SUBSTITUTE TEACHER HANDBOOK Sample Clauses

SUBSTITUTE TEACHER HANDBOOK. A. All substitutes shall be provided a copy of the Northshore School District Substitute Handbook. B. Upon becoming members of the Association, substitutes shall be provided with this Article of the Collective Bargaining Agreement. C. Substitutes may submit suggestions to the Substitute Office for revisions of the handbook.
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SUBSTITUTE TEACHER HANDBOOK. The BOARD shall abide by the provisions of the Substitute Teacher Handbook developed by the BOARD and the UNION during the 2016-17 school year, subject to the terms of this Agreement.
SUBSTITUTE TEACHER HANDBOOK. Each unit member will be provided with a handbook containing the administrative procedures of the school, a floor plan of the building fire drill regulations, sign-in procedures and student disciplinary regulations. A copy of the Substitute Teacher Contract will also be given to each substitute on or about his/her first day working in the District by the building administrator or his/her designee.
SUBSTITUTE TEACHER HANDBOOK. 5.1 All substitutes shall be provided a copy of the Shoreline School District Substitute Handbook and Addendum to the Collective Bargaining Agreement with the Shoreline Education Association.

Related to SUBSTITUTE TEACHER HANDBOOK

  • Substitute Teachers 21.01 A substitute teacher is employed by the Division either to replace a regular teacher or fulfill an assignment which is less than twenty (20) consecutive days in duration. 21.02 Upon commencement of the sixth (6th) day of substitute teaching in the same assignment, a substitute teacher shall be paid for each day taught at the per diem rate (to be calculated as 1/x of the salary to which a teacher of the same qualifications and experience would be entitled under the basic salary schedule of the current collective agreement, where x equals the number of days in the current school year). This rate of pay shall be retroactive to the first day of the teaching assignment and shall continue in effect until the end of that specific teaching assignment. In-service days, administrative days and school closure days shall not constitute a break in the consecutive days for that specific teaching assignment. 21.03 Substitute teachers shall be paid as follows: Daily Rate (including vacation pay) 165.66 ** **Substitute Teacher rates for the 2021/2022 school year will be effective on the date the parties confirm the amount of the COLA adjustment (in January 2022 or as soon as possible thereafter.) Pay relating to the salary earned by substitute teachers during any month shall be forwarded to those teachers not later than the fifteenth (15th) day of the following calendar month. 21.04 Manitoba Teachers’ Society fees and Xxxxxxx Teachers’ Association fees shall be deducted from a substitute teacher’s pay. The Association shall indemnify and save harmless the Division from any and all losses, costs, liabilities or expenses suffered or sustained by the Division as a result of any claim or legal action arising from the deduction of local Association fees or Manitoba Teachers’ Society Fees. 21.05 A substitute teacher who has been employed for at least nine (9) consecutive days of substitute teaching in the same assignment in a school year shall be entitled to one (1) day of sick leave with pay for each nine (9) days taught in that assignment. Sick leave shall not accumulate from assignment to assignment. The use of sick leave with pay shall not constitute an interruption of the substitute teaching assignment. 21.06 If a substitute teacher is absent from a period of substitute teaching on account of bereavement leave granted in accordance with Board practice or policy, and that substitute teacher returns to the same substitute teaching assignment immediately following the period of bereavement, the period of leave shall not constitute an interruption of the substitute teaching assignment. 21.07 The provisions of the Collective Agreement do not apply to substitute teachers except as expressly provided for in Article 21 – Substitute Teachers: Article 1 – Obligation To Act Fairly Article 2 – Purpose

  • Substitute Teaching An adjunct faculty member who is interested in a substitute teaching assignment may be assigned to teach as a substitute in a course section for which the adjunct faculty member is qualified to teach. Each semester an adjunct faculty member may submit to the appropriate Xxxx a written request, on a form provided by the College, which shall indicate his/her willingness and availability to act as a substitute teacher and a reliable means by which to contact the adjunct faculty member on short notice. An adjunct faculty member who is selected to substitute teach shall be paid in accordance with Article 8.4.

  • Member Handbook The Contractor shall develop a member handbook for its members. The Contractor’s member handbook shall be submitted annually for OMPP’s review. The member handbook shall include the Contractor’s contact information and Internet website address and describe the terms and nature of services offered by the Contractor, including the following information required under 42 CFR 438.10(f), which enumerates certain required information. The member handbook may be offered in an electronic format as long as the Contractor complies with 42 CFR 438.10(c)(6). The Hoosier Healthwise MCE Policies and Procedures Manual outlines the member handbook requirements. The Hoosier Healthwise member handbook shall include the following:  Contractor’s contact information (address, telephone number, TDD number, website address);  The amount, duration and scope of services and benefits available under the Contract in sufficient details to ensure that participants are informed of the services to which they are entitled, including, but not limited to the differences between the benefit options;  The procedures for obtaining benefits, including authorization requirements;  Contractor’s office hours and days, including the availability of a 24-hour Nurse Call Line;  Any restrictions on the member’s freedom of choice among network providers, as well as the extent to which members may obtain benefits, including family planning services, from out-of-network providers;  The extent to which, and how, after-hours and emergency coverage are provided, as well as other information required under 42 CFR 438.10(f), such as what constitutes an emergency;  The post-stabilization care services rules set forth in 42 CFR 422.113(c);  The extent to which, and how, urgent care services are provided;  Applicable policy on referrals for specialty care and other benefits not provided by the member’s PMP, if any;  Information about the availability of pharmacy services and how to access pharmacy services;  Member rights and protections, as enumerated in 42 CFR 438.100, which relates to enrollee rights. See Section 4.8 for further detail regarding member rights and protections;  Responsibilities of members;  Special benefit provisions (for example, co-payments, deductibles, limits or rejections of claims) that may apply to services obtained outside the Contractor’s network;  Procedures for obtaining out-of-network services;  Standards and expectations to receive preventive health services;  Policy on referrals to specialty care;  Procedures for notifying members affected by termination or change in any benefits, services or service delivery sites;  Procedures for appealing decisions adversely affecting members’ coverage, benefits or relationship with the Contractor;  Procedures for changing PMPs;  Standards and procedures for changing MCEs, and circumstances under which this is possible, including, but not limited to providing contact information and instructions for how to contact the enrollment broker to transfer MCEs due to one of the “for cause” reasons described in 42 CFR 438.56(d)(2)(iv), including, but not limited to, the following:  Receiving poor quality of care;  Failure to provide covered services;  Failure of the Contractor to comply with established standards of medical care administration;  Lack of access to providers experienced in dealing with the member’s health care needs;  Significant language or cultural barriers;  Corrective action levied against the Contractor by the office;  Limited access to a primary care clinic or other health services within reasonable proximity to a member’s residence;  A determination that another MCE’s formulary is more consistent with a new member’s existing health care needs;  Lack of access to medically necessary services covered under the Contractor’s contract with the State;  A service is not covered by the Contractor for moral or religious objections, as described in Section 6.3.3;  Related services are required to be performed at the same time and not all related services are available within the Contractor’s network, and the member’s provider determines that receiving the services separately will subject the member to unnecessary risk;  The member’s primary healthcare provider disenrolls from the member’s current MCE and reenrolls with another MCE; or  Other circumstances determined by the office or its designee to constitute poor quality of health care coverage.  The process for submitting disenrollment requests. This information shall include the following:  Hoosier Healthwise members may change MCEs after the first ninety (90) calendar days of enrollment only for cause;  Members are required to exhaust the MCE’s internal grievance and appeals process before requesting an MCE change ;  Members may submit requests to change MCEs to the Enrollment Broker verbally or in writing, after exhausting the MCE’s internal grievance and appeals process; and  The MCE shall provide the Enrollment Broker’s contact information and explain that the member must contact the Enrollment Broker with questions about the process. This information shall include how to obtain the Enrollment Broker’s standardized form for requesting an MCE change.  The process by which an American Indian/ Alaska Native member may elect to opt-out of managed care pursuant to 42 USC § 1396u–2(a)(2)(C) and transfer to fee-for-service benefits through the State;  Procedures for making complaints and recommending changes in policies and services;  Grievance, appeal and fair hearing procedures as required at 42 CFR 438.10(g)(2)(xi), including the following:  The right to file grievances and appeals;  The requirements and timeframes for filing a grievance or appeal;  The availability of assistance in the filing process;  The toll-free numbers that the member can use to file a grievance or appeal by phone;  The fact that, if requested by the member and under certain circumstances: (1) benefits will continue if the member files an appeal or requests a State fair hearing within the specified timeframes; and (2) the member may be required to pay the cost of services furnished during the appeal if the final decision is adverse to the member.  For a State hearing describe (i) the right to a hearing, (ii) the method for obtaining a hearing, and (iii) the rules that govern representation at the hearing.  Information about advance directives;  How to report a change in income, change in family size, etc.;  Information about the availability of the prior claims payment program for certain members and how to access the program administrator;  Information on alternative methods or formats of communication for visually and hearing-impaired and non-English speaking members and how members can access those methods or formats;  Information on how to contact the Enrollment Broker;  Statement that Contractor will provide information on the structure and operation of the health plan; and  In accordance with 42 CFR 438.10(f)(3), that upon request of the member, information on the Contractor’s provider incentive plans will be provided.

  • Training Program It is agreed that there shall be an Apprenticeship Training Program, the provisions of which are set forth in Exhibit "D", which is attached hereto and forms part of this Agreement.

  • Quality Assurance Program An employee shall be entitled to leave of absence without loss of earnings from her or his regularly scheduled working hours for the purpose of writing examinations required by the College of Nurses of Ontario arising out of the Quality Assurance Program.

  • Training Programs All employees shall successfully complete all necessary training prior to being assigned work (e.g., all employees will complete health and safety training prior to being assigned to task). Nothing in this Article or provision shall constitute a waiver of either party’s bargaining obligations or defenses. The Employer still has an obligation to notify and bargain changes in terms and conditions of employment with the exclusive representative.

  • Training Plan 19.6.1 An apprentice shall be a party to an individual Training Plan. 19.6.2 The Training Plan sets out the training that the apprentice will do both on – the – job and off – the – job. The Training Plan also sets out how the Registered Training Organisation (RTO) will ensure the apprentice will receive quality training – both on – the – job and off – the – job. 19.6.3 The Training Plan reflects the choices made by the employer and the apprentice in relation to:-

  • BARGAINING PROCEDURE 10.01 All negotiations with a view to the completion of a collective agreement or to effecting changes or modifications in this Agreement shall be conducted between the authorized bargaining Representatives of the Union on the one hand and the designated bargaining Representatives of the Company on the other. 10.02 No agreement resulting from collective bargaining as herein provided shall be deemed to have been concluded until it is reduced to writing and signed by the authorized bargaining Representatives of the Union and by the designated bargaining Representatives of the Company, and an agreement so signed shall take effect as and from the effective date specified therein.

  • Policies and Procedures i) The policies and procedures of the designated employer apply to the employee while working at both sites. ii) Only the designated employer shall have exclusive authority over the employee in regard to discipline, reporting to the College of Nurses of Ontario and/or investigations of family/resident complaints. iii) The designated employer will ensure that the employee is covered by WSIB at all times, regardless of worksite, while in the employ of either home. iv) The designated employer will ensure that the employee is covered by liability insurance at all times, regardless of worksite, while in the employ of either home. v) The designated employer shall have exclusive authority over the employee’s personnel files and health records. These files will be maintained on the site of the designated employer.

  • Policies, Guidelines, Directives and Standards Either the Funder or the Ministry will give the HSP Notice of any amendments to the manuals, guidelines or policies identified in Schedule C. An amendment will be effective in accordance with the terms of the amendment. By signing a copy of this Agreement the HSP acknowledges that it has a copy of the documents identified in Schedule C.

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