Beyond the Commission Reports: The Coming Crisis in Teaching.Santa Monica, CA: Rand.
9.
EbertsR. W.1982. Determinants of Teacher Turnover during the 1970s: The Case of New York State Public School Teachers.Center for Educational Policy and Management, Eugene, Oregon: University of Oregon.
10.
Feiman-NemserS.1990. “Teacher Preparation: Structural and Conceptual Alternatives,” in Handbook of Research on Teacher Education, HoustonW. R., ed., New York: Macmillan Publishing Co.
11.
GrissmerD. W., and KirbyS. N.1987. Teacher Attrition: The Uphill Climb to Staff the Nation's Schools.Santa Monica, CA: The RAND Corporation.
12.
HeynsB.1988. “Educational Defectors: A First Look at Teacher Attrition in the NLS-72,”Educational Researcher, 17(3): 24–32.
13.
KalbfleischJ. D., and PrenticeR. L.1980. The Statistical Analysis of Failure Time Data.New York: John Wiley and Sons.
14.
KempleJ. J.1989. “The Career Patterns of Black Teachers: Evidence from North Carolina,” unpublished doctoral dissertation, Harvard University.
15.
MarkJ. H., and AndersonB. D.1985. “Teacher Survival Rates in St. Louis, 1969–1982,”American Educational Research Journal, 22: 413–421.
16.
MarkJ. H., and AndersonB. D.1978. “Teacher Survival Rates: A Current Look,”American Educational Research Journal, 15(3): 379–383.
17.
MurnaneR. J.1981. “Teacher Mobility Revisited,”Journal of Human Resources, 16: 3–19.
18.
MurnaneR. J., and OlsenR. J.1990. “The Effects of Salaries and Opportunity Costs on Length of Stay in Teaching,”Journal of Human Resources, 25(1): 106–124.
19.
MurnaneR. J., and OlsenR. J.1989. “The Effects of Salaries and Opportunity Costs on Duration in Teaching: Evidence from Michigan,”The Review of Economics and Statistics, pp. 347–352.
20.
MurnaneR. J., SingerJ. D., and WilletJ. B.1988. “The Career Paths of Teachers: Implications for Teacher Supply and Methodological Lessons for Research,”Educational Researcher, 17: 22–30.
21.
National Research Council.1990. Precollege Science and Mathematics Teachers: Monitoring Supply, Demand, and Quality.Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press.
22.
National Research Council.1987. “Toward Understanding Teacher Supply and Demand,”Interim Report of the Panel on Statistics on Supply and Demand for Precollege Science and Mathematics Teachers.Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press.
23.
NCES.1991. Characteristics of Stayers, Movers, and Leavers: Results from the Teacher Follow-Up Survey (the 1988 SASS), 1988–89.Washington, D.C.: National Center for Education Statistics.
24.
TitleD. G.1990. “Factors Influencing How Long Teachers Remain in Their Initial School Districts,” unpublished doctoral dissertation, Harvard University.
25.
WilletJ. B., and SingerJ. D.1988. “Doing Data Analysis with Proportional Hazards Models: Model Building, Interpretations and Diagnosis,” Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the AERA, New Orleans.