Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m really curious about the admin salaries at our school. School apparently does not have to publish the salaries as it is a religious school. It seems like there has been a big increase in the number of admin positions over the years as well, as teacher salaries have begun to not keep up with inflation.
If they’re a non-profit (as many area privates are) you can find their tax filing information via pro publica. Highest paid employees are listed in Part VII.
Religious schools don't file 990s.
Some do. It's s choice when they don't.
Why would you file a 990 if you aren't required to do so? What purpose would it serve?
There are rare organizations that believe that transparency is a strength and a virtue. But not many. Too many people know where the $$$ go then.
That just nonsense
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m really curious about the admin salaries at our school. School apparently does not have to publish the salaries as it is a religious school. It seems like there has been a big increase in the number of admin positions over the years as well, as teacher salaries have begun to not keep up with inflation.
If they’re a non-profit (as many area privates are) you can find their tax filing information via pro publica. Highest paid employees are listed in Part VII.
Religious schools don't file 990s.
Some do. It's s choice when they don't.
Why would you file a 990 if you aren't required to do so? What purpose would it serve?
There are rare organizations that believe that transparency is a strength and a virtue. But not many. Too many people know where the $$$ go then.
Anonymous wrote:Why can't schools pay teachers with salaries similar to Google engineers?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m really curious about the admin salaries at our school. School apparently does not have to publish the salaries as it is a religious school. It seems like there has been a big increase in the number of admin positions over the years as well, as teacher salaries have begun to not keep up with inflation.
If they’re a non-profit (as many area privates are) you can find their tax filing information via pro publica. Highest paid employees are listed in Part VII.
Religious schools don't file 990s.
Some do. It's s choice when they don't.
Why would you file a 990 if you aren't required to do so? What purpose would it serve?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m really curious about the admin salaries at our school. School apparently does not have to publish the salaries as it is a religious school. It seems like there has been a big increase in the number of admin positions over the years as well, as teacher salaries have begun to not keep up with inflation.
If they’re a non-profit (as many area privates are) you can find their tax filing information via pro publica. Highest paid employees are listed in Part VII.
Religious schools don't file 990s.
Some do. It's s choice when they don't.
Anonymous wrote:Why can't schools pay teachers with salaries similar to Google engineers?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Baltimore area private-25 years experience, masters-$63,000
25 years at that school, or 25 years experience total? It makes a difference. Years of experience rarely transfer to a new job, public or private. It’s BS but that’s how most districts operate.
Anonymous wrote:Baltimore area private-25 years experience, masters-$63,000
Anonymous wrote:How much do public school teachers make!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Public service loan forgiveness
Working at a private school isn’t a public service.
So, teachers who get paid significantly less than public school teachers and are teaching kids from the same community as the public school kids aren't doing a public service and, therefore, should not be able to apply for loan forgiveness? BTW, if the private school is a non-profit, a teacher can apply for TEPSLF provided they meet the requirements (work at school for a certain number of years, have already made at least 120 payments).
Anonymous wrote:MD area private, 10 years experience with a masters degree $76,000 plus ok benefits and additional compensation for extra duties outside of a standard teaching load.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Public service loan forgiveness
Working at a private school isn’t a public service.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m really curious about the admin salaries at our school. School apparently does not have to publish the salaries as it is a religious school. It seems like there has been a big increase in the number of admin positions over the years as well, as teacher salaries have begun to not keep up with inflation.
If they’re a non-profit (as many area privates are) you can find their tax filing information via pro publica. Highest paid employees are listed in Part VII.
Religious schools don't file 990s.