my school district 50,000+/year
2006-09-12 09:00:15
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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2004 Survey & Analysis of Teacher Salary Trends
For the first time since the 1999-2000 school year, the average teacher salary failed to keep up with inflation, according to the AFT's latest salary survey. The AFT teacher salary survey found that the average teacher salary in the 2003-04 school year was $46,597, a 2.2 percent increase from the year before. This falls short of the rate of inflation for 2004, which was 2.7 percent. In addition, many states are attempting to drastically reduce or eliminate pension and healthcare benefits, which were negotiated as part of their compensation.
You could likely extrapolate to this year at a rate of about 2.5% per year.
http://www.aft.org/salary/index.htm
2006-09-12 16:04:54
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answer #2
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answered by odu83 7
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These are for PUBLIC school teachers:
A brand new teacher might only make $25K - $35K per year but I have heard of salaries for teachers with years & years of service making as much as $110,000 in a few wealthy districts. Compensation is based upon the old union tenet that years of service, not capability & performance, should dictate your pay.
Stupid way to compensate people if you ask me... Of course I make a lot more than a third year teacher in my third year out of college.
2006-09-12 16:06:18
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answer #3
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answered by Dubberino 3
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There is no simple answer.
If she/he only have a BA degree you start lower.
Is it a public or private school?
How many years have you been teaching so far?
How many hours a week will you teach?
What are your benefits?
Which state are you living at? (standard of living)
A teacher can make anywhere from 30-80000$ a year .
2006-09-12 16:05:07
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answer #4
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answered by loretail 2
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Here in HISD starting off between 35 and 40K a year, not too shabby right?
2006-09-12 16:01:23
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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experience, education and the individual school
district all come into this. although most teachers
still feel they are underpaid (who doesn;t?) they are
usually better paid than the taxpayers supporting them.
2006-09-12 16:09:51
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answer #6
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answered by agedlioness 5
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in my state of ky it does not matter what you teach..teachers are paid on the degree they have and their experience.....In ky, my husband has been teaching for 5 years and has one of the highest degrees,,he makes 37,000 a year...
he teaches english.
2006-09-12 16:09:08
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answer #7
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answered by Machelle 4
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Go to salary.com and you can find out average salaries for specific jobs and areas.
2006-09-12 16:05:46
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answer #8
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answered by Samantha J 2
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depends on how many years of teching are under his/her belt.
2006-09-12 16:03:27
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answer #9
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answered by tecsklls9 3
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