Deborah R. Gerhardt, a parent of school-age children in North Carolina, is upset that her children’s teachers–including their best teachers–are leaving. They are leaving because the Legislature is driving the state’s best teachers away, she says.
Ten years ago, she and her family moved to North Carolina because of its reputation for investing in its public schools.
But that reputation has been squandered.
She writes:
After six years of no real raises, we have fallen to 46th in teacher pay. North Carolina teachers earn nearly $10,000 less than the national average. And if you look at trends over the past decade, we rank dead last: After adjusting for inflation, North Carolina lowered teacher salaries nearly 16 percent from 2002 to 2012, while other states had a median decline of 1 percent. A first-year teacher in North Carolina makes $30,800. Our school district lost a candidate to a district in Kentucky because its starting salary was close to $40,000. It takes North Carolina teachers more than 15 years to earn $40,000; in Virginia it may take only four. Gap store managers on average make about $56,000.
If you talk to a teacher in North Carolina, you will hear the bitter truth of how difficult it is for them to make ends meet. Most teachers at Ben’s school work at least one extra job. An elementary school teacher told me that his daughters do not have the chance to play soccer or cello like his students. He has no discretionary income left to spare.
What are we teaching our children about the value of education? When my boys see a teacher outside school, they rush up to say hello, eyes bright with admiration and respect. How I wish our children could minister to the adults in my state. While the majority of us remain quiet, North Carolina teachers face incessant reminders that they are not valued.
Both parties are responsible, she says. The Democrats froze teacher pay. Then the Republicans started an all-out war on teachers in 2013.
Job security in the form of tenure was abolished. Extra pay for graduate degrees was eliminated. A new law created vouchers so that private academies could dip into the shrinking pool of money that the public schools have left. While requiring schools to adopt the Common Core standards, the legislature slashed materials budgets. According to the National Education Association, we fell to 48th in per-pupil expenditures. State funds for books were cut by about 80 percent, to allocate only $14.26 a year per student. Because you can’t buy even one textbook on that budget, teachers are creating their own materials at night after a long day of work. As if that weren’t enough, the legislature eliminated funding for 5,200 teachers and 3,850 teacher assistants even though the student population grew. North Carolina public schools would have to hire 29,300 people to get back up to the employee-per-student ratio the schools had in 2008. The result? Teachers have more students, no current books, and fewer professionals trained to address special needs, and their planning hours are gone now that they must cover lunch and recess. For public school teachers in North Carolina, the signals sent by this legislation are unambiguous: North Carolina does not value its teachers.
As a parent who is deeply concerned about the public schools, she is leading a campaign to raise teacher pay to the national average. Friends say this is hopeless because the Legislature is determined to wipe out public education altogether. But she is buoyed by polls showing that three-quarters of people in North Carolina think teachers should be paid more. “A nonpartisan survey from October 2013 showed that 76 percent of North Carolinians agree that public school teachers are paid too little, 71 percent think we cannot keep the most qualified teachers with the current pay scale, and 83 percent support increased pay for higher degrees. I love these data. They prove that the recent legislative assault on teachers does not reflect true North Carolina values.”
It is parents like this who will turn the tide in North Carolina, where the Legislature seems to despise teachers. The bottom line: It is parents like this who will vote these men out of office.
Over the past year, as I learn about what is happening in North Carolina, I keep imagining a scene where the leaders of the Legislature meet each week to think up a new idea to make teachers feel disrespected. “Well, let’s see, we have already taken away the stipends for graduate degrees. We have already taken away due process rights. We have already gotten rid of teachers’ aides. We cut the textbook fund. What can we do now?”
These guys are creative. What will they think up next?

I saw this coming in NC since 2008 that is the main reason why we moved. I am not sure why people in NC do not pay attention to what is going on in their own state until it is too late. When you don’t pay taxes or at least a fair share then you don’t get services. It is not a difficult concept. How the people voted for McCroy I don’t know? He had crook written all over him. I am glad some of the people in NC are waking up. Maybe now something will turn around.
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We just moved to the Raleigh area in August 2013. When my son finishes school in June 2014 we are moving back to NYC. He has special needs and I just can’t keep him in a school system that keeps making huge, sweeping cuts. I have not pulled him out of his class now b/c his preschool special education teacher is excellent. And he loves her! I do not even know if she’ll be here next year. I don’t know how everybody isn’t outraged about what’s happening in NC.
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Re Mike Petrilli’s suggestion that other states seek the proficiency of Massachusetts in education . . .
Looking for that economic link to Massachusetts, it seems there is something else lacking from the legislators in North Carolina other than reason and compassion.
From America’ Richest (and Poorest) States – 24/7 Wall St.:
http://247wallst.com/special-report/2013/09/19/americas-richest-and-poorest-states/5/
38. North Carolina
> Median household income: $45,150
> Population: 9,752,073 (10th highest)
> Unemployment rate: 9.5% (tied-4th highest)
> Pct. below poverty line: 18.0% (10th highest)
“North Carolina’s unemployment rate of 9.5% was one of the nation’s highest in 2012. In addition, the state also had one of the nation’s worst poverty rates, with 18% of the population living below the poverty line. Last year, according to the News & Observer, a state lawmaker stated that no one in North Carolina lived in extreme poverty, claiming “poverty [means] you’re out there living on a dollar and half a day. I don’t think we have anybody in North Carolina doing that.” These comments drew substantial criticism from groups that work to fight poverty. According to the census, 6% of households lived on income of less than $10,000 last year. This was one of the highest rates in the country.”
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TY for this information. OY! HORRORS.
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The high unemployment and poverty leads to one of the problems NC faces. I have been told many times that I should just be thankful to have a job. I feel the view of many is that teachers are just taking tax payer money and we should just be thankful to be getting the scraps we are because these people aren’t getting anything. I’m sorry but I went to college for 6 years to perfect my craft and am having a hard time making ends meet because I have to pay back school loans. I’m happy that this is my last year here. I have a job offer in another state making $35,000 a year more than what I am now doing the exact same job. The only difference my new state values education and they are willing to pay to recruit and retain the best teachers.
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If you teach in NC….you must work other jobs…..I always worked 3 or 4 extra jobs…nights…weekends…every single summer….seasonal….after school…before school…you get the point..In addition I worked all of the extra hours on school work..
The work was non-stop…except for the one week we took each year for vacation…..I was under the assumption all teachers had to do this….If they do give pay raises to these teachers..I can assure you they will have them working before school…after. school..at nights..and every weekend..They believe in no raises for teachers….there is no respect for teachers in this Sate…
They..(the big dudes with the power) ….go…and I have seen this…to their million dollar beach houses…..with their boats….their wining and dining…..their luxurious cars…..and discuss what is needed for Education to improve in this State..It is the joke of every teacher…..
They are sickening and getting Fatter in bulge and Green at the same time!
It is such a farce..There are reviews for the EOG’s that are 65 pages long and the teacher has to run off every page….but is given only 2 packs of paper per nine weeks..It is pathetic…A company would be bankrupt after the 2nd day…
That is only 1 review…There are up to 5 reviews and each have about 60 pages…What a Joke,..
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Horrendous! It’s a grab for money and power and no one should forget this. It’s about the ELITE controlling the rest of us for their PROFITS….period.
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DITTO
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The concern over NC teacher salaries is valid, as we are now in the lower tier of state teacher salaries.
But, despite the omission in the report, this did not occur “overnight” with the arrival of Republican majority in legislature and governorship.
It has been a gradual downturn over more than a decade for a variety of reasons, but NOT a deliberate affront on teachers. Which the NC Education Association fails to mention, perhaps due to it being in hibernation during the three terms of Democrat governorships.
Critics who could care less about the state’s financial woes conveniently
omit the $2.5 billion debt NC has due to extending unemployment four years ago, which must be paid back to the Federal govt.
Add in the recession which made NC one of the highest unemployment states in the nation and one can appreciate the tremendous challenge.
Its not surprising, yet troubling, teacher salaries have become a partisan issue. Teacher salaries have not suffered any more than other public positions.
Getting NC teacher salaries to where they should be will not occur overnight, it took fourteen years to get us here, and will take more
than two years to fix.
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I think it will take parents like this to make it happen. Parents have to step up on behalf of teachers because in states where teachers do organize, there is a mindset built up against them that trickles into other states where teachers cannot organize. And so parents (tax payers who use schools) will have more clout in saying, “hey. . .we need to pay them more!” than teachers will on saying same on their own behalf.
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I think the thing to remember about our Raleigh leadership is. . .”no taxes.”
But. . .”no taxes!” And roads. . .”no taxes!” But what about. . .”no taxes!” . . .well, “no taxes!”
That’s all they care about, it seems. So it isn’t so much even about showing them how they are misbusing (to use a favorite kid word I heard once) teachers and public schools, but that it all boils down to “no taxes!”
Got that. . .”no taxes!”
Of course, supporting two school approaches (or three, really) public, charter and voucher, I think, will create the need for more taxes. But I guess they figure that’s a future problem not to worry with now.
The “no taxes” hammer has no discretion. . .it just hammers on anything that costs tax payer money.
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The next step is to get rid of mandatory education; then, they can let the public school system die since they will no longer be responsible for educating all children. If you want an education, then you will have to get yourself into a charter or rely on those oh so generous vouchers. Wait a minute! If school is no longer mandatory, the government doesn’t have to allocate anything for education. Guess vouchers go out the window, and we have taken care of that pesky tax issue, too!
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Utah’s already discussing this. Senator Aaron Osmond (yes, he’s a nephew of Donny and Marie) is proposing that in the legislative session that starts in two weeks. It’s scary. Utah already spends less per pupil than any other state in the nation, and this will just give an excuse to spend even less.
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Maybe I’m nuts but it looks like they go in and completely destroy public education they they can complain about it and replace it with charter and private education. I really can’t see any other reason for this assault on education to this degree. I feel sickened by this as here in calif. I know teachers struggling too, not to the same extent thanks to Gov. Brown. but it could happen we have an Eli Broad supt. in LA. and he’s after teachers firing them for nothing and intimidating them for fun..
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Ms. Ravitch, thank you so much for helping to put North Carolina in the spotlight. We are losing some AWESOME educators to other states. Teaching is a challenging profession! Many who have left and who are deciding to leave are doing so because other states pay more. They realize there are challenges wherever they go, but at least they will be able to financially support their families. I have also considered leaving after teaching here for 21 years. I wonder will things eventually change for the better. Time will tell.
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Don’t give up! Stay and fight for better times. Stay and vote for better leaders and legislators!
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Exactly.
In our house we consider this period the innocation of NC so we do not succumb to the disease entirely.
Get out your votes!!! Pay attention.
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Innoculation
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Diane, it would appear Missouri is next, as you have reported. We know a tenure-dismantling bill is being submitted, and we know Nicastro is in collusion with privatizers, and unfortunately, we know that the battle will be difficult to win. Thanks for all you do to help.
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Eliot,
We don’t have “tenure” here in the Show Me State. We do have “due process rights” after a five year (continuous with same district) probationary period.
We need to be careful to not use the edudeformer’s language.
Duane
Nice scenery in the background, certainly isn’t MO, though!
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That’s what we had too. Due process. Not tenure.
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As the majority of working American who do not receive tenure, what is so unique about the profession that warrant it for teachers?
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Love this lady! I hope things turn around soon. I come home every night feeling beat down. Bless the children, if it weren’t for them I think we’d all pack up and move.
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Well in NJ we were just visited by the State (QSAC- facilities) and they didn’t cite the building for it’s mold, uneven heating systems, rodent feces or insect infestations, but did cite the building for teacher refrigerators and have required us to remove all personal mini refrigerators from classrooms. For what purpose…? I believe it’s another way to chip away at the morale of public school teachers.
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“The bottom line: It is parents like this who will vote these men out of office.”
And vote in whom? There is the corporate-backed candidate, and then there is the corporate-backed candidate.
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Wrong.
Read up.
New candidates are getting involved on the state level. This is not a hopeless situation.
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As a fifth year teacher and Teacher of the Year at Ashley High last year, I am looking for another job and bailing out. Done. Can’t raise my son on my salary, and I won’t lose spending time with him to work 2-3 other jobs to barely make it. I can drive to Myrtle Beach and make $9,000 more a year as a special education teacher…sad but true.
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