$53k for 10 months of work is not peanuts. |
So you think $33/hour is appropriate pay for your child's teacher. That is peanuts. |
DP Seriously. All of the pay scales are easily found online. I know FCPS shows the maximum entry step. |
I have a friend that has a PhD that was teaching in FCPS last year. She said that the salaries are roughly the same around the DMV area. |
They still need to be certified as well. If they majored in education, then student teaching and certification testing was probably rolled into their degree. |
The OP never said they weren't certified, just that they (or the person they are enquiring for) only hold a bachelor's. |
Yes, it's actually pretty good if you're just graduating from college. The problem is it stagnates big time. |
I only have a bachelors. Teach hs. Starting year 7. 66k Can’t complain. Crypto and coaching youth sports puts me at 120k. I’m chilling. |
Yes, teacher certification can be part of the bachelor's degree. You do not need a Masters degree to become a certified teacher. |
While the wording is ruder than it needs to be, I completely agree with the sentiment. I am an experienced teacher and am sick of immature new teachers. I don't think it is just that I am getting older--the more recent batches of teachers have been uniquely helpless and clueless. Every teacher I know, and not just in my own school, talks about all the drama that is caused by the newer teachers who don't seem to think anything is their job. It isn't all of them. In fact, the biggest clashes are between the competent young teachers and the incompetent young teachers. Someone who thinks asking on this board is a good way to find out salary information needs some time to grow and mature before taking over a classroom. Be an assistant, go for a masters, work another job--but don't take a classroom if you are this clueless. |
Benefits galore. |
Good benefits but a lot taken out of the paycheck for union dues, random stuff and the pension. Many of these new teachers won't make it the years they need to benefit from the pension from which they are contributing too.
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What benefits are we talking about? I’m a teacher and we’ve always gotten cheaper health insurance through my husband’s large company. He’s at a non profit that offers better 403b options and considerably higher matching than my district. He gets 6 weeks paid vacation yearly + federal holidays. I have a Master’s and make significantly less than he does with only a Bachelor’s. I am not unhappy with my job but the people acting like the benefits are some great rarity probably don’t talk to a lot of people who work for other large corporations or well funded NPOs. |
For watching and teaching 15-30 kids, writing lesson plans, being asked to sub so you don’t have a planning period and having to take work home, grading papers after school, being forced to use curriculum that doesn’t work, dealing with unsupportive admin, constant parent communication, writing IEPs and reports, and buying your own materials? Hell no it definitely is not enough. $50-75 an hour to start would be sufficient. No way I’d accept that job for 53k though- that’s why they have teacher shortages out the wazoo. A nanny watching one child can make more than $53k per year and there’s not near the level of stress and expectation. |
I made $25 an hour plus benefits working in a public school 20 years ago just graduating college and now make 4 times that. My job is similar to teaching but more specialized so I work in schools but never want to be hired by one because they pay nothing. |