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Showing posts with label San Antonio teaching jobs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label San Antonio teaching jobs. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 03, 2010

San Antonio Teaching Jobs in Philosophy and Religion

In the coming years, there will be a strong need for qualified individuals to fill San Antonio teaching jobs in philosophy and religion. Visit http://sanantonio.jobing.com/jobs/teacher to find out more.

Post-secondary philosophy and religion teachers are responsible for teaching students about philosophy, religion, and theology. This includes both teachers who are primarily involved with teaching and those who teach and conduct research.

The education required to become a post-secondary teacher depends on the institution in which you want to teach, and can vary from a doctoral degree for four-year colleges and universities to a Ph.D. for research universities.

In addition, any job seeker looking to work in the education industry will most likely be asked to take part in Texas criminal background checks (Click here).

There were about 1.7 million post-secondary teachers throughout the nation during 2008, and 25,100 of those positions belonged to philosophy and religion teachers, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Employment as a whole should increase by 15 percent by 2018.

Employment throughout Texas is anticipated to grow from 1,250 workers in 2006 to 1,700 workers by 2016, resulting in 450 additional jobs and an overall increase of 36 percent, according to the Texas Workforce Commission.

Colleges, universities, and professional schools employ the majority of post-secondary philosophy and religion teachers, at 75.03 percent, while junior colleges employ 24.6 percent of these workers.

During 2009, the average wage for post-secondary philosophy and religion teachers in Texas was $32.55 per hour, while the average wage for those throughout the nation was $32.50 per hour.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

San Antonio Teaching Jobs, Medical Jobs Increase 2 Percent

San Antonio teaching jobs (Click here) and medical jobs saw the biggest yearly increase during April as the city's unemployment rate remained even and more workers were added overall.

During April, the San Antonio-New Braunfels area's unemployment rate remained at 7.3 percent percent for the second month in a row, following a decrease from 7.4 percent during March. The area's rate is lower than the national average of 9.9 percent.

The San Antonio area had a total non-farm employment of 829,000 workers during April, according to the U.S. Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics. This is up from 826,200 workers during March, but a 1.2 percent decrease from last year.

Six industries managed to see a monthly increase in employment during April, including: construction by 300 jobs; trade, transportation and utilities by 200 jobs; financial activities by 200 jobs; education and health services by 900 jobs; leisure and hospitality by 1,800 jobs; and government by 800 jobs.

Employment in the mining and logging industry remained even over the month with 3,300 jobs.

Three industries managed to see a yearly increase in employment, with the education and health services industry adding the most workers. The industry's workforce grew by 2 percent between April 2009 and April 2010 to 124,300 jobs.

The government industry saw the second-largest increase in employment, growing by 1.1 percent over the year to 162,900 jobs. The financial activities industry increased by .9 percent to 64,900 jobs during April of this year.

The information industry took the biggest hit when compared to last year. The industry employed 18,500 workers during April, down from 18,700 workers during March and an 8.9 percent decrease from last year.

Other industries that saw an over-the-year decrease in employment include:
Construction by 6.8 percent
Manufacturing by 5.5 percent
Mining and logging by 2.9 percent
Professional and business services by 2.5 percent
Trade, transportation and utilities by 2.2 percent
Other services by 1.6 percent
Leisure and hospitality by .9 percent