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State Supt. Flanagan: Michigan Teachers Should Make $100K

The average salary for a teacher within Utica Community Schools in 2010-11 was $83,646.

 

The key to getting more qualified math and science teachers into Michigan schools is simple, according to state Superintendent Mike Flanagan: pay them more.

Flanagan, who heads up the Michigan Department of Education, said Monday at an assembly of scientists at Michigan State University that Michigan schools need more math and science teachers. The problem, he said, is that most scientists and mathamaticians don't consider teaching in public schools to be a viable career option.

“We can do all we want with content standards, but the elephant in the room is that it won’t do much good if we don’t have enough math and science teachers in our schools,” Flanagan said while discussing science standards in K-12 shools, according to a release from the state.

“When you ratchet-up teacher salaries to $100,000-plus, market forces will direct more mid-career changers and you’ll attract more math and science college students into our educator prep programs,” he added. “We need to be moving all teachers to that salary level to continue getting the best and brightest people educating our students.

“It’s all about talent.”

Average teacher salaries, according to statistics released annually by the MDE, vary by tens of thousands of dollars, depending on the school district. No district's average salary in 2010-11 hit $100,000.

For example, the average salary for a teacher within Utica Community Schools in 2010-11 was $83,646 – ranked No. 3 average salary in the state. Teachers in Birmingham Area Schools earned an average of $75,323.07.

Correction: The average teachers salary at Birmingham Public Schools in 2010-11 was $75,323.07, district officials said Jan. 31. The original version of this story incorrectly stated that Birmingham had the highest average teacher salary in the state, at $94,703. This number was provided by the Michigan Department of Education, however district officials said this week that salary data had been mis-reported to the state in 2011.

Do you think Michigan teachers should have higher salaries? Tell us in the comments.

Related Topics: Michigan Department of Education, Teacher Salaries, and utica community schools

Matt Guarnieri

11:24 pm on Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Why not pay teachers according to their qualifications and not tenure? Dissolve the union and let the right teachers get paid what they are really worth. Math and science teachers will get paid 100k and gym teachers can get by on 40k. As long as there is a teachers union and tenure, truly talented teachers will never be paid what they are really worth. You can't just ratchet up pay for all teachers to attract better math teachers. Currently, the poor teachers are holding down the pay scale of the gifted teachers.

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Philip Karrandja

12:57 pm on Friday, February 1, 2013

Philip Karrandja
Could not agree more with what Matt Guarnieri posted. All teachers are not created the same.

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