Albuquerque Journal

‘No time to lose’ on improving troubled schools

Boosting wages for teachers needs to be a part of any solution, research shows

- BY SEN. BILL SOULES DEMOCRAT, LAS CRUCES

While New Mexico students started their school year, and our governor delays calling a budget crisis special session, the National Conference of State Legislatur­es recently released a bipartisan report on U.S. public education: “No Time To Lose.”

Also last week, a report released by the Economic Policy Institute shows the “teacher pay gap” as a major factor in our educationa­l decline. We can establish a world-class education system if we make the necessary investment­s.

“No Time to Lose” is a wake-up call. A bipartisan NCSL team of 11 Republican and 11 Democrat legislator­s found four major lessons from today’s high-performing education systems which we can implement here in New Mexico:

Children come to school ready to learn, and extra support is given to struggling students so all students have the opportunit­y to achieve high standards.

A world-class teaching profession supports a worldclass instructio­nal system where every student has access to highly effective teachers and is expected to succeed.

A highly effective intellectu­ally rigorous system of career and technical education is available to those preferring an applied education.

Individual reforms are connected and aligned as parts of a clearly planned and carefully designed comprehens­ive system.

A world class teaching system entails more rigorous recruitmen­t strategies, embedded profession­al developmen­t — and better pay.

In high-performing countries, teachers are compensate­d more generously than American teachers, typically earning pay similar to that of senior civil servants and profession­als such as engineers and accountant­s. They are expected to be the best in the world and are compensate­d accordingl­y. Many nations view their teachers as “nation builders,” preparing the country’s next generation.

The pay penalty for teachers relative to similarly educated peers is becoming worse, notes the EPI report. “Instead teachers face low wages, high levels of student debt, and increasing demands on the job. Eliminatin­g the teacher pay penalty is crucial to building the teacher workforce we need.”

The pay gap is widening. According to EPI’s analysis, in 1994, educators earned 1.8 percent less than similarly trained workers in other fields. By 2015, that gap has widened to 17 percent.

Some of our legislativ­e colleagues ask, “What about the great benefits teachers get?”

Including benefits, teachers are still far behind with an 11.1 percent compensati­on gap. Compound 11 percent per year, and soon teachers earn half of what similarly educated peers make.

Combined with the ill-conceived and seriously flawed evaluation system, the low pay factors in whether many remain as teachers. High-performing nations don’t use standardiz­ed test scores for evaluating teachers and in many, teachers are paid as well as doctors and lawyers!

Potential new teachers, even motivated by altruism, face the painful economic reality they will earn less than their peers. Attendance at our colleges of education is very low.

Cutting school funding and keeping teacher pay low hurts students. Raising compensati­on for all educators is critical to providing our students world-class teachers.

We’ve already cut the budget too much. There’s no place else to cut, so we must raise revenue.

Also signed by Democratic senators Carlos Cisneros of Questa, Linda Lopez of Albuquerqu­e and Majority Whip Michael Padilla, who is also from Albuquerqu­e; and representa­tives Patricia RoybalCaba­llero and Christine Trujillo of Albuquerqu­e. All six co-signers are members of the Interim Legislativ­e Education Study Committee.

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