Tag: education

  • A deep dive into the Loveland teacher pay scale

    A deep dive into the Loveland teacher pay scale

    A Comparative Analysis

    Lesley Hodge

    A Guest Column by Lesley Hodge

    Many things about school funding and finance are made to be more complicated than they should be. When 86% of your Public School District’s budget is comprised of employee compensation and benefits (of which the majority is teacher pay) it pays to be informed (no pun intended). We constantly need new levies because the union-negotiated salary schedule is designed to perpetuate substantial and ever-increasing teacher costs. No one is denying that we have good teachers at Loveland. They should be paid decently but they are clearly not underpaid. The Loveland district has been generous in compensating teachers for years. It would be a benefit to the Loveland Community to address this issue openly in terms of ever rising costs and the ability of our community to reasonably afford them. To that end, here is a deeper look at how the teacher pay scale is structured and compares to the top schools in our area.

    WHO OR WHAT GOVERNS TEACHER PAY

    The LCSD Master Contract (available publicly) governs teacher pay and is typically negotiated every 1-3 years. Teachers are called “certified staff’ but the union who bargains for their contract refers to them as “bargaining unit members”. The current Master Contract is 87 pages long, but bargaining unit members sign a single sheet of paper which designates their individual compensation package. Pay is negotiated by the Loveland Education Association, the local union, which is an affiliate of the Southwestern Ohio Education Association (SWOEA), the Ohio Education Association (OEA) and the National Education Association (NEA).

    HOW PAY IS CALCULATED

    Appendix I of the Master Contract is a single page dedicated to the Loveland City Schools Teacher Pay Scale for years 2021-2022 & 2022-2023. Think of the Pay Scale as a grid. Across the top of the grid are six column headings designating increasing education levels from a bachelor (Group I) to a Master’s degree plus 30 semester hours (Group VI). Down the side in rows are the numbers 1-35 designating years of teaching (also called “steps”).


    Group IGroup IIGroup IIIGroup IVGroup VGroup VI
    1-35 – Years of teaching experience (“steps”) Bachelor (BA)BA with 150 semester hours
    Master’s (MA)MA + 10 semester hoursMA + 20 semester hoursMA + 30 semester hours

    A bargaining unit member’s pay is determined by 3 things:

    1) the base salary (everything hinges on this),

    2) education level (graduate semester hours or degree) a teacher has earned, and

    3) years of teaching or number of steps.

    Each contract year Bargaining unit members may receive up to three different kinds of increases:

    1) a negotiated increase in the base salary, which is not limited and may be different for each year of the contract,

    2) an education level increase of a pre-calculated percentage amount based on the new Group (see chart above), and

    3) a percentage increase for the number of years of teaching or steps.

    There are 20 raises in the current Master Contract up until a teacher has been teaching for 27 years. There are no new increases between 27 and 35 years of teaching, but if the base pay is increased at any time, all years up to year 27 are increased proportionally.

    To determine the yearly total pay for a teacher, the equation would be:

    Salary = Base Pay + Education Level increase + Number of Years Teaching increase (steps).

    The value of teacher pay is determined automatically by years of teaching and education level. Classroom performance, class size, subject matter, grade level, and student needs have no bearing on teacher pay.

    DID LOVELAND TEACHERS RECEIVE ZERO PAY RAISES?

    The School District’s statement on its website that there has been “0% increase in the pay scale for teachers” should be clarified. This does not mean that teachers are being paid no more this year than they were paid last year, as one might naturally suppose. The current LCSD Pay Scale has remained the same for the two-year contract period of 2021-2023. During this current period there have been no increases in the base salary of $44,167 (what a first-year teacher with a Bachelor’s Degree would receive).

    However, the current Master Contract which was negotiated in 2021 modified the years of teaching experience or steps. To align Loveland more closely with other districts, LCSD expanded the steps so that it now takes a teacher 26 years to reach the top salary level, whereas previously only 20 years were required. In the previous contract’s pay scale a teacher could receive 17 raises to reach the top salary for years of teaching. In the current contract’s pay scale a teacher can receive 20 raises to reach the top salary for 27 years of teaching. As a consequence, every teacher with more than 20 years’ teaching experience received one or more of these new raises. Moreover, in transferring teachers from the previous 20-year schedule to the new pay scale according to their salaries at the time of the change (so that no teacher would receive a pay cut), a number of teachers were reassigned to a level higher than their actual years of teaching would indicate. In the first year of the new contract every teacher received a boost to their pay due to these administrative adjustments. Finally, any teacher achieving the next milestone of educational level received the usual related salary increase. So clearly, even in a year when the “pay scale has not increased,” the cost of teacher compensation increased substantially.

    Teachers who have reached the top of the pay scale (maxed out both education levels and years’ experience) can receive a raise only when an increase in the base salary is negotiated. When the base salary is raised (as a percentage in the contract), it then raises every other category on the pay scale, amplifying the increase to all salaries. Although some teachers did not see any salary increase in the current or second year of the Master Contract, year-to-year 0% increases in the pay scale still result in pay increases for the majority of teachers who received an increase for another year of teaching.

    FAST TRACK TO A MASTER’S DEGREE

    Individual school districts vary in the way they compensate teachers for educational level. Whereas Loveland’s top salary group is a Master’s Degree plus 30 semester hours, Indian Hill’s and Forest Hills’ top salary level is a Doctorate. Sycamore tops out at a Master’s Degree plus 45 semester hours. In every top performing district other than Loveland it takes longer for teachers to achieve the highest educational level.

    Moreover, there is a “multiplier” between each of the education levels which determines the increase in pay for that level. On Loveland’s pay scale the cumulative percentage increase in the base salary between the lowest education level attained and the highest education level is equivalent to 27.25%. Of the top performing schools in southwest Ohio only Indian Hill comes close to Loveland with a 22.5% cumulative education level increase. Sycamore Schools hand out a cumulative education level increase of only 11.35% from a bachelor to a doctorate.

    By obtaining one’s Master’s Degree a teacher can increase his or her salary and move up the pay scale more quickly. In fact, many Loveland teachers do so. The District assists in this, as the Master Contract attests. It states: The Board will provide 100% tuition reimbursement to bargaining unit members, up to a maximum of three (3) credit hours each and up to a total Board contribution of $60,000 during a contract year. So teachers not only increase their salaries by obtaining a Master’s Degree but also can obtain semester hours at the school’s expense. This also assists a teacher in obtaining a “Continuing Contract” (job for life) which the majority of Loveland’s teachers possess.

    The following chart demonstrates the high percentage of Master’s Degrees in the Loveland District compared to the top performing schools in our area even though research cannot conclude that an advanced degree makes one a better teacher or improves classroom performance.

    PERCENTAGE OF TEACHERS WITH MASTER’S DEGREES (with local rankings)


    LOVELANDSYCAMOREINDIAN HILLWYOMINGFOREST HILLSMADEIRA
    202286.9% (2)68.1%(6)93.2% (1)70.5%(5)78.6%(3)74.6%(4)
    202190.2%(2)67.7%(6)91.6%(1)71.0%(5)78.5%(3)77.0%(4)
    202086.2%(2)70.5%(6)91.7%(1)74.2%(5)76.0%(4)77.7%(3)
    201986.5%(2)69.4%(6)91.3%(1)75.0%(4)73.8%(5)76.5%(3)
    201884.9%(2)69.8%(6)91.4%(1)75.1%(4)74.6%(5)78.7%(3)

    COMPARING AVERAGE PAY AND YEARS EXPERIENCE

    In Fiscal Year 2021 Loveland ranked 20 out of all 607 districts in the state of Ohio for highest average teacher pay (96th percentile) and was ranked 4th out of the 49 districts in southwest Ohio. Currently Loveland ranks 39 out of 607 districts for average teacher pay putting us in the 93rd percentile. This ranking is in spite of having both a lower base pay and a lower top salary than these same schools. Here is how Loveland compares to the other top performing districts in our area:

    AVERAGE TEACHER SALARY (with local rankings)


    LOVELANDSYCAMOREINDIAN HILLWYOMINGFOREST HILLSMADEIRA
    2022$81,511(5)$73,726(6)$85,758(1)$82,733(3)$81,946(4)$84,757(2)
    2021$82,624(3)$73,804(6)$83,647(1)$81,094(4)$80,039(5)$83,097(2)
    2020$82,156(3)$74,359(6)$82,234(2)$80,136(4)$76,742(5)$82,388(1)
    2019$78,248(3)$72,714(6)$79,884(2)$78,242(4)$73,582(5)$80,131(1)
    2018$74,224(4)$71,577(5)$77,872(2)$76,930(3)$70,299(6)$78,079(1)

    The reason Loveland ranks high for average pay is that we have a larger number of teachers at the higher level of the pay scale than other schools, with the majority of our teachers possessing a Master’s Degree (Indian Hill being the only local district higher than Loveland). Interestingly enough, we have on average fewer years teaching experience than most of the other top schools except for Sycamore. Sycamore, however, has far fewer Master’s Degrees and has a much lower average teacher salary. No other district in the State of Ohio has the percentage of teacher’s with Master’s Degrees that Loveland has for the comparably low years of teaching experience.

    AVERAGE YEARS TEACHING EXPERIENCE


    LOVELANDSYCAMOREINDIAN HILLWYOMINGFOREST HILLSMADEIRA
    2022131318171815
    2021141418171815
    2020141418181715
    2019141412181518
    2018131212171514

    OBSERVATIONS

    Loveland compares favorably with other top local districts in our area for base salary. Even when the base salary itself is not increased, most teachers receive a salary increase from either years of teaching (steps) or advanced education levels or both. Loveland is exceptionally generous with its raises related to education level and subsidizes a portion of that advanced education. Loveland ranks in the 93rd percentile in Ohio for average teacher pay, even though its teachers have on average fewer years of teaching experience than is true in other districts.

    While it is good that our Board re-negotiated to expand the teaching years (steps) in the pay scale they did not address the short time frame to rise through the educational levels. In the end they just “kicked the can” down the road. Although it will take a bargaining unit member longer to reach the top salary he or she will go through an additional series of increases and if and when the base pay rises all other education level and step increases will go up accordingly.

    How long can the Loveland community sustain the expenses of our current educational system? When 86% of the budget is personnel and 60% of that 86% is a pay scale with both negotiated and built-in automatic raises, it can only become more and more difficult for the community to pony up the ever-increasing amounts of money needed to pay the cost.

    Resources: All data in this analysis was derived from the Loveland Teacher’s Master Contract, The Ohio Department of Education, the State Employment Relations Board and interviews with local teachers.

  • Workforce Development Training Grants Now Includes Educational Institutions and non-profits 

    Workforce Development Training Grants Now Includes Educational Institutions and non-profits 


    Hamilton County, Ohio – Hamilton County has updated its Workforce Development Training Grant Application to now include educational institution(s) serving residents in Hamilton County, Ohio along with 501(c)(3) organizations. 

    Hamilton County Commissioners announced project expansion funding for non-profits that provide workforce development training programs with a proven record of success. County Commissioners allocated $5.7 million in funding to enhance the capacity of existing, successful workforce development training programs – programs that connect people to careers with upward mobility and financial stability and that help employers find, develop, and retain talent. 

    The Hamilton County Workforce Development Training Grant aims to prepare and connect residents to in-demand careers.
    For more information and to find the application, click the button below: Workforce Development Application

    Deadline to Apply: Applications for funding are due on or before November 1, 2022, at 5:00 p.m. and must be emailed to sarah.adams@hamilton-co.org. Anticipated award date is December of 2022 with a project completion date of December 21, 2024. 
    For more information on this and other Hamilton County American Rescue Plan Programs, visit Hamilton County’s website.
  • [Video] 2022 Homecoming Parade

    [Video] 2022 Homecoming Parade

    by David Miller

    Loveland, Ohio – It was Thursday, October 6, 2022, when the streets of Loveland, Ohio’s Historic Downtown were crowded with thousands of screaming and cheering Loveland High School Tiger fans for the procession of the Homecoming Parade.

  • It’s Loveland High School Homecoming Week

    It’s Loveland High School Homecoming Week

    The parade is Thursday, October 6

    Starts at 6:30

    Loveland, Ohio – This year’s Loveland High School Homecoming Parade will be on Thursday, October 6.

    The Homecoming Game will be Friday, October 7 against the Little Miami Panthers. The Tigers are on a 3-game winning streak and now 3-4 (3-3). The visiting Panthers are 2-5 (1-5).

    The Loveland Athletic Boosters Homecoming Parade, celebrating Loveland High Schools Homecoming is a Loveland tradition. The Parade starts at the Moose Lodge Hall on East Loveland Avenue and proceeds to West Loveland Avenue, to Rich Road, and ends at Loveland High School.

    The annual Powder Puff football game will be held at Tiger Stadium immediately following the parade. The school is at #1 Tiger Trail.

    2022 Homecoming Parade Registration – High School and Middle School Participants

    The Grand Marshal this year is Jeff Williams. Jeff was president of Loveland Athletic Boosters for over 10 years. Parade organizer Tori Morrison said, “He was instrumental in getting funding for our first turf field and building our Athletic Fitness Center which is used by athletes in grades 7-12. I can’t think of a better or more deserving person to serve as our Grand Marshal.”

    A 2009 Loveland Magazine file photo of Jeff Williams doing his thing. raising money for a turf field at Loveland High School. Williams pulled off the installation fundraising during a recession.

    Jeff Williams receives Louis Rockwood Award

    Here is the Loveland Magazine TV video from the 2019 Homecoming Parade

  • Austin Smith, Zachary Peebles, and Andrew Partin are “Commended” students

    Austin Smith, Zachary Peebles, and Andrew Partin are “Commended” students

    Loveland, Ohio – Congratulations to “Commended” students for their outstanding performance on the National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test: Austin Smith, Zachary Peebles, and Andrew Partin.

  • Meet LHS photographer Sohani Gauniyal

    Meet LHS photographer Sohani Gauniyal

    by David Miller

    Loveland, Ohio – The photography of Sohani Gauniyal caught my eye at the Whistle Stop Pottery Affaire in Historic Downtown Loveland on September 3.

    Sohani is a sophomore at Loveland Highschool. She said, “I first got into photography a couple of years ago, and ever since then I’ll go out in my backyard from time to time and take pictures of plants and the like.” She also says she also enjoys writing and rock climbing.

    I later contacted Sohani and asked her if we could share the photos in Loveland Magazine. I told her that if the photo of the chess match was blown up to about 5 feet tall and mounted from the floor up, people would start to walk right into the room because the chess board looked so much like a tiled floor. She said, “The chess picture features my dad, and a chess set I got when my mom visited her family in India. What’s funny is that we set up the board so the move would be legal if you studied it, but due to the angle the black knight is coming from, it looks like an illegal move.”

    “The coral is from my dad’s fish tank. I got a picture of it by putting my lens directly up against the glass of the tank. Thankfully, the color came out all right. Generally, the dark blue light we use to simulate “night” in the tank messes with my camera, but here it made the coral glow a nice neon color.”

    Sohani accepts commissioned work and can be contacted at: sohani.gauniyal@gmail.com

  • COVID-19 “High” in Butler and Clermont Counties

    COVID-19 “High” in Butler and Clermont Counties

    According to the CDC:

    In Clermont County, Ohio, the community level is High.

    In Butler County, Ohio, the community level is High.

    In Hamilton County, Ohio, the community level is Medium.

    In Warren County, Ohio, the community level is Medium.

    At all COVID-19 Community Levels (LOW, MEDIUM, AND HIGH):

    Green, yellow, and orange squares representing all COVID-19 Community Levels

    MEDIUM AND HIGH

    When the COVID-19 Community Level is Medium or High:

    • If you are at high risk of getting very sick, wear a high-quality mask or respirator (e.g., N95) when indoors in public
    • If you have household or social contact with someone at high risk for getting very sick, consider self-testing to detect infection before contact, and consider wearing a high-quality mask when indoors with them
    Yellow- and orange-colored rectangles indicating medium and high COVID-19 Community Levels

    HIGH

    When the COVID-19 Community Level is High:

    • Wear a high-quality mask or respirator.
    • If you are at high risk of getting very sick, consider avoiding non-essential indoor activities in public where you could be exposed.
    Orange-colored rectangles indicating high COVID-19 Community Level

    Community-Level Prevention Strategies

    LOW, MEDIUM, AND HIGH

    At all COVID-19 Community Levels:

    • Promote equitable access to vaccination, testing, masks and respirators, treatment and prevention medications, community outreach, and support services.
    • Ensure access to testing, including through point-of-care and at-home tests for all people.
    • Maintain ventilation improvements.
    • Provide communications and messaging to encourage isolation among people who test positive.

    WHAT TO DO IF YOU HAVE COVID-19

    WHAT TO DO IF YOU WERE EXPOSED TO COVID-19


    Clermont County Public Health offers childhood COVID-19 vaccine clinics

    COVID-19 Testing Locations | Clermont County Public Health (ccphohio.org)

    COVID-19 Vaccine Info in Clermont County

    Vaccine and Testing Information for HamiltonCounty

    Vaccine information for Warren County

  • Allyson Colegate, Broderick Merz, Carmen Noe, and Evan Osgood are National Merit Semifinalists

    Allyson Colegate, Broderick Merz, Carmen Noe, and Evan Osgood are National Merit Semifinalists

    Loveland, Ohio – Loveland High School students Allyson Colegate, Broderick Merz, Carmen Noe, and Evan Osgood are National Merit Semifinalists.

    They will now wait to learn if they will become a National Merit Scholarship recipient. A Semifinalist must have an outstanding academic record throughout high school, be endorsed and recommended by a high school official, write an essay, and earn SAT or ACT scores that confirm the student’s earlier performance on the qualifying test.

  • Loveland Learning Garden is hosting a scavenger hunt for kids in their garden

    Loveland Learning Garden is hosting a scavenger hunt for kids in their garden

    Loveland, Ohio – The Loveland Learning Garden is hosting a scavenger hunt for kids in their garden as part of The Greater Cincinnati Great Outdoor Weekend on Sunday, September 25 between Noon and 4 PM.

    The Garden is on the campus of the Loveland Primary and Elementary schools.

    Click the image below to search for other events near you…

    About the Loveland Learning Garden

    Visit www.lovelandlearninggarden.org

    Follow on Instagram

    Follow on Facebook

    The mission of Loveland Learning Garden is to foster lifelong connections to the wonders of the natural world. Their mission statement says, “We believe in the benefits of immersing kids in the outdoors from a young age and the lasting impact of positive impressions with nature.” To support this, the non-profit creates and manages garden and nature-based programs on school grounds for elementary students. “Our garden and nature trail are used to enhance classroom study while allowing children an opportunity to experience nature, the satisfaction of growing their own food, and contributing harvest to the local food pantry.”

    Description

    The program in Loveland serves ~1,400 1st through 4th-grade students and has been a local and national role model for outdoor school garden and nature programs. Working in collaboration with school administration and staff, they offer a complete package of services that include:

    • Design and year-round maintenance of educational food garden and nature trail on school grounds.
    • A customized, age-appropriate curriculum aligned with both school and state requirements
    • A schedule of outdoor learning classes is provided for classroom teacher signup
    • Nature educators prepared to teach interactive lessons
    • A non-profit board overseeing results and building a sustainable operation with strong school and teacher partnership
    • Hands-on learning enhancing student understanding of science, math, social studies, health, and the natural world as they interact with their environment.
    • After-school enrichment programs and community events
    • Donation to the local food pantry and use of all food grown
    • Student discovery of plant cycles, garden habitats, food production, and fresh produce
    • Student connection and observation of change in nature

    The Learning Garden is on the search for Nature Educators to lead lessons in the garden and/or nature trail during the school day or as part of our afterschool program this fall. Here is the link to the Volunteer Match.

    Come volunteer with other like-minded people in the beautiful learning garden. No experience is necessary, the new garden manager will be there to guide you all along the way. Tasks may include transplanting, planting seeds, weeding, laying wood chips, compost management, etc. Meet at the garden located in between the Loveland Primary and Elementary schools on Loveland Madeira Road. The garden is in between the buildings when looking from the street side. Look for a garden shed with the Learning Garden logo, Bring your family and friends. Children are welcome, Feel free to leave early or come later as needed.

  •  Loveland City School District Earns 5-Star Report Card

     Loveland City School District Earns 5-Star Report Card

    1 of 12 districts across the state to earn all five-star ratings, placing the district in the top 2% in Ohio.

    Loveland, Ohio – The Loveland City School District has announced the results of the 2021-2022 Ohio School Report Card. The district scored a 5-star rating in every category. 

    “This is a tremendous achievement for Loveland City School District, and a testament to the hard work of our students and their families, and the outstanding support offered by our outstanding staff,” Superintendent Mike Broadwater said. 

    Loveland City School District earned five stars in every component of the Ohio School Report Card, including Achievement, Early Literacy, Gap Closing, Graduation Rate, and Progress. Loveland City School District is only one of 12 districts across the state of Ohio to earn all five-star ratings, placing the district in the top 2% in Ohio. 

    “Two goals of our #beLOVEland Strategic Vision are student success and fiscal responsibility. Being able to achieve at a high level while keeping a close eye on the bottom line is further evidence that we are delivering a fantastic educational value for our Loveland City Schools community. We look forward to their continuing support,” Broadwater said. 

    Follow this link, and search for “Loveland” to learn more about Loveland’s Ohio School Report Card results: https://reportcard.education.ohio.gov/home

    You can learn more about the Ohio School Report Card and how to interpret results by following this link.