Yes, you can collect unemployment if you work for a school district, but eligibility often depends on the nature of your employment and the timing of your job loss. Typically, school employees may not qualify for unemployment benefits during regular school breaks or if they have a contract that covers the entire academic year. However, if you are laid off or your position is eliminated outside of scheduled breaks, you may be eligible for benefits. It's important to check with your state's unemployment office for specific regulations and guidelines.
Technically you can not collect unemployment if your school schedule interfers with any job opportunity.
NO... if you are not looking for work you cannot collect
The difficulty school personnel have with trying to collect unemployment is that most states do not allow unemployment when you are under contract or have assurance that you will return to work when school resumes and therefore "are not unemployed" in the regular sense of the word.
If what you are asking is "Can I collect unemployment after I have been back at work for weeks?" The answer is: No you can not.
It depends. If you are collecting unemployment, you need to report your earnings when you work.
it can work until it gets laid off, and then it can collect unemployment it can work until it gets laid off, and then it can collect unemployment
No you cant!
I do not believe that you can continue to collect unemployment if you refuse ANY legitimate offer of work.
YOu cannot receive unemployment if you return to work.
No because nobody is going to fire you because you have a cold. You have to be totally out of work to collect unemployment and not just out sick.
No. To be eligible for unemployment benefits, you must be available for work. If you are incarcerated, you are not available for work.
This is very doubtful. To collect unemployment you must, usually, be unemployed due to no fault of your own. While going back to school is an admirable idea, it is still attributable to you that you are unemployed. Beyond that, unemployment always requires that you be ready, willing, and able to work, and going to school - especially full-time - typically prevents you from meeting this qualification.