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NJ Spotlight Maps Public School Teacher Salaries

Across the state, teacher's pay offers a patchwork of possibilities, but tax caps and a sluggish economy are keeping raises tight

 

By Colleen O'Dea, NJ Spotlight

The average New Jersey public school teacher earned $67,412 last year, an increase of less than 1 percent over the prior year.

That small pay hike ($356 on average) reflects continuing poor economic conditions and the relatively tight 2 percent cap on tax increases imposed by the state.

Click here for an interactive map with teacher salary information for every school district in the state

The average salary for non-administrative professional staff -- including teachers, librarians, counselors, and others -- was up nearly 6 percent over the 2009-10 average of $63,632, according to an analysis of the New Jersey Department of Education’s certificated staff databases.

The database lists the base salary, degree, experience, job titles, and other information for every professional school staffer in the state. Teachers and others may actually receive more in total pay if they get a stipend for coaching or other activities. They also may be paid extra for unused time off or for declining health insurance.

Between 2010-2011 and 2011-2012, a number of teachers in different districts agreed to a pay freeze. Voters in April 2010 rejected a near-record number of budgets -- 58.4 percent -- at least partly in response to a campaign by Gov. Chris Christie against the spending plans. The following year, just two of 10 budgets were rejected. This past spring, 88 percent of budgets passed, though only 70 districts held votes. A change in the law permits districts that stay below the cap not to put their budgets on the ballot.

According to the New Jersey School Boards Association, the average teacher contract settlement in 2011-2012 was 3.2 percent; for the new year, that is down to 2.4 percent. And the average salary increase for contracts settled since January 2011 is less than 2.2 percent.

“Settlement rates continue their downward trend due to the state’s 2 percent tax levy cap, the slow economy, and local school board concerns about property tax burdens,” said Marie S. Bilik, NJSBA executive director.

The average teacher in New Jersey last year had less than 13 years of experience. Little more than half of the teachers possessed a bachelor’s degree, while about 46 percent had a master’s degree.

In about a third of the districts, the highest paid professional whose primary responsibility was not administrative earned more than $100,000. At least some of these are guidance counselors working 12 months, instead of the 10 that the typical teacher works. Some also have some part-time administrative duties, for instance, serving as a subject supervisor.

The highest salary paid, at $162,599, was for a 12-month position as school psychologist at the Hudson County School of Technology. This professional had a master’s degree and 32 years of experience.

In contrast, the state’s longest-tenured teacher was an English as a Second Language expert in a Newark elementary school who had a doctorate and made $103,159 after 56 years of teaching.

New Jersey also boasts a an 84-year old Union City middle school teacher earning $111,600 after 40 years.

Below is a chart on teacher salary info for local districts and some District Factor Group comparables:

District Factor Group Average Teacher Salary One-Year Change Two-Year Change Average Years of Experience Lowest Teacher Salary Highest Teacher Salary
Fair Lawn GH $71,361 -1% +2.3% 13.9 years $29,286 $109,189
Paramus GH $67,769 +1.5% +5.9% 11.6 years $21,294 $119,031
Teaneck GH $81,951 -2.3% +8.1% 13.7 years $48,460 $113,203
Ridgewood J $78,319 -2.2% +4.3% 12.7 years $6,208 $126,616
Glen Rock J $71,988 +5% +9.8% 14.6 years $23,600 $119,464
Saddle Brook DE $65,124 -2.1% +2.1% 13.7 years $19,170 $106,682
Englewood DE $66,982 +0.3% +3.1% 10.4 years $19,506 $117,556
Bogota DE $66,761 +7.6% +10.9% 15.1 years $27,936 $98,929
Elmwood Park CD $57,943 +0.4% +8% 9.6 years $29,636 $104,833
Garfield B $68,529 +2.6% +6.3% 11.9 years $41,399 $133,300
Lodi B $68,826 +3% +9.4% 14.3 years $21,266 $115,191

*Teacher salaries include part-timers and 12-month positions

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Related Topics: Teacher Salaries

shimon baum

4:43 pm on Thursday, September 6, 2012

So part of the excessive taxes I pay is to help fund the salaries of teachers that on average make more money than me. What a great deal. Are they hiring? I might as well make some of my money back.

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Who Is John Galt

6:04 pm on Friday, September 7, 2012

Good point, Shimon. Teaneck teachers' pay is excessive if on average it's higher than Shimon Baum's salary. I've written to the board of Ed and instructed them to hold teacher salaries to average only equal to or below Baum's salary. Really!?!? Are you kidding!?!? Listen, if your unhappy with your pay and you think you'd be better compensated as a teacher, then go the hell ahead and work to become a teacher it's a free damn country, nothing's stopping you. Oh, by the way, no I'm not a teacher, but your comment was ludicrous!

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Josh Hosseinof

4:33 pm on Saturday, September 8, 2012

This comparison with the other towns is very useful. One of the arguments that always is put forth for the high salaries of Teaneck public school teachers is that they have many more years of experience on average compared to teachers in other towns. That is clearly not the case here - Teaneck teachers on average have fewer years of experience than teachers in Fair Lawn, Glen Rock, Bogota, and Lodi, and the same years of experience as teachers in Saddle Brook. Yet the Teaneck teachers by far have the highest average salary of all the towns listed.

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zizi

11:46 pm on Saturday, September 8, 2012

Teaneck spends way to much money on schools than the neighboring towns and gets the worst results...... The real losers are the students/parents who somehow are made to believe that higher salaries means better education. Poor students/parents are just pawns in the hands of these so called educators. It is time to roll back the increases and make the teachers responsible for the results their students achieve in standard tests.

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