WHEN we
don’t get
the results
we want in
our military
endeavors,
we don’t
blame the
soldiers. We
don’t say,
“It’s these
lazy
soldiers and
their
bloated
benefits
plans!
That’s why
we haven’t
done better
in
Afghanistan!”
No, if the
results
aren’t
there, we
blame the
planners. We
blame the
generals,
the
secretary of
defense, the
Joint Chiefs
of Staff.
No one
contemplates
blaming the
men and
women
fighting
every day in
the trenches
for little
pay and
scant
recognition.
And yet
in education
we do just
that. When
we don’t
like the way
our students
score on
international
standardized
tests, we
blame the
teachers.
When we
don’t like
the way
particular
schools
perform, we
blame the
teachers and
restrict
their
resources.
Compare
this with
our approach
to our
military:
when results
on the
ground are
not what we
hoped, we
think of
ways to
better
support
soldiers. We
try to give
them better
tools,
better
weapons,
better
protection,
better
training.
And when
recruiting
is down, we
offer
incentives.
We have a
rare chance
now, with
many
teachers
near
retirement,
to prove
we’re
serious
about
education.
The first
step is to
make the
teaching
profession
more
attractive
to college
graduates.
This will
take some
doing.
At the
moment, the
average
teacher’s
pay is on
par with
that of a
toll taker
or
bartender.
Teachers
make 14
percent less
than
professionals
in other
occupations
that require
similar
levels of
education.
In real
terms,
teachers’
salaries
have
declined for
30 years.
The average
starting
salary is
$39,000; the
average
ending
salary —
after 25
years in the
profession —
is $67,000.
This prices
teachers out
of home
ownership in
32
metropolitan
areas, and
makes
raising a
family on
one salary
near
impossible.
So how do
teachers
cope?
Sixty-two
percent work
outside the
classroom to
make ends
meet. For
Erik Benner,
an
award-winning
history
teacher in
Keller,
Tex., money
has been a
constant
struggle. He
has two
children,
and for 15
years has
been unable
to support
them on his
salary.
Every
weekday, he
goes
directly
from Trinity
Springs
Middle
School to
drive a
forklift at
Floor and
Décor. He
works until
11 every
night, then
gets up and
starts all
over again.
Does this
look like “A
Plan,”
either on
the state or
federal
level?
We’ve
been working
with public
school
teachers for
10 years;
every
spring, we
see many of
the best
teachers
leave the
profession.
They’re
mowed down
by the long
hours, low
pay, the
lack of
support and
respect.
Imagine a
novice
teacher,
thrown into
an urban
school, told
to teach
five classes
a day, with
up to 40
students
each. At the
year’s end,
if test
scores
haven’t
risen
enough, he
or she is
called a bad
teacher. For
college
graduates
who have
other
options,
this kind of
pressure,
for such low
pay, doesn’t
make much
sense. So
every year
20 percent
of teachers
in urban
districts
quit.
Nationwide,
46 percent
of teachers
quit before
their fifth
year. The
turnover
costs the
United
States $7.34
billion
yearly. The
effect
within
schools —
especially
those in
urban
communities
where
turnover is
highest — is
devastating.
But we
can reverse
course. In
the next 10
years, over
half of the
nation’s
nearly 3.2
million
public
school
teachers
will become
eligible for
retirement.
Who will
replace
them? How do
we attract
and keep the
best minds
in the
profession?
People
talk about
accountability,
measurements,
tenure, test
scores and
pay for
performance.
These
questions
are worthy
of debate,
but are
secondary to
recruiting
and training
teachers and
treating
them fairly.
There is no
silver
bullet that
will fix
every last
school in
America, but
until we
solve the
problem of
teacher
turnover, we
don’t have a
chance.
Can we do
better? Can
we generate
“A Plan”? Of
course.
The
consulting
firm
McKinsey
recently
examined how
we might
attract and
retain a
talented
teaching
force. The
study
compared the
treatment of
teachers
here and in
the three
countries
that perform
best on
standardized
tests:
Finland,
Singapore
and South
Korea.
Turns out
these
countries
have an
entirely
different
approach to
the
profession.
First, the
governments
in these
countries
recruit top
graduates to
the
profession.
(We don’t.)
In Finland
and
Singapore
they pay for
training.
(We don’t.)
In terms of
purchasing
power, South
Korea pays
teachers on
average 250
percent of
what we do.
And most
of all, they
trust their
teachers.
They are
rightly seen
as the
solution,
not the
problem, and
when
improvement
is needed,
the school
receives
support and
development,
not
punishment.
Accordingly,
turnover in
these
countries is
startlingly
low: In
South Korea,
it’s 1
percent per
year. In
Finland,
it’s 2
percent. In
Singapore, 3
percent.
McKinsey
polled 900
top-tier
American
college
students and
found that
68 percent
would
consider
teaching if
salaries
started at
$65,000 and
rose to a
maximum of
$150,000.
Could we do
this? If
we’re
committed to
“winning the
future,” we
should. If
any
administration
is capable
of tackling
this, it’s
the current
one.
President
Obama
and
Education
Secretary
Arne Duncan
understand
the
centrality
of teachers
and have
said that
improving
our
education
system
begins and
ends with
great
teachers.
But
world-class
education
costs money.
For those
who say,
“How do we
pay for
this?” —
well, how
are we
paying for
three
concurrent
wars? How
did we pay
for the
interstate
highway
system? Or
the bailout
of the
savings and
loans in
1989 and
that of the
investment
banks in
2008? How
did we pay
for the
equally
ambitious
project of
sending
Americans to
the moon? We
had the
vision and
we had the
will and we
found a way.
Dave
Eggers
and
Nínive
Clements
Calegari
are
founders
of the
826
National
tutoring
centers
and
producers
of the
documentary
“American
Teacher.”