Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about salaries at the top DC independents?
Not great. Crappy benefits. Good jobs for people with high earning spouses, and the independently wealthy.
No tuition benefits either.
Most of them have some tuition benefit, not just as much as they used to have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about salaries at the top DC independents?
Not great. Crappy benefits. Good jobs for people with high earning spouses, and the independently wealthy.
No tuition benefits either.
Anonymous wrote:What about salaries at the top DC independents?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just saw a posting and considering an application. Looking for any insight into teacher salaries (I have a Master's if that matters). No private school teaching experience, but several years of college-level teaching. Are salaries varied across lower, middle, and upper schools? Thanks.
It's pretty hard to get a private school teaching job without teaching credentials. They can employ uncredentialed teachers, but with such a huge pool of teachers available (there are far more teachers than teaching jobs), there's not a lot of reason to, unless the job is an especially hard one to fill (like Chinese teacher, maybe). In general, college teaching is not great preparation for being an effective high school teacher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think they compare to public schools because of the school funding and union contracts. There was a kindergarten teacher at my DD's public elementary who had been there for 20-25 years and he was making about $125K. He has since retired but that was about 5 years ago. I believe the starting salary in DCPS is about 60K or 65K.
That's definitely not the starting salary in DCPS. The only teachers who start that high will have extensive prior teaching experience and/or a Masters or higher degree.
Not correct. With a BA or BS alone, starting is over 50 and moves up by 60% over a full career. With a Master's or above, for a full carer, it goes over 105. That does not include pension contributions, which are very substantial. External link to DCPS: http://dcps.dc.gov/page/compensation-and-benefits-teachers
Alexandria, Arlington, and MontCo are a bit below, but not dramatically.
Nearly all privates pay much, much less at every level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think they compare to public schools because of the school funding and union contracts. There was a kindergarten teacher at my DD's public elementary who had been there for 20-25 years and he was making about $125K. He has since retired but that was about 5 years ago. I believe the starting salary in DCPS is about 60K or 65K.
That's definitely not the starting salary in DCPS. The only teachers who start that high will have extensive prior teaching experience and/or a Masters or higher degree.
Anonymous wrote:Just saw a posting and considering an application. Looking for any insight into teacher salaries (I have a Master's if that matters). No private school teaching experience, but several years of college-level teaching. Are salaries varied across lower, middle, and upper schools? Thanks.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think they compare to public schools because of the school funding and union contracts. There was a kindergarten teacher at my DD's public elementary who had been there for 20-25 years and he was making about $125K. He has since retired but that was about 5 years ago. I believe the starting salary in DCPS is about 60K or 65K.