Quorum Report Newsclips Axios - January 31, 2022

Teacher crisis grips Austin schools

Teachers are leaving Austin public schools in droves. Why it matters: The departures, mirrored around the country, have led to a crisis of getting instructors in front of students. Even school administrators have taken turns filling in as substitute teachers. Between the lines: For all the tensions around COVID and the politics of curricula — see critical race theory and filthy books — a major reason for exits is money — or lack thereof. By the numbers: The starting salary for an AISD teacher is $51,150. For those who have taught 15 years, pay is $54,129. Of note: Because of the school schedule, AISD calls the pay "187-day annual salary." Yes, but: Austin ain't getting cheaper.

Full Analysis (Subscribers Only)

What they're saying: "A lot of colleagues are leaving just to get more lucrative jobs," veteran Anderson High School English teacher Victoria Gallen tells Axios. "If we look specifically at AISD, teachers are paid very, very little compared to the cost of living." "That gulf is just going to continue to grow as housing prices go up in Central Texas. A lot of colleagues realize they will not be able to purchase homes or afford a mortgage if they do not leave teaching," she said. By the numbers: Exactly 859 Austin teachers have resigned over the last roughly 10.5 months. By comparison: A total of 604 resigned in the 12-month period just ahead of the pandemic. Compounding matters: Most of the vacancies are at schools serving high concentrations of low-income students, and one-third are in special education. The wider context: Frustration among teachers is often pointed toward the downtown school district administration, which teachers see as bloated and out-of-touch. The district faces a $62 million budget deficit, and officials recently proposed cutting teacher planning time — effectively adding to the teachers' workload. The other side: Superintendent Stephanie Elizalde says she has eliminated 60 central office positions to reduce spending by $4.8 million — and is looking to save millions of dollars more.

Please visit quorumreport.com to advertise on our website