Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$50k is nice, but it's hard to support a family in this area without another income. It's ridiculous.
The salary is a bit misleading because of working 9 months. take the salary divide by nine then times 12 is the real salary, that ls not including the gold plated health and ension benifits.
Where do people come up with nine months? Around here teachers work through most of June and go back in September which leaves July and August when most teachers I know are taking continuing ed classes or material for the next year.
So true. I am out of my classroom around June 20 and back in around Aug 10. School in the District doesn't start after labor day. It usually starts around Aug 25. I work at camp in the summer. Take about three weeks off in July to be with my family at our lake cottage in upstate NY to rest and regain my sanity so I can start all over again. I teach Pre-K. It is physically and emotionally tiring, but I pretty much love it. Can't imagine being in a desk job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$50k is nice, but it's hard to support a family in this area without another income. It's ridiculous.
The salary is a bit misleading because of working 9 months. take the salary divide by nine then times 12 is the real salary, that ls not including the gold plated health and ension benifits.[/quote
It's 10 months. And most professionals have access to health insurance and pension "benifits."
DH and I are both in our 2nd year at MCPS. I have a masters and make $51k, he has a bachelors plus some and makes $46k. We were previously on other career paths.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$50k is nice, but it's hard to support a family in this area without another income. It's ridiculous.
The salary is a bit misleading because of working 9 months. take the salary divide by nine then times 12 is the real salary, that ls not including the gold plated health and ension benifits.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$50k is nice, but it's hard to support a family in this area without another income. It's ridiculous.
The salary is a bit misleading because of working 9 months. take the salary divide by nine then times 12 is the real salary, that ls not including the gold plated health and ension benifits.
Where do people come up with nine months? Around here teachers work through most of June and go back in September which leaves July and August when most teachers I know are taking continuing ed classes or material for the next year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$50k is nice, but it's hard to support a family in this area without another income. It's ridiculous.
The salary is a bit misleading because of working 9 months. take the salary divide by nine then times 12 is the real salary, that ls not including the gold plated health and ension benifits.
Anonymous wrote:$50k is nice, but it's hard to support a family in this area without another income. It's ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Arlington, 2 years, Masters, 50k
Anonymous wrote:Also, anyone can look up public school teacher salaries; they're on every district's website.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Me: $70k, 13 years experience, masters, public school
Husband: $46k, 14 years experience, bachelors, private school.
Hmm..do I know you? Do you teach kindergarten and have 2 young daughters?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is unbelievable sad for me to read. I mean, seriously?
Only a 10k difference between someone without a degree and someone with a Masters........WOW
No study has shown that a teacher with a master's degree is in any way better than one without. So why should they even be paid that much more? (Good teachers should be paid well, better than they are, but their salaries shouldn't be based on years of experience or if they have a master's degre.)
Anonymous wrote:Me: $70k, 13 years experience, masters, public school
Husband: $46k, 14 years experience, bachelors, private school.