Sure, because organizations just love to file unnecessary paperwork, possibly creating tax liability where none existed. No entity files a 990 unless required to do so. Chances are whatever school you think is doing this out of an altruistic love of transparency is actually required to file it. The schools that are exempt from 990s are: "A school below college level affiliated with a church or operated by a religious order." |
Then name the school that is exempt from filing 990s that files 990s anyway. |
| I don't know the ins and outs of who files 990 and who is exempt but it does not seem to be based on merely being religious or not. Many Episcopal and Quaker schools across the nation file 990s, but not the ones inside DC city limits. |
I wonder if they apply for grants that require 990s? |
Depends on the school system. Both MCPS snd zpGCzpS have clear lines if 8 and 10 years respectively. PGCPS will raise this for hard to fill positions- namely Special education, math, and science. MCPS will only raise if you come un with a higher offer from another district. A masters plus 8 is $72k at mcps. Masters plus 30 additional credits plus 8 years of experience is only $75k |
Because private schools are run by and cater to populations that are historically hostile to labor. Teachers are “the help” after all. |
YOU have clearly never worked with teachers if you’re unaware of maximum entry steps. So yes, your years of experience are “recognized” when you change districts but frequently not taken into account for salary purposes. |
I’m a career teacher with 20+ years of experience and never had an entry level cap until I encountered MCPS. I don’t k ow any other profession that caps like this and undervalues substantiated experience. |
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The private school I teach at told me they were looking for a teacher with five years experience Bc that’s all they wanted to pay for. They agreed to hired me but started me at a level more than five years, but well below my actual years.
Yes, it was my choice to take the job or not. It’s a nice job but a poor financial decision. |
Why? Does the K-8 insurance not good? |
I truly don't understand. People line up to pay $50K for a school like Big 3 and actually deeply devalue education to persuade their kids not to be a teacher? What is the value? Sy hypocritical? If only money can buy education, then is education's only goal to make more money? |
What makes you think they have a manageable work load ? Please leave teaching you are not fit for it. |
DP. I have worked in public and private. The workload is the same. I’m still working on Saturdays and Sundays. I’m still putting in an extra 2-3 hours on weekdays. But I am so much happier. That’s because I feel more valued and my time in the school building is calmer / more relaxed. I don’t feel the constant “is everything going to blow up” anxiety I felt in public school. So the hours are the same, but I enjoy my job now. |
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The head of school for my son's very small k-8 makes $125,000. The teachers make between $50 and $80 and have insurance for themselves, but have to full pay for family. Most teachers have spouses who cover insurance.
They aren't there for the money, but the culture and autonomy. Having said that, we are still trying to raise salaries and improve health coverage for them. But it's really hard for small schools that don't have any type of endowment. I'm not exusing, just explaining. |
MCPS is why I applied to privates. They were going to cap me at year 8 instead of honor my 16 years. Privates offered me more than MCPS did. I know the earning potential isn’t the same, but I resented the fact my experience and success in the classroom had no value to MCPS. So I took my experience to a private school. |