Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here, I'm still curious about actual salary numbers. Does anyone have any insight on the actual salaries? And when you mention that the benefits suck, what does that mean? They don't get dental? No 401K?
15:55 here---BFFs health insurance for her and her son is about $800/mo. She doesn't get the MCPS pension that some teachers have. She has a 401K with a 3% match. She gets 3 days off when school is in session and they can't be before or after a holiday. She does not have short disability. I'm not sure about her prescription coverage but I know she spends a lot compared to me. Her in network deductible is also very high. There is no adoption assistance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It will vary by school, but in general they earn meaningfully less than public school teachers.
+1 I've taught at two of the "big" East Coast privates, and earned significantly less than that of my public school friends. One of these was one of the HADES schools, and people were always shocked at how low teachers' salaries were; I had to correct friends a few times when they voiced their beliefs that "now you make a good salary."
Why do people choose to work at private schools then? My DC is at a private, she's had some very good teachers, so I'm glad they're not all taking off for public, but you'd think the better ones would head to public if it's that much better.
The private school teachers do seem, on the whole, to be on the younger side, as compared to public. And there is quite a bit of turnover among the assistant teachers, but that may be a function of youth as well.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, I'm still curious about actual salary numbers. Does anyone have any insight on the actual salaries? And when you mention that the benefits suck, what does that mean? They don't get dental? No 401K?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It will vary by school, but in general they earn meaningfully less than public school teachers.
+1 I've taught at two of the "big" East Coast privates, and earned significantly less than that of my public school friends. One of these was one of the HADES schools, and people were always shocked at how low teachers' salaries were; I had to correct friends a few times when they voiced their beliefs that "now you make a good salary."
Anonymous wrote:It will vary by school, but in general they earn meaningfully less than public school teachers.
Anonymous wrote:At our school, $55k-$75k