- Mid- and late-career teacher base salaries are painfully low in many states. In
Colorado, teachers with a graduate degree and 10 years of experience
make less than a trucker in the state. In Oklahoma, teachers with 15
years of experience and a master’s degree make less than sheet metal
workers. And teachers in Georgia with 10 years of experience and a
graduate degree make less than a flight attendant in the state.
- Teachers with 10 years of experience who are family breadwinners
often qualify for a number of federally funded benefit programs designed
for families needing financial support. We found that mid-career
teachers who head families of four or more in multiple states such as
Arizona and North Dakota qualify for several benefit programs, including
the Children’s Health Insurance Program and the School Breakfast and
Lunch Program. What’s more, teachers have fewer opportunities to grow
their salaries compared to other professions.
- To supplement their minimal salaries, large percentages of teachers work second jobs. We found that in 11 states, more than 20 percent of teachers rely on the financial support of a second job, and in some states such Maine, that number is as high as 25 percent. In these 11 states, the average base salary for a teacher with 10 years of experience and a bachelor’s degree is merely $39,673—less than a carpenter’s national average salary. (Note that teachers typically have summers off, and the data on teachers who work second jobs do not include any income that a teacher may have earned over the summer.)
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
October 30, 2014
Mid and late career teachers are underpaid
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