The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Poll: Most teachers would strike for raise, feel underpaid

Only 3 in 10 in South and Midwest believe their salary is fair.

- By Maureen Downey mdowney@ajc.com

A new national poll finds half of public-school teachers in America have seriously considered leaving the profession in the past few years.

The 2019 Phi Delta Kappa Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools shows America’s teachers are frustrated. In its 51st year, the PDK poll includes a random national sample of pub- lic-school teachers for the first time since 2000, combining their responses with those of parents and adults in the general public.

The poll documents a deep discontent among America’s teachers, 60% of whom say they’re unfairly paid and 55% of whom say they’d vote to go on strike for higher pay.

Southern and Midwest- ern teachers unhappy with their salaries play a big role in bringing down the rate of educators unhappy with their pay. While six out of 10 teachers in the Northeast report they are fairly paid, only 3 in 10 in the South and Midwest believe their salary is fair. (Teachers in the West fall in the middle, with 47% feeling fairly paid.)

Other signs of teacher discord: 75% say the schools in their community are underfunde­d; 58% say they’d vote to strike for higher funding for schoolprog­rams, and 52% say they’d vote to strike for greater teacher say in academic policies on standards, testing and the curriculum.

While half of teachers say they’ve seriously considered leaving the profession, the rate climbs to 62% among teachers who feel under- valued, who feel their pay is unfair, or earn less than $45,000 annually. Having considered quitting is more common among high school teachers, at 61% vs. 48% in the lower grades.

Teacher worries over school funding are shared by others; Americans call a lack of financial support for the public schools the biggest problem facing their local schools for the 18th consecutiv­e year in the poll.

However, while 60% of respondent­s say schools have too little money, the majority don’t endorse raising taxes. They support directing reve- nue to schools from state lotteries, legal recreation­al marijuana and sports gambling.

Other interestin­g findings from the study:

■ Support for Bible studies in the public schools peaks at 82% among evangelica­l Christians, 78% of Republi- cans, and 76% of conserva- tives, compared with 51% of Democrats and 43% of liberals. Among Democrats, there’s a racial and ethnic division — 67% of black Democrats support Bible studies, compared with 52% of Latino Democrats and 45% of white Democrats. Support also is higher in rural areas than in cities or suburbs — 72% vs. 62%. ■ Almost all Americans, 97%, say public schools should be teaching civics, including 70% saying it should be required. (Only eight states mandate that students take a yearlong civics or government course in high school, while 27 others require a semester-long course, according to Education Week.) ■ Pare n ts and adults (each 53%) agree academics should be the focus of a public-school education while teachers say the main goal should be preparing students to be good citizens (45%) or preparing them academical­ly (37%). ■ Preference for work preparatio­n as a focus of schools is higher among Republic a ns, conserva- tives, rural residents and whites than their counter- parts. Asian-American par- ents and public-school teach- ers are most focused on citizenshi­p, and Democrats are 9 points more apt than Repub- licans and independen­ts to prioritize academics.

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