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Bringing home the bacon: the going rate for Grade-A education leaders, the latest controversial contract points and more.


Even an inexperienced in·ex·pe·ri·ence  
n.
1. Lack of experience.

2. Lack of the knowledge gained from experience.



in
 sleuth who happened upon the village of Dobbs Ferry Dobbs Ferry, village (1990 pop. 9,940), Westchester co., SE N.Y., on the Hudson River, a suburb of New York City; inc. 1873. It is mostly residential but has light industries and research facilities. , N.Y., could easily do it. The challenge: uncover the total compensation of the school district's leader.

"What you see is what I get," says man-in-charge Sidney Sidney, city (1990 pop. 18,710), seat of Shelby co., W central Ohio, on the Great Miami River, in a farm area; founded 1811, inc. 1834. Refrigerator parts and machinery are among the items produced there.  A. Freund Freund (German for friend) is a surname and may refer to:
  • Ernst Freund
  • Gisèle Freund (1912-2000), photographer
  • Jules T. Freund
  • Karl Freund
  • Kurt Freund
  • Michael Freund
  • Steffen Freund, German soccer player
  • Tom Freund
.

Several years ago, he and the board agreed "to avoid public confusion and suspicions by converting all benefits, exclusive of health insurance, to salary." Car expenses, life insurance premiums, annuity annuity: see insurance.
annuity

Payment made at a fixed interval. A common example is the payment received by retirees from their pension plan. There are two main classes of annuities: annuities certain and contingent annuities.
 contributions and other benefits are now paid by the superintendent out of has base pay. "I believe that this approach has made my salary and benefits less of a public topic for debate," Freund says. Now complete, the conversion was accomplished slowly to avoid alarming jumps in salary.

This district's solution may he unique, but the reason for it is not. Administrator salary scrutiny is an ever-popular sport in a rocky economic climate. Budget slashes am synonymous with synonymous with
adjective equivalent to, the same as, identical to, similar to, identified with, equal to, tantamount to, interchangeable with, one and the same as
 program cuts, requests for teacher concessions and job losses. "The recessionary economy has produced a tendency by some boards toward conservative [administrator] salaries, especially in districts where teachers and others have been laid off," says William William, crown prince of Germany
William or Frederick William, 1882–1951, crown prince of Germany, son of William II. In World War I he commanded (1914) an army on the Western Front and was nominal commander in the German attack
 L. Newman, executive director of the search firm Ray and Associates, which has worked with education clients since 1975.

When education leaders in troubled districts do receive increases, a media frenzy Frenzy
Beatlemania

term referring to the Beatles’ (rock musicians) immense popularity; manifested by screaming fans in the 1960s. [Pop. Culture: Miller, 172–181]

Big Bull Market
 ensues. In one Chicago Chicago, city, United States
Chicago (shĭkä`gō, shĭkô`gō), city (1990 pop. 2,783,726), seat of Cook co., NE Ill., on Lake Michigan; inc. 1837.
 area district, for instance, a superintendent reportedly received a 20 percent raise last year despite a $5.6 million budget deficit and failing student test scores.

It's it's  

1. Contraction of it is.

2. Contraction of it has. See Usage Note at its.


it's it is or it has
it's be ~have
 a pattern not unlike the salary of corporate leaders. An analysis of CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board.  compensation at 100 of the largest companies, published in the April issue of Fortune magazine, revealed that median compensation rose 14 percent in 2002. (To what? You don't don't  

1. Contraction of do not.

2. Nonstandard Contraction of does not.

n.
A statement of what should not be done: a list of the dos and don'ts.
 want to know.) Yet, in that year, total return on the S&P 500 was down 22.1 percent.

DOWNWARD PRESSURE For administrators, the situation is as political as it is economic, notes Patti Houston Houston, city (1990 pop. 1,630,553), seat of Harris co., SE Tex., a deepwater port on the Houston Ship Channel; inc. 1837. Economy


The fourth largest city in the nation and the largest in the entire South and Southwest, Houston is a port of entry;
, executive director of the American Association of School Administrators The American Association of School Administrators (AASA), founded in 1865, is the professional organization for more than 13,000 educational leaders across the United States. . "There's real downward pressure on the salaries in districts," he says.

"If teachers aren't going to get a pay raise, one would hope that administrators would stay where they are, as well," says Lisa Graham Keegan, CEO of Education Leaders Council. "It's a good opportunity to reiterate re·it·er·ate  
tr.v. re·it·er·at·ed, re·it·er·at·ing, re·it·er·ates
To say or do again or repeatedly. See Synonyms at repeat.



re·it
 the mission, a really good time to pull together [and say], 'Here's what we're going to do, here's what I'm personally going to do.'"

While she has noticed some superintendents forgoing for·go also fore·go  
tr.v. for·went , for·gone , for·go·ing, for·goes
To abstain from; relinquish: unwilling to forgo dessert.
 increases, Keegan says, "The human reality is that the board has a personal relationship with the superintendent. They know the person is under increasing pressure. They see him or her every day, so that person is the likeliest to get increasing salary."

Pressure from another angle may make accepting an increase more difficult these days, with discussions about low teacher pay on the rise. Brian Crosby, Glendale (Calif.) Unified School District A unified school district is a school district which includes both primary school (kindergarten through middle school or junior high) and high school (grades 9-12). In Illinois, these districts are called unit school districts.  teacher, says that those in the trenches deserve increases the most. In The $100,000 Teacher: A Teacher's Solution to America's Declining Public School System (Capital Books, 2002), he argues, six-figure salaries should be attainable at·tain  
v. at·tained, at·tain·ing, at·tains

v.tr.
1. To gain as an objective; achieve: attain a diploma by hard work.

2.
 for "master" teachers, those with 15 years of experience and successful job performance.

How important is salary to those making the leap into administration? In a 2002 survey of Ohio superintendents conducted by the Ohio University Ohio University, main campus at Athens; state supported; coeducational; chartered 1804, opened 1809 as the first college in the Old Northwest. There are additional campuses at Chiillicothe, Lancaster, and Zanesville, as well as facilities throughout the state.  Department of Education Studies, "improved salary" did rate as a high incentive. However, the "chance to have greater impact" and "malting malt  
n.
1. Grain, usually barley, that has been allowed to sprout, used chiefly in brewing and distilling.

2. An alcoholic beverage, such as beer or ale, brewed from malt.

3. See malted milk.

v.
 a difference" incentives were seen as more important.

Not surprisingly, "public pressure" was viewed as a low incentive. As Richard C. Lewis, deputy executive director of the Ohio School Boards Association, puts it, "Your life really becomes a fishbowl."

THE PRICE OF LEADERSHIP Boards generally realize what good leadership is worth. Take, for example, Buffalo (N.Y) Public Schools' Superintendent Marion Canedo, whose contract was renewed in June with a salary increase of approximately $10,000 annually.

Despite the district's fiscal challenges, which equate e·quate  
v. e·quat·ed, e·quat·ing, e·quates

v.tr.
1. To make equal or equivalent.

2. To reduce to a standard or an average; equalize.

3.
 to extensive program cuts, the board praised Canedo for leading the district to improved academic performance, as well as for progress made on reform and in securing school construction funds. Besides, board members agreed, the alternative to securing Canedo would be far more costly to the district.

What keeps a superintendent on the job? According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 recent studies, longevity longevity (lŏnjĕv`ĭtē), term denoting the length or duration of the life of an animal or plant, often used to indicate an unusually long life.  is related to how much the board micro-manages, the amount of support given for needed construction, the district's poverty level and the level of the superintendent's educational background, says Helen C. Sobehart, an education consultant at DHR DHR De Heer (Dutch: Mister)
DHR Department of Human Resources
DHR Department of Historic Resources (Virginia)
DHR Dihydrorhodamine
DHR Device History Record
DHR Director of Human Resources
 International, which has been conducting education searches since its inception in 1989. She believes the shortage of qualified superintendents, which many experts say has driven salaries up in the past few years, is a myth. While large urban and rural districts may be feeling a crunch (1) To process data. See number crunching.

(2) To compress data. See data compression.

1. (jargon) crunch - To process, usually in a time-consuming or complicated way.
, Sobehart says tenure is more likely to average six or seven years.

The 208 education and political leaders who signed a May 2003 manifesto MANIFESTO. A solemn declaration, by the constituted authorities of a nation, which contains the reasons for its public acts towards another.
     2. On the declaration of war, a manifesto is usually issued in which the nation declaring the war, states the reasons
, produced by the Thomas (language) Thomas - A language compatible with the language Dylan(TM). Thomas is NOT Dylan(TM).

The first public release of a translator to Scheme by Matt Birkholz, Jim Miller, and Ron Weiss, written at Digital Equipment Corporation's Cambridge Research Laboratory runs
 B. Fordham Institute and The Broad Foundation, do see a shortage of qualified leaders. And their area of concern is the traditional path to leadership in public schools.

The declaration, called Better for America's Schools, says the teacher to principal, to central office administrator, to superintendent career ladder The Career ladder is a metaphor or buzzword used to denote vertical job promotion. In business and human resources management, the ladder typically describes the progression from entry level positions to higher levels of pay, skill, responsibility, or authority.  (the last step accomplished "with a little luck, decent political skills and ample ambition") should be expanded.

Finding leaders from outside K-12 has certainly been tried in recent years, mainly in large urban districts with "many different moving parts Moving parts are the components of a device that undergo continuous or frequent motion, most commonly rotation. "Parts" only include the mechanical components which does not include fuel, or any other gas or liquid. ," says Terry Ryan, program director at the Fordham Foundation. "Certainly [there] are good leaders from the traditional pipeline. But are there enough?"

Nine member districts in the Council of the Great City Schools currently have a non-traditional leader at the helm, and nine other dries in the 60-member group have hired non-traditional superintendents in the past, says Executive Director Michael Casserly. Average salaries for these leaders don't seem to be either higher or lower than averages of other big city superintendents. Casserly adds that most non-traditional leaders aren't taking a big pay cut to lead school districts, since they don't tend to hail from the top executive level of the private sector.

When they enter public education, non-traditional leaders are met with "a huge learning curve," says Rob Delane, director of school board development at OSBA OSBA Ohio School Boards Association
OSBA Ohio State Bar Association (Columbus, Ohio)
OSBA Oregon School Boards Association
OSBA Ontario School Bus Association
OSBA Office of Small Business Assistance
. Ryan explains, "A view among many educators is that there's a culture of education that's critically important for any leader to understand and be a part of.... They have to be appreciative of this culture. With that said, I don't think they necessarily have to have spent 20 years in that culture."

A few high-profile cases in the past year prove that non-traditional superintendent appointments haven't always been successful. Seattle's Joseph Olchefske, who has a finance background, has stepped down. Oklahoma voted earlier this year to restore a law requiring future principals or superintendents to have earned at least a master's degree master's degree
n.
An academic degree conferred by a college or university upon those who complete at least one year of prescribed study beyond the bachelor's degree.

Noun 1.
 in education. Reportedly, the resignation of Bill Weitzel, Oklahoma City's superintendent who hails from the university and business consulting worlds, had something to do with the legislators' decision.

A growing number of states are, however, beginning to offer alternative routes to administration. According to a recent National Center for Education Information survey, two states have stopped requiring certification of either principals or superintendents. Five states and the District of Columbia District of Columbia, federal district (2000 pop. 572,059, a 5.7% decrease in population since the 1990 census), 69 sq mi (179 sq km), on the east bank of the Potomac River, coextensive with the city of Washington, D.C. (the capital of the United States).  no longer issue superintendent certificates, leaving the leadership requirements to local districts. And 11 states have created explicit alternate routes An official alternate route is a bannered highway that provides an alternate alignment for a highway. Originally, the term for these routes was "optional"; but in 1959, the designation became alternate.  to administration certification.

The manifesto endorsers, Ryan says, aren't saying that welcoming alternative leaders "is some sort of panacea Some antidote or remedy that completely solves a problem. Most so-called panaceas in this industry, if they survive at all, wind up sitting alongside and working with the products they were supposed to replace.  to all the problems facing [schools]. We see it as one tool that should be in the toolbox See toolkit and toolbar.  for districts looking to improve themselves."

Search executives at DHR agree about the need to look outside the box. The firm has created a K-12 Practice Group through a partnership with Duquesne University's school of education to focus on "identifying, assessing and training leaders and CEOs for the 21st century educational environment," says David P. Smith, executive vice president of DHR. "Searching for CEOs of business and education should no longer be seen as separate practices and should be informed by concrete evidence from both fields," adds Sobehart.

So what can quality education leaders expect to earn in districts today? Here's a look at emerging and continuing trends in administrator compensation:

RISING AVERAGE SALARIES The National Center for Education Statistics The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), as part of the U.S. Department of Education's Institute of Education Sciences (IES), collects, analyzes, and publishes statistics on education and public school district finance information in the United States; conducts studies  reports a 22 percent increase in total school district employees between 1992-1993 and 2000-2001. Despite having more mouths to feed, average administrator salaries continue to rise. The average salary paid to superintendents is now at $126,268, a 3.7 percent increase over the past year, according to Educational Research Service's 30th annual school district salary survey. (See the charts throughout this story for more data from ERS's 2002-2003 study.)

SIX-FIGURES, BUT BARELY, FOR WOMEN AASA AASA American Association of School Administrators
AASA Asian American Student Association
AASA Association of Academies of Sciences in Asia
AASA Aging and Adult Services Administration
AASA Administrative Assistant to the Secretary of the Army
 recently released the first national study of top women administrators in the U.S., with 1,350 respondents In the context of marketing research, a representative sample drawn from a larger population of people from whom information is collected and used to develop or confirm marketing strategy.  (surveys were sent to 5,500 women, nearly all females in the positions studied). Only about one-quarter of superintendent respondents earn $125,000 or more; over $100,000 is more typical, with more than half earning that much. The gender line is likely because women tend to serve in smaller districts, says co-researcher Margaret Grogan, who chairs the department of educational leadership and policy analysis at the University of Missouri-Columbia.

Among women central office administrator respondents (about 400 of the total sample), around half reported salaries of more than $100,000. Nearly 40 percent of these women aspire to aspire to
verb aim for, desire, pursue, hope for, long for, crave, seek out, wish for, dream about, yearn for, hunger for, hanker after, be eager for, set your heart on, set your sights on, be ambitious for
 the top spot in a district, but two factors may delay that: Women tend to wait until they've raised their own families, and going to a smaller district as a first-time superintendent (the most common scenario) often means a pay cut. "Because they're earning pretty well in the central office positions, it's really hard for them to move into the superintendency Su`per`in`tend´en`cy

n. 1. The act of superintending; superintendence.
 when they're going to get paid less," Grogan says. (See chart on page 34 for more on this study.)

LITTLE WIGGLE ROOM wiggle room
n.
Flexibility, as of options or interpretation: ambiguous wording that left some wiggle room for further negotiation.

Noun 1.
 FOR NEW SOUPS For both men mad women seeking a first top spot, candidates "usually do not quibble QUIBBLE. A slight difficulty raised without necessity or propriety; a cavil.
     2. No justly eminent member of the bar will resort to a quibble in his argument.
 about the stated salary," Newman says. In addition, boards hesitate to offer incoming superintendents (even experienced ones) multi-year contracts, says Lewis, who also chairs the National Association of Superintendent Searchers, a group of state school board association staff that meets annually to compare notes on placement efforts. Yet, he adds, superintendents would typically like a three-year guarantee to relocate re·lo·cate  
v. re·lo·cat·ed, re·lo·cat·ing, re·lo·cates

v.tr.
To move to or establish in a new place: relocated the business.

v.intr.
.

TOTAL COMPENSATION PACKAGES Boards are more inclined today to offer these packages, which set a total amount and then allow the final superintendent candidate flexibility in how he or she wants the earnings dispersed dis·perse  
v. dis·persed, dis·pers·ing, dis·pers·es

v.tr.
1.
a. To drive off or scatter in different directions: The police dispersed the crowd.

b.
, says Thomas Jacobsen of the search firm McPherson & Jacobson, which has contracted with more than 175 districts since 1991. "The bottom line is, the board knows the total dollar cost of the superintendent's contract, and there are no hidden benefits." Five or 10 years ago, these packages were less common.

HIDDEN PAY On the other hand, with the perception that all administrators are overpaid o·ver·pay  
v. o·ver·paid , o·ver·pay·ing, o·ver·pays

v.tr.
1. To pay (a party) too much.

2. To pay an amount in excess of (a sum due).

v.intr.
To pay too much.
, base salary is usually the toughest part of contract negotiations, says education consultant Billy Silky silky

female spirit who does household chores. [Br. Folklore: Briggs, 364–365]

See : Domesticity
, of Castallo & Silky, which has conducted education searches for 19 years. This is when creativity comes into play. One Ohio example, from Lewis: For any new grants this superintendent could attain for the district, be received a bonus worth a percentage of the grants.

PERFORMANCE PAY Atlanta's superintendent, Beverly Hall, received a $30,195 bonus for the 2001-2002 school year: Of the 41 targets set forth in her contract (covering areas such as achievement in language arts language arts
pl.n.
The subjects, including reading, spelling, and composition, aimed at developing reading and writing skills, usually taught in elementary and secondary school.
 and math, student attendance and student enrollment in higher-level courses), eight were immeasurable and she met or exceeded 45 percent of the remaining 33.

Hairs deal is one a growing number of leaders are inking. Smith and Sobehart say that tying pay to student performance is a more recent phenomenon. "Most of them tend to be test score bonuses," Houston says. "I've never been a big fan of those."

Thomas Glass, a professor in the department of leadership at the University of Memphis The University of Memphis is a public research university located in Memphis, Tennessee, United States, and is a flagship public research university of the Tennessee Board of Regents system.  school of education, is also concerned. "Are test scores a legitimate way to reward a superintendent? What can a superintendent do in a year or two to affect test scores, outside of telling the guy running the computer program to reprogram re·pro·gram  
tr.v. re·pro·grammed or re·pro·gramed, re·pro·gram·ming or re·pro·gram·ing, re·pro·grams
To program again.



re
 the computer?"

The best criteria, Houston says, are goals that are "more closely tethered Attached to a data or power source by wire or fiber. Contrast with untethered.  to what the superintendent does," such as changing a reading program or developing a long-range plan. Keegan says that "performance pay models are a little bit warped." She has a different idea for educators and non-superintendent administrators. "What should happen is that you do your job better, you get more responsibility and then more pay-not just [more] pay for [doing a] better job," she says.

Yet, performance pay is mandated for some. Since 1997, multiple-year contracts with Illinois Illinois, river, United States
Illinois, river, 273 mi (439 km) long, formed by the confluence of the Des Plaines and Kankakee rivers, NE Ill., and flowing SW to the Mississippi at Grafton, Ill. It is an important commercial and recreational waterway.
 administrators must be performance-based, linking to student achievement mad academic improvement. Marcy Dutton, associate director for the Illinois Association of School Administrators, says that in the past few years, she has seen boards getting more actively involved in goal-setting, as well as a surge in goals related to district finances.

GROWING USE OF SEARCH FIRMS Silky has noticed more national firms getting involved in administrator searches, including more contracts with firms that don't just specialize spe·cial·ize
v.
1. To limit one's profession to a particular specialty or subject area for study, research, or treatment.

2. To adapt to a particular function or environment.
 ill education. Private firm search fees, according to an informal DISTRICT ADMINISTRATION poll, vary wildly, on factors such as the type of services required, the scope of the search and repeat relationships. Fees between $5,000 and $40,000 were reported. School board association searches, available in most states, tend to be less expensive. In Ohio, for instance, Delane says that 95 percent of searches end up costing about $7,900. Some districts use more than one firm.

FINANCE AND BIZ HELP WANTED "Help wanted" is a request commonly made by an employer in search of an employee. It may also refer to:
  • "Help Wanted" (SpongeBob SquarePants), a SpongeBob SquarePants episode
  • Help Wanted EP, an EP from punk band Midget Fan Club
  • Help Wanted
 Search firm executives report that they're getting contracts to fill more than just superintendent jobs. Assistant superintendent Assistant Superintendent, or Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP), was a rank used by police forces in the British Empire. It was usually the lowest rank that could be held by a European officer, most of whom joined the police at this rank. , treasurer, business manager and even principal searches are becoming more common. "There seems to be less final negotiations in filling these positions, when compared to superintendents," says Newman. These candidates "don't push as hard for life insurance and disability packages because they are a lot younger than superintendent candidates," adds Vincent J. Coppola, executive director of Western New York
Western, New York is also the name of a town in Oneida County, New York.


Western New York refers to the westernmost region of New York State.
 Educational Service Council, which has served approximately 400 districts since 1949.

MORE LOOT TO BUY A LEAP Eight or 10 years ago, Newman noticed most superintendents would consider a position elsewhere as long as the pay was better. Now, superintendents with good jobs are only "willing to move when the new salary exceeds their current salary by about $20,000," he says.

HAPPY GOLDEN YEARS Noun 1. golden years - the time of life after retirement from active work
time of life - a period of time during which a person is normally in a particular life state
. Negotiating healthy retirement benefits is increasingly a concern today, says Houston, since superintendents often plan to retire late and not stay in a single district quite as long as in the past. Varying state retirement systems still make it difficult to cross borders and retain benefits, but he adds that each year he hears a little more talk about possibly changing the rules.

Meanwhile, some states' systems put money in the pockets of retiring superintendents. In Ohio, for instance, a superintendent can retire and be rehired--all within the same board meeting, Lewis says. This way, the superintendent has entered the state retirement system but can still earn an annual salary, sometimes a lower one to help out the district's budget

As with corporate CEO's, education leaders are interested in socking away part of their salary in tax-advantaged accounts. Tax-deferred annuities tax-deferred annuity

See tax-sheltered annuity (TSA).
, insurance policies and Rabbi trusts Rabbi Trust

A trust created for the purpose of supporting the non-qualified benefit obligations of employers to their employees.

Notes:
Called a Rabbi trust due to the first initial ruling made by the IRS on behalf of a synagogue, these forms of trusts create security for
 (which are half-funded by a district and go toward future, payment of benefits) are especially popular, Houston says. Asking for paid health insurance into retirement, Silky says, is also an important request today, as superintendents age and health insurance costs soar SOAR - 1. State, Operator And Result. A general problem-solving production system architecture, intended as a model of human intelligence. Developed by A. Newell in the early 1980s. SOAR was originally implemented in Lisp and OPS5 and is currently implemented in Common Lisp. .

MONEY FOR "NOTHING" Several news stories from the past year detail what superintendents could get (or will get) for leaving their jobs. When one Minnesota leader was discovered to be on the market, the local newspaper revealed that he could get more than $350,000 at quittin' time--for 285 unused sick days, 100 unused vacation days and 6-months' severance The act of dividing, or the state of being divided.

The term severance has unique meanings in different branches of the law. Courts use the term in both civil and criminal litigation in two ways: first, when dividing a lawsuit into two or more parts, and second, when
. Carryover carryover n. in taxation accounting, using a tax year's deductions, business losses or credits to apply to the following year's tax return to reduce the tax liability. (See: carryback)  of a leader's sick days bank is one of the top three contract concerns Coppola has noticed when placing superintendents. (Starting salary and health and life insurance benefits are the other two.)

On the local level, when an education leader "leaves short of a contract and gets paid for it anyway, that creates firestorms," Keegan says. But, between including ever-commonly requested contract points like this and having to find a better candidate for the job, which storm is worse to weather? The question remains.
WHERE'S THE BACON? MEAN OF AVERAGE SALARIES, 2002-2003

INCOME INSIGHT: Salaries for all personnel (including administrators at
all levels, teachers, support staff, instructional aides, librarians
and counselors) tend to be lowest in districts with the smallest
enrollment. Among central-office employees, there is a relationship
between district size and salary levels, with larger and more complex
school systems generally paying more. Survey respondents were also
asked to report per-pupil expenditure, which does not generally impact
central-office administrator salaries. However, the regions that tend
to have the highest salaries also tend to have the highest average
per-pupil expenditures.

                                                          ENROLLMENT
                                ALL         25,000        GROUP (2)
POSITION/FUNCTION (1)       RESPONDENTS    or more     10,000 to 24,999

Superintendent               $126,268      $170,024        $138,537
Deputy/Associate Super-
  intendent                   112,104       122,282        110,923
Assistant Superintendent       98,623       107,469        102,132
Director, Finance and
  Business                     81,451        95,986         87,408
Director, Instructional
  Services                     84,640        94,133         88,238
Director, Technology           73,931        94,413         80,101
Subject Area Supervisor        66,582        71,289         65,813

POSITION/FUNCTION (1)       2,500 to 9,999    300 to 2,499

Superintendent                 $121,853            $98,302
Deputy/Associate Super-
  intendent                     101,890                 --
Assistant Superintendent         96,288             87,043
Director, Finance and
  Business                       80,648             64,336
Director, Instructional
  Services                       81,086             71,754
Director, Technology             69,751             55,424
Subject Area Supervisor          65,468             55,543

POSITION/FUNCTION
                                      New
Geographic Region:                  England     Mideast     Southeast

Superintendent                      $121,280    $137,875     $125,013
Deputy/Associate Superintendent        --        131,268      102,639
Assistant Superintendent              96,793     110,073       90,270
Director, Finance and Business        82,035      93,703       76,878
Director, Instructional Services      82,458      92,668       77,363
Director, Technology                  69,815      79,283       69,909
Subject Area Supervisor               76,156      82,731       62,704

                                    GEOGRAPHIC REGION (3)

                                     Great
Geographic Region:                   Lakes       Plains      Southwest

Superintendent                      $120,339    $114,408      $130,906
Deputy/Associate Superintendent      113,464     109,626       107,661
Assistant Superintendent             100,456      97,312        89,429
Director, Finance and Business        79,925      83,414        73,685
Director, Instructional Services      88,091      79,005        74,515
Director, Technology                  70,830      67,569        71,848
Subject Area Supervisor               64,637      65,362        57,750

                                     Rocky
Geographic Region:                   Mtns.      Far West

Superintendent                      $102,826    $137,530
Deputy/Associate Superintendent        --        122,663
Assistant Superintendent              90,143     109,980
Director, Finance and Business        68,483      89,419
Director, Instructional Services      77,276      99,344
Director, Technology                  65,279      87,889
Subject Area Supervisor               58,494      70,969

Notes:

(1) Where more than one administrator performs the same function,
respondents were asked to report salary for the one administrator with
primary responsibility in that

(2) Enrollment is defined as all students

(3) States included in geographic regions: New England: CT, ME, MA, NH,
RI, VT Mideast: DE, IL, IN, Ml, OH, WI, Plains: M, RS, MN, MO, NE, ND,
SD; Southwest: AZ, NM, OK, TX; Rocky Mountains: CO, ID, MT, UT, WV; Far
West: AH, CA, HI, NV, OR, WA.

--Insufficient data reported

Source: Salaries and Wages Paid Professional and Support Personnel in
Public Schools, 2002-2003, Educational Research Service, www.ers.org

MOVIN' UP: MEAN OF AVERAGE SALARIES,
2001-2002 TO 2002-2003

                            2001-2002    2002-2003

         Superintendent      $121,794     $126,268    +3.7
       Deputy/Associate       107,458      112,104    +4.3
         Superintendent
              Assistant        96,627       98,623    +2.1
         Superintendent
  Director, Finance and        80,132       81,451    +1.6
               Business
Director, Instructional        82,418       84,640    +2.7
               Services
   Director, Technology        72,961       73,931    +1.3
           Subject Area        66,351       66,582    +0.3
             Supervisor

Note: Table made from bar graph.

INCOME INSIGHT: There were gains in average salaries for all of the
above central-office administrator positions, as well as for all other
job titles tracked in this year's survey (other categories are building
administrators, classroom teachers, auxiliary professional personnel
secretarial/clerical personnel and other support personnel). Various
events can effect increases, such as economic changes, employee
retirements and new employees coming in at starting salaries.

Source: Salaries and Wages Paid Professional and Support Personnel in
Public Schools, 2002-2003, Educational Research Service, www.ers.org

AVERAGE DAILY RATES, 2002-2003

Percentile Distribution of Average Daily Rates

POSITION/FUNCTION                 AVERAGE DAILY RATE PERCENTILES

                             Mean Average       25th          50th
                              Daily Rate     Percentile    Percentile

Superintendent                 $533.74        $416.67       $510.00
Deputy/Associate Superin-
  tendent                       476.37         412.82        469.58
Assistant Superintendent        418.75         363.12        413.15
Director, Finance and
  Business                      341.80         280.00        335.09
Director, Instructional
  Services                      363.50         304.35        352.90
Director, Technology            315.78         255.56        312.55
Subject Area Supervisor         292.85         247.11        283.77

POSITION/FUNCTION            AVERAGE DAILY RATE PERCENTILES

                                          75th
                                       Percentile

Superintendent                          $614.52
Deputy/Associate Superin-
  tendent                                536.13
Assistant Superintendent                 468.22
Director, Finance and
  Business                               401.38
Director, Instructional
  Services                               415.91
Director, Technology                     371.68
Subject Area Supervisor                  328.95

Note: Percentile distribution refers to a frequency distribution that
displays the percent of districts with a value at or below a given
value out of the total number of districts reporting. For example, in
25 percent of all responding district, the superintendent earns $416.67
per day or less.

Source: Salaries and Wages Paid Professional and Support Personnel in
Public Schools, 2002-2003, Educational

Research Service, www.ers.org

HIGH-TECH HIGHLIGHTS:
EDUCATION VS. PRIVATE SECTOR

INCOME INSIGHT: Of the total number of technology industry survey
respondents (9,138), more than half reported a salary increase from
2001 to 2002, with an average increase of 6 percent. Approximately 30
percent reported no change in salary.

POSITION             2002 TOTAL AVERAGE COMPENSATION

                     EDUCATION     ALL INDUSTRIES

    CIO/VP of IT     $123,964         $151,278
Chief Technology       95,167 *        142,087
         Officer
     Director of       73,338          100,586
IT/IS Operations

Note: Table made from bar graph.

* The total base for this category was low, between 16 and 29
responses.

Source Computerworld magazine's 16th Annual Salary Survey 2002,
www.computerworld.com

FLASHBACK:
PERCENT CHANGES IN AVERAGE SALARIES

INCOME INSIGHT: In the first half of the decade, central-office
administrator rate increases were slightly lessthan those of
building-level administrators. In the second half of the decade,
central-office administrators had a greater rate of growth in salaries
than any other subgroup of employees district-wide.

MEAN OF AVERAGE SALARIES AND WAGES PAID

POSITION/FUNCTION                       2002-2003         2002-2003
                                     above 1997-1998   above 1992-1993

Superintendent                            24.4%             48.3%
Deputy/Associate Superintendent           24.2              45.5
Assistant Superintendent                  19.8              39.8
Director of Finance and Business          20.3              40.8
Director of Instructional Services        15.9              35.4
Subject Area Supervisor                   10.3              29.5

Note: Data collection on Direclar of Technology position is new, so
five- and 10 year comparisons are not possible.

Source: Source: Salaries and Wages Paid Professional and Support
Personnel in Public Schools, 2002-2003, Educational Research Service,
www.ars.org

TOP WOMEN'S WAGES

INCOME INSIGHT: About half of women superintendents and central office
administrators responding to an AASA survey currently earn more than
$100,000 annually in base salary. Yet, among women administrators going
for their first superintendency, it's not uncommon for them to have to
take a salary cut. And barely one quarter of women superintendents earn
more than $125,000 per year, which is close to the national average
among all superintendents.

A total of 1.2 percent of the superintendent respondents earn more than
$200,000 a year; among women central office administrators responding,
just 0.2 percent earn between $200,000 and $225,000 (none say they earn
more than that).

Of the nearly 5,500 surveys sent out to nearly all top female
administrators in the U.S., a total of 1,301 completed surveys were
received.

             Superintendents    Central Office Administrators

<$25k             0.1%                       0.4
25K-50K           1.8                        1.1
50K-75K          13.1                       10.9
75K-100K         33.5                       36.7
100K-125K        27.2                       36.1
125K-150K        14.2                       13.3
150K-175K         6.8                        1.1
175K-200K         2.1                         .2

Note: Table made from bar graph.

Source: AASA National Study of Women Superintendents & Central Office
Administrators: Early Findings, 2003, www.aasa.org


METHODOLOGY: Unless otherwise noted, data is taken from Salaries and Wages Paid Professional and Support Personnel in Public Schools, 2002-2003, published by Arlington, Va.-based Educational Research Service. ERS ERS,
n.pr See extended rotated side-bent.
 has been conducting surveys on salaries and wages in public schools annually since 1972. The 100-page report was based on surveys mailed to 1,940 of the approximately 11,206 public school systems in the U.S. that enroll 300 or more students, a universe that includes 62 percent of the total enrolled students in the U.S. Of those asked to participate, 620 school systems provided data for the survey.

The mission of ERS is to be the premier provider of timely, objective and reliable pre-K-12 research and information that education leaders need to make informed decisions (in both day-to-day operations and long-term Long-term

Three or more years. In the context of accounting, more than 1 year.


long-term

1. Of or relating to a gain or loss in the value of a security that has been held over a specific length of time. Compare short-term.
 planning) that improve student achievement and benefit all children. Online and print subscriptions to ERS research and information services See Information Systems. , as well as customized analyses and comparative profiles, are available to all U.S. school districts. 800-791-9308, www.ers.org

Melissa Ezarik, mezarik@ edmediaEroup.com, is features editor.
COPYRIGHT 2003 Professional Media Group LLC
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:3rd Annual Salary Report
Author:Ezarik, Melissa
Publication:District Administration
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Sep 1, 2003
Words:4302
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