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  • June 2016: Substitute teachers

    June 29, 2016

    District Trendline, previously known as Teacher Trendline, provides actionable research to improve district personnel policies that will strengthen the teacher workforce. Want evidence-based guidance on policies and practices that will enhance your ability to recruit, develop, and retain great teachers delivered right to your inbox each month? Subscribe here.

    While student
    absences
    have been making headlines lately, teachers sometimes miss school too.
    In fact, one analysis
    we conducted found that some school districts spend nearly $2,000 each year for
    every teacher they employ to provide substitutes who can cover their absences. This
    month, the Trendline takes a look at substitute teachers’ required qualifications,
    salary, and benefits. We find some significant changes in the pay and benefits
    provided to substitute teachers since our last look only one year ago.

    Minimum education and
    licensing requirements

    In the majority of districts, substitute
    teachers are not subject to the same education and licensing requirements as full-time
    teachers. While 35 percent of districts require a Bachelor’s degree, 48 percent
    of the districts in the database do not. In fact, 15 percent of districts
    require no more than a high school diploma or GED.

    In addition to education requirements, some districts also
    have licensing or certification requirements for daily substitutes. Although
    the majority of districts do not directly address this issue in formal policy, there
    are 42 districts in the database requiring substitute teachers to have some
    form of license or certification. The vast majority of these districts (36)
    require substitutes to have a “substitute teaching license” while six
    districts (Fargo, Kanawaha County (WV), Portland (OR), San Diego, Seattle, and Spokane) require substitutes to
    have a regular teaching license. Still, it may be a matter of semantics as many
    districts that don’t require a license per se still require substitute
    candidates to go through district trainings or pass a test before they are
    hired.

    Evaluation

    While most districts do not make it clear if substitute
    teachers must be evaluated, one-third of the districts in the database have
    some form of evaluation policy for substitutes. Among the districts that
    evaluate substitutes, many specify that only substitutes in specific categories—
    such as long-term substitutes or those serving in specific schools— are
    evaluated.

                   

    On the topic of evaluation, there are some notable districts.
    In Dekalb County (GA), substitutes
    must have two satisfactory evaluations by an administrator to remain on the
    substitute teacher list for the following school year. Northside (TX) requires new
    substitutes to be evaluated after each of their first three assignments and
    requires two evaluations per year for experienced substitutes. In Milwaukee, all substitutes must be
    evaluated by an administrator after three or more days in one position.

    Salary

    Just as when we looked at this topic last year, substitutes
    are most commonly paid a minimum daily rate of $71 to $90. Portland (OR) offers the highest
    minimum daily rate of $181.52, followed by Los Angeles ($173.04/day) and Seattle ($171.20/day). All three of
    the highest paying districts require substitute teachers to have a bachelor’s
    degree; in Portland and Seattle, substitutes must also have a regular teaching
    license.

    These minimum daily rates may not be an accurate reflection
    of the amount many substitute teachers get paid. In fact, 70 percent of the
    districts in the database (100 districts) differentiate pay for substitutes
    based on a variety of factors. This is a big increase from 55 percent of districts
    when we last looked at this topic in 2015.

    The most common way to differentiate substitute pay is based
    on number of days worked, either consecutively or throughout the year. For
    example, in Clark County daily substitutes earn
    $90 per day while long-term substitutes who fill vacancies for 11 to 20 days or
    more than 20 days earn $100 and $150 per day, respectively. In Pittsburgh, daily substitutes can
    earn an additional $31 per day if they worked at least 40 days during the
    previous two semesters. After 80 consecutive days in one assignment, substitutes
    in Des Moines are moved from the daily
    rate system onto the district’s salary schedule.

    Another way districts determine substitute teacher pay is
    based on license or certification. Many districts pay teachers with regular
    teaching licenses more and some districts also offer teachers who have
    certification in specific areas more per day. Birmingham, for example, offers
    substitutes with a substitute teaching license $60 per day, substitutes with an
    Alabama teaching license $125 per day and substitutes with an Alabama teaching
    license in either math or science $200 per day.

    The “Other” category in the graph references districts
    that differentiate pay in other ways. Some districts pay substitutes in certain
    schools more. Others, like Conroe (TX), pay substitutes more
    to work on Mondays and Fridays. Oakland provides a more generous,
    year-long contract to substitutes who are willing to work at a specific school,
    presumably as a way to ensure that schools facing the most teacher absences
    always have access to substitutes.

    Roughly half of the districts that differentiate pay combine
    various criteria from the graph above. For example, Jefferson County (KY) has a salary schedule
    for substitute teachers similar to that of regular teachers, featuring step
    increases based on years of experience and lanes based on education level.

    Health benefits

    Another key component of compensation is health benefits. Of
    the districts in the database, 35 offer some substitutes health benefits,
    generally to those serving in long-term assignments. Notably, this is an
    increase from the 28 districts in 2015 that offered health insurance benefits
    to some substitutes.

                             

    We see notable changes in the pay and benefits provided to
    substitute teachers in only just the last year, suggesting that the market for
    substitute teachers has grown much tighter. Access all of our substitute
    teacher data and more by visiting the custom
    report page
    of the Teacher
    Contract Database
    .

    The Teacher Contract Database includes information from the 60 largest
    districts in the country and the largest district in each state, as well as member
    districts of the Council of Great City Schools and districts which won the
    Broad Prize for Urban Education. The database features answers to over 100 policy
    questions and provides access to teacher contracts, salary schedules, and board
    policies in addition to relevant state laws governing teachers.