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"Salaries for Bellevue and Mercer Island Teachers"

5 Comments -

1 – 5 of 5
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Do your numbers include "TRI" pay, ie training, additional duties etc?

Wed Sep 17, 05:45:00 AM 2008

Anonymous Anonymous said...

The Bellevue School District completely lost the PR campaign. The strike was about pay and benefits. Yet, the many articles I heard or read, focused on curriculum. Striking for pay develops much less public sympathy than striking against structured curriculum. As a last note, private school teacher pay would give you a pretty good benchmark as to how the market values teachers. Of course this comparison would have to be adjusted to account for different work loads.

Wed Sep 17, 05:56:00 AM 2008

Blogger Richard Sprague said...

My numbers include "certified base salary", "base salary", and "other salary". As I scan down the list, "other salary" appears to correlate with TRI (some teachers get a lot, some get 0).

My numbers don't include "insurance benefits", which vary from 0 to about $20K.

I'd love to compare with private salaries if anyone has the data.

Wed Sep 17, 07:24:00 AM 2008

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I believe the salaries are based on how much experience and how much education they have. Wouldn't it be more accurate to do an apples-apples comparison of teachers with similar experience and education instead of using the aggregate?

Bellevue has had the reputation of having among the highest teacher turnover in the state. That could mean, as a whole, the teachers there have less experience -- hence the problem.

Wed Sep 17, 10:05:00 AM 2008

Blogger Richard Sprague said...

"Experience" in the dataset I have just means number of years the person is employed, which isn't much of a guide to how much they are worth. Sure, theoretically a person who's been doing something a long time is better at it than somebody who just started, but some of the best teachers I know are relatively young.

Thu Sep 18, 09:02:00 PM 2008

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