STATE
|
PUBLIC SCHOOL TEACHERS, 2010
|
NON-TEACHING STAFF, 2010
|
NON-TEACHING
STAFF PER 100 TEACHERS, 2010
|
Virginia
|
70,947
|
130,100
|
183.4
|
Indiana
|
58,121
|
80,681
|
138.8
|
Kentucky
|
42,042
|
57,183
|
136.0
|
Wyoming
|
7,127
|
9,296
|
130.4
|
Oregon
|
28,109
|
35,493
|
126.3
|
Alaska
|
8,171
|
9,931
|
121.6
|
Ohio
|
109,282
|
131,930
|
120.7
|
Vermont
|
8,382
|
10,103
|
120.5
|
Michigan
|
88,615
|
104,872
|
118.3
|
Connecticut
|
42,951
|
50,137
|
116.7
|
New Hampshire
|
15,365
|
17,590
|
114.5
|
Maine
|
15,384
|
17,165
|
111.6
|
Arkansas
|
34,273
|
37,912
|
110.6
|
Mississippi
|
32,255
|
35,611
|
110.4
|
Colorado
|
48,543
|
52,883
|
108.9
|
Louisiana
|
48,655
|
52,225
|
107.3
|
New Mexico
|
22,437
|
24,082
|
107.3
|
Minnesota
|
52,672
|
56,322
|
106.9
|
South Dakota
|
9,512
|
10,033
|
105.5
|
Pennsylvania
|
129,911
|
136,884
|
105.4
|
Utah
|
25,677
|
26,664
|
103.8
|
Nebraska
|
22,345
|
23,164
|
103.7
|
California
|
260,806
|
269,531
|
103.3
|
Georgia
|
112,460
|
114,728
|
102.0
|
Iowa
|
34,642
|
34,973
|
101.0
|
United States
|
3,099,095
|
3,096,113
|
99.9
|
By Mark Perry
At the Division of Labour blog, Frank Stephenson points to a new study by Ben Scafidi at The Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice that finds (according to Frank) “Educrats Outnumber Teachers in 21 States.” The study is titled “The School Staffing Surge: Decades of Employment Growth in America’s Public Schools, Part II.” (Here’s a link to the companion study, Part I.) From the Executive Summary of Part II:
At the Division of Labour blog, Frank Stephenson points to a new study by Ben Scafidi at The Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice that finds (according to Frank) “Educrats Outnumber Teachers in 21 States.” The study is titled “The School Staffing Surge: Decades of Employment Growth in America’s Public Schools, Part II.” (Here’s a link to the companion study, Part I.) From the Executive Summary of Part II:
America’s K-12 public education system has experienced tremendous historical growth in employment, according to the U.S. Department of Education’s National Center for Education Statistics. Between fiscal year (FY) 1950 and FY 2009, the number of K-12 public school students in the United States increased by 96 percent, while the number of full-time equivalent (FTE) school employees grew 386 percent. Public schools grew staffing at a rate four times faster than the increase in students over that time period. Of those personnel, teachers’ numbers increased 252 percent, while administrators and other non-teaching staff experienced growth of 702 percent, more than seven times the increase in students.













