Walter, did you already send this to JUNTO?
   
 
 
http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110009612 
$34.06 an Hour 
That's  how much the average public school teachers makes. 
Is that "underpaid"? 

BY JAY P. GREENE AND MARCUS A. WINTERS 
Wall St.  Journal                 [bio at bottom]
Friday, February 2, 2007 
Who, on average, is better paid --  public school teachers or architects? How 
about teachers or economists? You  might be surprised to learn that public 
school teachers are better paid than  these and many other professionals. 
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, public  school teachers earned 
$34.06 
per hour in 2005, 36% more than the hourly wage  of the average white-collar 
worker and 11% more than the average  professional specialty or technical 
worker.  
… Indeed, our efforts to hire more  teachers and raise their salaries account 
for the bulk of public school spending  increases over the last four decades. 
During that time per-pupil spending, adjusted for  inflation, has more than 
doubled; overall we now annually spend more than  $500 billion on public 
education.  
… The new Democratic majority intends  to push for greater education funding, 
much of which would likely to go toward  increasing teacher compensation. It 
would be beneficial if the debate focused  on the actual salaries teachers are 
already paid.  
It would also be beneficial if the  debate touched on the correlation between 
teacher pay and actual results.  To wit, higher teacher pay seems to have no 
effect on raising student  achievement. Metropolitan areas with higher teacher 
pay do not  graduate a higher percentage of their students than areas with  
lower teacher pay.  
In fact, the urban areas with the  highest teacher pay are famous for their 
abysmal outcomes. Metro Detroit leads  the nation, paying its public school 
teachers, on average, $47.28 per hour. That's 61% more  than the average 
white-collar worker in the Detroit area and 36% more than the average  
professional 
worker.  
In metro New  York, public school teachers make $45.79 per hour,  20% more 
than the average professional worker in that area. And in Los  Angeles teachers 
earn $44.03 per hour, 23% higher  than other professionals in the area.  
Evidence suggests that the  way we pay teachers is more important than simply 
what they take  home. Currently salaries are determined almost entirely by  
seniority -- the number of years in the  classroom -- and the number of 
advanced degrees accumulated. Neither has much  to do with student improvement. 
 
There is evidence that providing  bonuses to teachers who improve the 
performance of their  students does raise academic proficiency. With our 
colleagues 
at the  University of Arkansas we found that a Little Rock program  providing 
bonuses to teachers based on student gains on standardized tests  substantially 
increased math proficiency. Researchers at the University of Florida recently 
found similar results in  a nationwide evaluation.  
Of course, public school teacher  earnings look less impressive when viewed 
on an annual basis than on an hourly  basis. This is because teachers tend to 
work fewer hours per year, with  breaks during the summer, winter and spring. 
But comparing  earnings on an annual basis would be inappropriate when teachers 
work significantly fewer hours  than do other workers.  
Teachers can use that time to be with  family, to engage in activities that 
they enjoy, or to earn additional money  from other employment. That time off 
is  worth money and cannot simply be ignored when comparing earnings.  The 
appropriate way to compare earnings in this circumstance is to  focus on hourly 
rates.  
Moreover, the earnings data reported  here, which are taken directly from the 
National Compensation Survey  conducted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, do 
not include retirement  and health benefits, which tend to be quite generous 
for public school  teachers relative to other workers. Nor do they include the 
 nonmonetary benefit of greater job security due to the tenure that most  
public school teachers enjoy.  
Educators sometimes object that  hourly earnings calculations do not capture 
the additional hours they work  outside of school, but this objection is not 
very compelling. First, the  National Compensation Survey is designed to 
capture all hours actually  worked. And teachers are hardly the only wage 
earners 
who take work home  with them.  
The fact is that teachers are better  paid than most other professionals. 
What matters is the way that we pay  public school teachers, not the amount.  
[Success  Achievement Bonuses are better than aging.]  The next  time 
politicians 
call for tax increases to address the problem of terribly  underpaid public 
school teachers, they might be reminded of these facts.  
Mr. Greene holds the endowed chair of  education reform at the University of 
Arkansas and is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, where Mr. Winters  
is a senior research associate. Their report, "How Much  Are Public  School 
Teachers Paid?," was released this  week 
[End quote.] 
http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110009612 
Teachers’ pay reality:   $34 an Hour





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