Some Oklahoma teachers find the grass
really is greener in Texas
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[April 05, 2018]
By Lisa Maria Garza
GRAPEVINE, Texas (Reuters) - After years of
poor pay, supply shortages and overcrowded classes, former Oklahoma
teacher Chelsea Price decided the best way to pursue the profession she
loves was to leave her home state and head south to Texas.
The harsh economic realities of teaching in Oklahoma, where school
salaries are some of the lowest in the United States, have created an
exodus to neighboring states where wages are higher.
As a consequence, Oklahoma is grappling with a teacher shortage that has
forced school districts to cut curricula and deploy nearly 2,000
emergency-certified instructors as a stop-gap measure.
“It just got to the point where it was really defeating,” said Price,
34, who last year moved to the Dallas suburb of Grapevine with her
husband and 10-year-old daughter to start a job as a second-grade
teacher.
Crossing the Red River that separates Oklahoma and Texas meant a salary
increase of about 40 percent for Price, who has a master's degree. She
saw few prospects of improving the lot of her family by staying put.
Price earned around $30,000 a year when she began teaching in Oklahoma.
When she left 11 years later, she was earning just under $40,000. At her
new position, Price earns about $55,000.
The benefits transcend salary. There is a cap on class sizes and every
student has an iPad, which Price said makes her job easier.
In Oklahoma, where educators statewide walked off the job this week to
protest years of low pay and budget cuts to the school system, teacher
complaints range from decaying infrastructure, students' having to share
worn-out textbooks and teachers' having to dip into their own pockets to
buy supplies for underfunded classes.
In contrast, the northern Dallas suburbs, an hour or less south of the
Oklahoma border, enjoy increased spending on schools as population
growth in recent years, which has outpaced nearly every area of the
United States, has driven up local tax revenues.
Grapevine, with about 50,000 people, has a refurbished main street, a
major resort hotel and easy commutes to major employers in Dallas and
Fort Worth. Like many of the northern Dallas-area suburbs, new parks,
schools and businesses are springing up in a region seen as a place of
relatively low crime, good employment prospects and affordable housing.
Oklahoma City and Tulsa also have relatively low unemployment rates and
spectacularly refurbished urban areas, but median household income and
wages are far lower than in the northern Dallas suburbs.
Price and other teachers from Oklahoma have followed the money.
“If I can find a better situation for all of us, then why wouldn’t I?"
she said.
Since 2010, Texas has seen about 3,500 teachers from Oklahoma apply for
teaching certificates, the most of any state, according to the Texas
Education Agency.
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Former Oklahoma teacher Chelsea Price, 34, is pictured in her
elementary school 2nd grade classroom in Grapevine, Texas, U.S.,
April 4, 2018. Courtesy Chelsea Price/Handout via REUTERS
"LOSING OUR BEST, BRIGHTEST"
About 11 percent of Oklahoma teachers overall leave the state or
profession every year, according to data from the Oklahoma State
School Boards Association, an umbrella group.
More than 80 percent leave over low pay, according to the data. In
constant dollar terms, the pay for Oklahoma teachers has dropped by
about 15 percent over the last 25 years, federal data showed.
"Oklahoma’s teacher shortage has been devastating for children. When
schools can’t find qualified teachers, they either must increase
class sizes or hire under-qualified, under-prepared teachers," said
Shawn Hime, executive director of the association.
Every state bordering Oklahoma offers higher wages for teachers,
with mean wages in the neighboring states about $8,600 to $16,000
higher, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Striking teachers in Oklahoma are seeking a $10,000 raise.
Those leaving are often teachers who have several years of
experience and generally hold a master's degree or higher, according
to a survey from Theresa Cullen, an associate professor of
educational psychology at the University of Oklahoma. The average
salary increase for those who fled to other states was about
$19,000, the survey showed.
"We are losing our best, brightest and most prepared," Cullen said.
Of neighboring states, Texas offers the highest mean wages. Ginny
Duncan, 24, decided to relocate there two years after starting her
teaching career at an elementary school in Tulsa.
"I’m moving to Texas this summer because I can’t afford to live
here," she said in a telephone interview.
Duncan, who holds degrees in both special education and regular
education, earns about $32,000 a year as a teacher and needs to work
three summer jobs to make ends meet. If she can land a similar
teaching job in the Dallas area, she could earn about $20,000 a year
more.
"I love teaching so much," Duncan said. "I wanted to be a teacher my
entire life. I have a special passion for special needs kids." But
her Oklahoma salary "makes it so hard to actually do it."
(Additional reporting by Jon Herskovitz in Austin, Texas, and
Barbara Goldberg in New York; Writing by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by
Frank McGurty and Leslie Adler)
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