AFT survey shows teacher pay insufficient
Anemic growth in teacher salaries is making it increasingly difficult for teachers, especially new ones, to find affordable housing in their communities and to pay off student loan debts, according to the most recent teacher salary survey released in March by the AFT.
These and other factors place the teaching profession—already plagued by high turnover and recruiting challenges—in further peril. The AFT report asserts that, to make teacher pay competitive with pay in other comparable professions by the end of the decade, teachers need a 30 percent raise—an additional invest-ment in our children’s future of almost $15 billion per year.
“Given the difficulty many districts have attracting and keeping educators, the financial penalty for deciding to become a teacher is unacceptable,” says AFT president Edward J. McElroy. “If we’re serious about placing the most qualified professionals in the classroom and keeping them there, we simply need to make a significant investment in teacher salaries.”
The AFT teacher salary survey for the 2004-05 school year found that the average teacher salary was $47,602, a 2.2 percent increase from the previous year. This falls short of the rate of inflation that year, which was 3.4 percent. Between 2003 and 2005, the buying power of the average teacher salary decreased by almost $800. The 2005 report uses the most complete data available, but a look at more recent data from the 50 largest U.S. cities indicates the salary situation is not improving.
The 2005 salary survey also examines the impact of rising housing costs and student loan debt on teachers in the 50 largest cities. The study concludes that the incomes of mid-career teachers in these cities will limit them to purchasing lower-priced homes. In cities such as Seattle, Oakland, Los Angeles and San Francisco, many career teachers will be unable to realize the middle-class dream of home ownership.
“It’s become fashionable in some circles to portray teaching as a lucrative career choice,” says McElroy. “But research shows that this is clearly not the case. It’s going to become increasingly difficult to retain teachers if we’re not even paying them enough to live near the schools where they work.”
Other highlights of the 2005 salary survey:
■ Connecticut had the highest average teacher salary, at $57,760, while South Dakota posted the lowest, at $34,039.
■ The average beginning teacher salary in the 2004-05 school year was $31,753, up 3.1 percent from the previous year.
■ In 37 states, teacher salaries did not keep pace with the 3.4 percent increase in the Consumer Price Index.
The full report, including state-by-state teacher salary information, can be downloaded at www.aft.org/salary .











