No googling. On average. A 1st year teacher, a teacher with 5 years experience and a teacher with 10 years experience. |
I know someone who has been there about 10 years who makes over $85K |
My guess is $60K, $70K, and $80K.
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Wrong! Maybe they've been in MCPS for 10 years, but did they come into the system with experience elsewhere? Do they have a number of stipend positions? I have over 15 years experience and am top of the scale making $85K. |
I highly doubt any first year teacher makes $60K. I'd love to be wrong, but I bet it is less than $40K.
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It's all public info:
http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/uploadedFiles/departments/ersc/employees/pay/schedules/salary_schedule_current.pdf A first year teacher with a BA is $46,000, with a MA is $51,000 |
what about pension for life and also dividing that number by 9 than multiply it by 12. |
BA is $46,000/9 * 12 = $61333.33333333333
MA is $51,000/9 * 12 = $68000 I have over 15 years experience and am top of the scale making $85K. $85000 / 9 * 12 = $113333.3333333333 |
Divide by 10 then multiply by 12. |
what about spring break and winter break http://www.fcps.edu/hr/oec/pdfs/stcalendar11-12.pdf |
Really - that's a little petty. But if you are going to be petty you should account for unpaid overtime for work done past an 8 hour day. |
Two weeks paid vacation is standard in any profession. So I have no issues with spring or winter break. I started with 3 weeks paid vacation. |
It's all public info, but there are different salary "lanes" for BA, MA, MA + 30 credits and MA + 60 credits. Also, salaries have been frozen as far as yearly increases for the past four years, so a first year teacher and a teacher in their 4th year currently make the same, sort of.
Although $60k is PP's guess for a first-year teacher? Uhhhh... wow. |
The salary is essentially for 12 months. What new job can you get for two months in the summer? You either look at is as a 12 month salary or 10 months salary with 2 months of furlough.
And the pension is not all that. First, there is guarantee it will be there when the teacher retirRes. Clearly there are people who post here who want it reduced. Second, they would be better off with a raise in salary and a 401k. |
. The point of the thread was to compare perception to reality, thus the instruction to not Google the answer. |