Please register to participate in our discussions with 2 million other members - it's free and quick! Some forums can only be seen by registered members. After you create your account, you'll be able to customize options and access all our 15,000 new posts/day with fewer ads.
Great article from the Washington Post. Read it if you are thinking about being a teacher or have kids in public schools. Basically it is a race to the bottom ending in a wholesale sell out to the private sector.
You voted for this mess.
"In fact, by 2014-15, North Carolina was still spending $100 million less on public education than it had before the economic recession. And over the past ten years, public schools added more than 150,000 additional students. No Republican legislator can honestly say that per pupil expenditures across the state have increased in the last six years.
Teacher salaries fell to near the bottom among all states in the nation and worst in the South after five years with zero pay increases. And when Republicans finally acted to increase teacher pay, they claimed to make the biggest pay hike in state history–but in reality only bumped up paychecks by an average of $270 per year. When you factored inflation into the mix, teachers were losing money."
Base salaries for teachers are paid by the state. Here is the base annual pay for teachers, based on years of experience:
0-4 years: $35,000
5-9 years: $36,500
10-14 years: $40,000
15-19 years: $43,500
20-24 years: $46,500
25-plus years: $50,000
Some school systems like Wake County pay teachers a supplement. Johnston County, for example, pays a supplement, so a teacher with 10 years experience would get an extra $3,800 from the county. And a teacher with 20 years experience would get an extra $6,975.
Got a friend who has a daughter that is graduating College next year in NC, and she wants to stay and get a teaching job there.....I'll forward the article to her Dad...Thanks !
Personally, I am so over the term "war on <insert The flavor of the day>. I am not a big talking points fan. When we lived in NC, the schools were just fine in Wake County. Busing kids for diversity was my only issue, rather than fixing the handful of poor performing schools....which you find in any metro area.
Personally, I am so over the term "war on <insert The flavor of the day>. I am not a big talking points fan. When we lived in NC, the schools were just fine in Wake County. Busing kids for diversity was my only issue, rather than fixing the handful of poor performing schools....which you find in any metro area.
Personally, I am so over the republican controlled general assembly trying to legislate the great state of NC back into the stone age.
"When we lived in NC"...I'm guessing that was prior to 2010? Things have changed a bit, regardless of one's fondness for talking points.
Bottom line is the current legislature and governor could care less about public education. Let me illustrate. According to US News NC has 10MM people and 21 high schools in the top 1000 whereas MA has 6.7MM people with 43 high schools in the top 1000.
Great article from the Washington Post. Read it if you are thinking about being a teacher or have kids in public schools. Basically it is a race to the bottom ending in a wholesale sell out to the private sector.
You voted for this mess.
"In fact, by 2014-15, North Carolina was still spending $100 million less on public education than it had before the economic recession. And over the past ten years, public schools added more than 150,000 additional students. No Republican legislator can honestly say that per pupil expenditures across the state have increased in the last six years.
Teacher salaries fell to near the bottom among all states in the nation and worst in the South after five years with zero pay increases. And when Republicans finally acted to increase teacher pay, they claimed to make the biggest pay hike in state history–but in reality only bumped up paychecks by an average of $270 per year. When you factored inflation into the mix, teachers were losing money."
Base salaries for teachers are paid by the state. Here is the base annual pay for teachers, based on years of experience:
0-4 years: $35,000
5-9 years: $36,500
10-14 years: $40,000
15-19 years: $43,500
20-24 years: $46,500
25-plus years: $50,000
Some school systems like Wake County pay teachers a supplement. Johnston County, for example, pays a supplement, so a teacher with 10 years experience would get an extra $3,800 from the county. And a teacher with 20 years experience would get an extra $6,975.
My wife teaches in Wake Co., they pay an 11% supplement.
Bottom line is the current legislature and governor could care less about public education. Let me illustrate. According to US News NC has 10MM people and 21 high schools in the top 1000 whereas MA has 6.7MM people with 43 high schools in the top 1000.
were you trying to say "could NOT care less"?
If you're anti-NCGA, then you REALLY don't want them to care even less.
where do our school systems compare to school systems of similar size? We know that Wake & Mecklenburg are HUGE districts - what are their peers?
How much does MA - by state, not district - spend per pupil? How does that compare? How much is spent on system labor, facilities, teachers, and teaching materials?
Please register to post and access all features of our very popular forum. It is free and quick. Over $68,000 in prizes has already been given out to active posters on our forum. Additional giveaways are planned.
Detailed information about all U.S. cities, counties, and zip codes on our site: City-data.com.