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The University Teachers Union (大学教員組合 – Daigaku Kyouin Kumiai) was founded in January 1999 and represents the interests of tertiary-level teachers in the Kanto region of Japan. Membership is open to any teacher, regardless of nationality, who is employed at a university, college, or post-graduate institution in a non-management post.
Tanzania Teachers’ Union; Teachers' Federation of Puerto Rico; Teachers Union (also "TU" and "New York City Teachers Union") (1916–1964) Teachers' Union of Ireland; Temple University Graduate Students Association; Tennessee Education Association [1] Texas State Teachers Association [1]
The All Japan Federation of Teachers' and Staff Unions (Japanese: 全日本教職員組合, Zenkyo) is a trade union representing workers in the education sector in Japan. The union was established in April 1991, when the Japan High School Teachers' Union merged with the recently founded All Japan Council of Teachers and Staff Union.
Teachers College shares academic and institutional resources with greater Columbia University including courses of instruction (Teachers College students may take courses at any other Columbia University graduate school and vice versa.), [33] [34] libraries, health service systems, research centers, classrooms, special event facilities and the ...
Prior to the 1950s, teacher and other education unions played little role in international trade union federations. In 1912, the International Committee of National Federations of Teachers in Public Secondary Schools was established in Belgium. Internationally, it was known as FIPESO, an acronym derived from its French name: The Federation ...
It held meetings with trade unionists teachers from different countries and unions: Cuba, Germany, Egypt, Palestine, Greece, Italy, Mexico, etc. FISE publishes every year announcements and posters useful for every trade union, concerning the International Workers’ May Day (May 1), the International Teachers Day, the International Women's Day ...
Japan Teachers Union (日本教職員組合, Nihon Kyōshokuin Kumiai, JTU), abbreviated Nikkyōso (日教組, Nikkyōso), is Japan's oldest labor union of teachers and school staff. Established in 1947, it was the largest teachers union until a split in the late 1980s.
Briefly summarized, the first principle states that teachers are entitled to "full freedom in research and in publication of the results" and that the issue of financial gains from research depends on the relationship with the institution. The second principle of academic freedom is that teachers should have the same freedom in the classroom.