Schools

Here's How Wisconsin Ranks In Teacher Pay

A new report shows teacher salaries, when adjusted for inflation, have actually decreased nationwide over the last 10 years.

A new report shows teacher salaries have fallen nationwide over the last 10 years.
A new report shows teacher salaries have fallen nationwide over the last 10 years. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

BROOKFIELD, WI — Wisconsin teachers earn the 33rd-most money in the country, according to a nationwide analysis published this week by one of the country’s largest education unions.

The National Education Association, based in Washington, D.C., on Monday released its annual “Rankings and Estimates” report.

Overall, the national average for teacher salary increased from $59,539 in 2016-17 to $60,477 in 2017-18. Average salaries ranged from as low as $44,926 in Mississippi to as high as $84,227 in New York.

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Wisconsin teachers earned on average $51,469 a year in 2017-18, and teachers who were just starting out earned $38,181, ranking 25th-highest in the country.

Here are the 10 states where teacher salaries were highest:

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  1. New York, $84,227
  2. California, $80,680
  3. Massachusetts, $80,357
  4. Washington, D.C., $76,486
  5. Connecticut, $74,517
  6. New Jersey, $69,917
  7. Alaska, $69,682
  8. Maryland, $69,627
  9. Pennsylvania, $67,535
  10. Rhode Island, $66,758

Nationwide, the union’s analysis found that salaries have increased 11.2 percent since 2008-09.
But that doesn’t tell the whole story. When adjusted for inflation, the teachers actually make on average 4.5 percent less than they did 10 years ago. The report did not provide inflation-adjusted salary changes by state.

NEA President Lily Eskelsen García said educator pay “continues to erode.” This means the large gap in pay between what educators earn and what similarly educated professionals earn in other jobs continues to expand.

“Educators don’t do this work to get rich, they do this work because they believe in students,” García said in a news release. “But their pay is not commensurate with the dedication and expertise they bring to the profession.”

Starting salaries for teachers also remain below pre-recession levels, the group added. The typical beginning teacher salary, when adjusted for inflation, fell nearly 3 percent over the last decade. The squeeze has been felt in some states more than others, particularly in Wisconsin and Michigan.

The reality for many teachers is that the base salary simply isn’t enough. About one in five have to work a second job to make ends meet, the union said.

Patch national staffer Dan Hampton contributed to this report.


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