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6 High Paying Cities for K-12 Teachers
What cities pay teachers well? Read and find out.
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6 High Paying US Cities
Teachers don’t get into teaching because of the great salaries, but earning more each paycheck can’t hurt.
1. Los Angeles
Starting Salary with Bachelor’s Degree: $49,497
Starting Salary with Mater’s Degree $55,124
About Los Angels Unified School District:
A major priority in the District is to have a fully certified /licensed teacher in every classroom. The District seeks qualified candidates who are innovative, enthusiastic, and are looking for the opportunity to make a difference. Mathematics, Science and special education are a priority for the District. The District is accepting applications for all subjects.
Interested in exploring a job with LA Unified School District?
Click here to learn more about employment.
2. New York City
Starting Salary with Bachelor’s Degree: $43,436
Starting Salary with Master’s Degree: $48,747
About New York City Public Schools:
Almost 135,000 people work full-time in New York City’s public school system — gifted teachers, principals, administrators, counselors, secretaries, paraprofessionals, custodians, and many, many more. Our shared mission is to provide the 1.1 million students we serve with the kind of education that will give them the tools to thrive in college and careers, and to contribute to their communities.
Interested in exploring a job with New York City Public Schools?
Click here to learn more about employment.
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== Related Links ==
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- Article: Careers With Good Wages & Plenty of Jobs Learn where teaching ranks. == == ==
- Lesson Plan: 50 Nifty United States Read lesson now. == ==
- Give your career a boost. Find a degree program and get ahead. == ==
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3. Atlanta
Starting Salary with Bachelor’s Degree: $43,231
Starting Salary with Master’s Degree: $47, 554
About Atlanta Public Schools
99 schools and other educational facilities are serving an estimated 50,000-student population. APS is organized into geographic clusters called School Reform Teams (SRTs), under the supervision of Executive Directors of Schools. 89 schools are classified at Title I schools and 86% of students are African American. 74% of students qualify for free and reduced meals. The ratio of teacher to student is no great than 1:23 at any level.The system’s 3,921 teachers make up 51 percent of APS staff personnel. Forty-five (45) percent of all APS teachers have advanced degrees. APS teachers have, on average, 15 years of classroom experience.
interested in a job with Atlanta Public Schools?
Click here to learn more about employment.
4. Chicago
Starting Salary with Bachelor’s Degree: $43, 233
Starting Salary with Master’s Degree: $46,228
About Chicago Public Schools:
623 Chicago schools employ 24,644 teachers that service 420, 982 students, 48.6% are African- American and 37.6% are Latino. 85.6% of students come from low-income families. The ratio of teacher to student is no great than 1:20. The Chicago Public Schools strives to be the premier urban school district in the country by providing all students and their families with high quality instruction, outstanding academic programs, and comprehensive student development supports to prepare them for the challenges of the world of tomorrow.
Interested in a job with Chicago Public Schools?
Click here to learn more about employment.
5. Houston
Starting Salaries with Bachelor’s Degree: $42,745
Starting Salaries with Master’s Degree: $43,745
About Houston Independent School District:
The Houston Independent School District is the largest public school system in Texas and the seventh-largest in the United States. Most HISD (Houston Independent School District) schools are assigned to one of five regions (North, East, South, West, and Central) with offices located in communities to give students and parents personalized service and immediate assistance. HISD educates 202,000 students of diverse population: 58% Hispanic, 30% African-American, 9% white, 3% Asian/Pacific. 78% of Houston’s students qualify for free and reduced meals. 55,000 students are limited English proficient, who combine speak more than 90 different native languages. 12,721 teachers service HISD.
Interested in a job with Houston Independent School District?
Click here to learn more about employment.
6. Philadelphia
Starting Salary with Bachelor’s Degree: $39.914
Starting Salary with Master’s Degree: $41,088
About Philadelphia Public Schools:
The School District of Philadelphia is one of the largest in the nation by enrollment, serving a racially and ethnically diverse student population. The district currently has a need for bilingual teachers who speak fluent English, and Spanish, Vietnamese or Chinese. The School District of Philadelphia has approximately 184,560 students in 291 public schools. The District is divided into twelve regions each under the supervision of a Regional Superintendent. The diverse student population represents 64.4% African-America and 15.8% Hispanic as it’s largest ethnicities.
Interested in a job with Philadelphia Public Schools?
Click here to learn more about employment.
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== More Teacher Salary Articles… ==
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- Main Guide == ==
- BA/BS vs. Masters: Compare Salaries in 50 States == ==
- Ten Great Cities for Teachers to Live & Work == ==
- Teaching Salary Guide for All 50 States == ==
- 10 Highest Paying Jobs in Education == ==
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- 6 High Paying Cities for K-12 Teachers == ==
- Who Will be Teaching in 2016? == ==
- Salaries for Careers in Education == ==
- Salaries Based on Degrees Earned & Location == ==
- Earn more. Go back to school to earn your degree.</em == ==
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© 2008 TheApple
usa007
2 months ago
2 comments
I think some of these articles are skewed....I have a M.Ed. and a Composite Social Studies Certification in Texas, Florida, and Delaware and I cannot get a job. I would love to be back in Dallas but that school district is so completely in total disfunction. I taught at the Yvonne A. Ewell Townview Magnet Center, in Dallas, for 5 years and most recently taught in Florida on an "Interim" assignment. And after having completed open online applications for over 40 districts in the above listed states---NO JOB!! So these aritcles-mainly the article about the 15 educational jobs over 70k is just a bunch of HOOIE! Kind of like pig sooie...by the way I have a application to renew my original teaching license in Arkansas and even in Arkansas there are no jobs except Special Ed or Reading Specialist or Speech Path... so know before you go the writers of this website are so really disconnected with the true distruction of the Education System. Futhermore, I feel like it is so nice to hear all these cutesy comments about how nice it is to work here and there--check you own local districts website and see the absence of jobs available....Havent any of you even noticed that your classroom size is growing....pathetic!
When the Principal where I was teaching in Florida called me in to tell me that she was dissolving my position(along with 9 others), she said, "...if you had your Reading Specialist, we wouldnt be having this conversation..." implying that she would have a job.So the long and short of it is I saw the handwriting on the wall and being a proactive person I immediately set out to get a job-to no avail..and furthermore I am too over qualified and too old for most other flunky jobs like waiting tables....so I feel like there is an absence of good sense on this websites behalf...
dhastings
9 months ago
210 comments
what are the salary ceilings?
andygomez03
10 months ago
2 comments
I work in DC Public Schools, and it is not an easy task. Although I work at one of the "better" schools, the new chancellor is really more of a dictator. She is mandating a lot of new initiatives that are good on paper but her way of doing things is anti-teacher in my opinion. The pay is not bad at all, starting salary with a bachelors is about 43000 and with a bachelors is about 48000. The cost of living in the city is super expensive. I live in a suburb and I make it by ok.
pdklein
12 months ago
2 comments
I like Jax had a more ambitious lifestyle, until my wife took up with a COP. Unfortunately I lost everything, including my kids who were moved into the detective's house. didn't matter that I had shared parenting. COPs and threats from them are very persuasive Eventually had to move out of the county to avoid harrassment. After the pain subsided, I was, however, awakened to the benefits of a simpler life, but had to move far away to find work so I could pay child support and still survive and not be thrown in jail. I live in a county where there is a militant female prosecutor who persecutes dads...sometimes rightly and many times wrongly. It always makes sense to give a police record to a man who already can't find work. Where is the logic in these people's minds.
Anyway, I returned to school on a music scholarship that I turned down years ago and got a master of music. But it's not an education degree. I found that I can enter schools on a lateral entry licensure, but most districts are loathe to pay a master degree salary when there is no certification. So I have been teaching English in the public schools in South Korea.
You can make roughly $30,000 to $34,000 a year here tax free for the first two years. Rent is free because the school provides an apartment. Roundtrip airfare is paid. Health insurance is paid. There is a one month salary bonus for completing a contract and each month the school deducts 5% of your salary and matches it as a retirement fund.
It is very challenging in many ways. Asian cultures are a 360 degree turn around from the west. Lots of culture shock. I spent a year just learning to read the alphabet and two years to understand a few phrases. Not only is the culture a complete turn about, but also the language. Sounds uttered here are incomprehensible to the western ear and virtually impossible for the western tongue to reproduce. Lots of isolation. But for those who drink it's a party paradise. Unfortunately I'm a teetotaler.
But to make a long story short, I'd love to come home and teach. I'd love to find a job, a good job teaching music rather than ESL (although I've become quite good at it), a nice trustworthy woman and settle down. I'm a talented guy. Spent years studying piano with two concert pianists. I'm 46 and life is too short and it's lonely to wander all alone. Where can a guy like me find work in the states with two non education music degrees on a lateral entry position?
texasteacher
about 1 year ago
4 comments
Dallas ISD is in deep trouble. Some financial wizards put the district between 64 and 84 million dollars in the red. The district is laying off around 600 employees including at least 350 teachers. Somebody needs to be fired.
Detroit08
about 1 year ago
6 comments
Michigan is not too bad, although the economy here is awful with the failing auto industry and districts are losing students so securing a job here may be difficult. Detroit entry level w/Masters is 41, 537. Masters at step 10 (the highest level) is 72, 516. Detroit is one of the lower paid districts in the Metro Detroit area so if you can get in one of the suburbs it's not bad.
Cholsen
about 1 year ago
2 comments
On what salary schedule are you basing your LA numbers. On the 08-9 schedule I have, starting salary is 45,637 + 584 for a masters degree. Am I missing something?
jax
about 1 year ago
4 comments
I think we're missing the big picture here. I was born and raised in NYC (super expensive). My siblings now live in California (almost as expensive) and I live in one of the suburbs north of Dallas. My sister teaches in San Diego area and despite making considerably more than I make (her and her husbands income is over 120K a year). She, hubby and kids can barely survive with the high cost of living, energy costs, food, outrageous mortgage etc.
I make 45K and am able to live comfortably on that (yes i have children at home and I am a single parent).
The way i see it 43-48K in a super expensive major city like L.A., N.Y. is more like making 20K a year in reality. It's all about:
1) Perspective-- Higher Salary+ Mega High Cost of living=scraping by
VS
A bit Lower Salary+ Substantially Lower Cost of Living+ Controlling spending habits= More comfortable living.
2) Control your spending, simplify your life a bit and you'll be able to hold on to more of your dollars.
I am not suggesting living like a hermit BUT we have to face the facts:
AMERICANS SPEND TOO MUCH ON TOO MUCH CRAP!
I used to be one of those Americans! I had the 3,000 Square foot 4 bedrooms,gameroom, 3 bathroom 3 car garage house in a deluxe neighborhood.
I had all the goodies-cars, motorcycles, china, fine glassware , nice vacations twice a year etc etc. and then it allllll blew up on us (or rather me depending on how you look at it) ---for the curious: Hubby took up with a much younger woman.
But i am soooo glad my life took the turn it did because with that i made an unbelievable discovery--I discovered i was enormously happier with ALOT LESS. A discovery i made when i moved out of my house temporarily on separation until the divorce.
So powerful was this discovery that it prompted me to leave him just about EVERYTHING in the divorce. He kept the house, cars (except for mine), all the contents of the home etc. All i asked for is that he also keep the remaining debts.
So i came out of my marriage with nothing but also DEBT FREE.
I bought a modest 1600 3bedroom/2 bathroom square foot home in a super nice, fairly new neighborhood close to amenities and with a decent driving distance of downtown Dallas.
I have some goodies like 2 TVs (bought at lowcost) Satellite, 2 Computers, Stereo system but that's it!
There are no "Knick nacs" in my home. No multiple cars, or motorcycles or boats, no expensive China, China hutch, sofas, glassware or expensive artwork --nothing.
I can buy these things but ---I CHOSE NOT TO.
I now have only 5 bills-- Electric, Water (including garbage and Sewer), Sattelite, Phone (including DSL internet)--these bills tend to add up to approximately $600/mo. and the mortgage is a smidgen over 1K , food and other essentials add up to about $400/mo= Approx 2K/MO.
Less bills and less junk=less cleaning=less headaches=less stress+ more time for the kids, friends, family and relationships (In other words- more time for what's important)=HAPPIER LIFE.
I am in a wonderful relationship with a man that knows how to treat a woman with respect and affection/attention.
And what about the EX?----Well it seems ex-hub got himself in a bit of a pickle:
Ex-husband is filing for Bankruptcy. I guess that's what happens when you take up with a 22 year old princess that feels the world should be handed to her on a silver platter with no effort on her part. Yes she promptly moved in with him once we separated and quit her job. He picked up the cost of her move, debts, and VERY EXPENSIVE cost of living. Gotta have those cute shoes.
It's amazing what some Men will do for a "Piece"-- LOL
chrawa
about 1 year ago
2 comments
In maryland incoming teachers make 43 with bachelors on average and 46/ 47 with masters. DC is a little bit more but you will never be able to buy property. Some counties in Maryland pay a little less but they contribute to your retirement.
cassia_sunshine
about 1 year ago
12 comments
Oh wow I just saw decochick comment, that is awsome! But still does anyone knows about D.C. let me know.
cassia_sunshine
about 1 year ago
12 comments
I am wondering if anyone knows about the Dallas school district or the D.C. school districts?
Thanks.
cassia
sspence
about 1 year ago
2 comments
im interested in moving to columbus ohio and teaching science. I have applied to several districts, but have not heard any response, ANY SUGGESTIONS?????? sspence8@yahoo.com
decochick
about 1 year ago
2 comments
You forgot to add Dallas. The starting salary is $43500 with a Bachelor's, plus a $3500 yearly bonus with a one time $1000-1500 sign on bonus.
hatmaster
about 1 year ago
4 comments
let's see kudos to whoever wrote the article tis a most laudable effort to keep educators informed.
that being said the article unfortunately only deals in terms of absolute salary.
I've never been to atlanta and chicago, so I have no idea about the 'true' situation there. but houston would definitely probably be in the top 3 if not the top spot I strongly think.
Houston's probably one of the only major cities out there that isn't constrained by natural boundaries (i.e. mountains, lakes, rivers, whatnot) it's smack flat in the middle of a virtual 'desert' so every year the 'sprawl' simply gets much bigger, since it can expand on all sides. instead of the housing market squeezing out the middle class.
quality of life is relatively decent there and the cost of living and food is much lower comparably to most major cities. you pay somewhere in the ballpark of $80 per square foot of housing.
(compared to nearly $1,000 per square foot in manhattan) the housing market is relatively stable and isn't prone to skyrocketing rates it goes up 2-3 percent per year i think.
los angeles on the other hand has cheap food but the land/housing prices are very pricey. it's near hollywood afterall and it's blocked on all sides from expanding. LAX is a rather cramped airport. and the smog. (i.e a cramped airport is a sign that land is at a premium) i could look up some la facts but i'm too lazy :P
new york city starting wages for a janitor i think is somewhere around the ballpark of $16 an hour that's roughly $31K a year :(
Looking around it seems the avg entry job lands $20 an hour...that's nearly $39K a year if what i'm seeing is a full time deal. and starting salary $43K.
and sales tax of 8.375% woohoo.
if you work in new york city or los angles for that matter you won't be able to afford in the city (obviously) proper. 2-3 hour commutes aren't uncommon. Brooklyn i think is nearly an hour or so away and the housing cost is roughly halved. i would think LA and NYC would be #'s 5 and 6 if they would be on the list at all after that
Brooke5
about 1 year ago
4 comments
It's a shame that we do not get paid more for our services. Without teachers no one would be able to do what they are doing in those professions that make $30,000 more than a teacher. Like somone stated earlier, the cost of living is much higher in those cities that pay more. But I agree, it is not about the money for me, it is about the love that I have for these children, however it would be nice to make a little more.