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Lycanthrope

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Screenshot 2026-06-01 100559.png

Administrators making 200k and 0% students are even proficient? Seems like we are wasting A LOT of money in ND on education and teachers arent even teaching kids...
 


zoops

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Compensation looks a little inflated, I see Langdon has teacher openings starting at 50k...I suppose if you count retirement contributions and benefits those are probably accurate.
 

Colt45

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Lycan,
please do the bismarck public school system if you can.......... that will be an eye opener for people I suspect
Its so hard to find the truth on our admin bloated school system.........
 


Lycanthrope

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Lycan,
please do the bismarck public school system if you can.......... that will be an eye opener for people I suspect
Its so hard to find the truth on our admin bloated school system.........
I pulled those pictures from a facebook group called ND Education Truth, I dont see bismarck listed yet but she posts new ones fairly frequently, worth following if you are in interested.
 

Colt45

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I pulled those pictures from a facebook group called ND Education Truth, I dont see bismarck listed yet but she posts new ones fairly frequently, worth following if you are in interested.
I dont do the spacebook thing, but if you see Bismarck pop up please share it,
Thanks Lycan!
 

Duckslayer100

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I'm going to get on a stump for a moment.

There are rotten folks in all walks of life. You can have 9 awesome people who do their work and strive hard -- passed every test and got where they were based on education, grit and/or determination -- but then you'll have 1 who has done everything the other 9 do and just sucks the life out of the room.

We seem to attract that 10 percent of people who have the qualifications, but zero interest in anything else -- and will leave again as soon as possible.

North Dakota has had an educator retention problem for years. I know, because for a semester of education during what I'll dub an early midlife crisis, I decided I wanted to shift gears and be a teacher. There were some huge incentives for taking jobs in rural ND, and even remote learning programs through universities such as Mayville State.

But even with all that, you still have the problem that is North Dakota in a nutshell: If you're not FROM here and you don't want to BE here, it's incredibly hard to recruit talented professionals who will stay for more than a handful of years before using their experience in whatever position they had to jump out of state and back to somewhere more temperate and less rural.

If we really wanted to solve that, it's that old saying again, "Money talks, and bullshit walks." I know we can't spend our way out of anything, but compensation well above what the national average is, and definitely above the state average, would do wonders to attract folks who know their stuff.

Then again, you'd need the right folks to weed out the bad apples and hire who we want. Which is another issue entirely (incompetence runs deep in administration).
 


Fly Carpin

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Screenshot 2026-06-01 144955.png


Once again, middle management blows up the budget. If I were a parent, I'd also be very concerned about the link between tech-heavy education and cognitive abilities like critical thinking and problem solving.
 

Colt45

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I'm going to get on a stump for a moment.

There are rotten folks in all walks of life. You can have 9 awesome people who do their work and strive hard -- passed every test and got where they were based on education, grit and/or determination -- but then you'll have 1 who has done everything the other 9 do and just sucks the life out of the room.

We seem to attract that 10 percent of people who have the qualifications, but zero interest in anything else -- and will leave again as soon as possible.

North Dakota has had an educator retention problem for years. I know, because for a semester of education during what I'll dub an early midlife crisis, I decided I wanted to shift gears and be a teacher. There were some huge incentives for taking jobs in rural ND, and even remote learning programs through universities such as Mayville State.

But even with all that, you still have the problem that is North Dakota in a nutshell: If you're not FROM here and you don't want to BE here, it's incredibly hard to recruit talented professionals who will stay for more than a handful of years before using their experience in whatever position they had to jump out of state and back to somewhere more temperate and less rural.

If we really wanted to solve that, it's that old saying again, "Money talks, and bullshit walks." I know we can't spend our way out of anything, but compensation well above what the national average is, and definitely above the state average, would do wonders to attract folks who know their stuff.

Then again, you'd need the right folks to weed out the bad apples and hire who we want. Which is another issue entirely (incompetence runs deep in administration).
I agree with everything you said, and am not throwing teachers, or educators under the bus. I know teaching is a thankless job most times, I have no problem paying teachers more, and I apologize if I came across that way to all the teachers.

THE issue I have is unchecked admin costs, which has gotten just ridiculous in my opinion. We have principals, a couple assistant principals, AD directors, a couple assistant AD directors, all making triple figures, and that's just the top of the bloated admin pyramid.

Thats why property taxes are out of line, and hopefully we vote that BS out next chance. Fix the bloated public school admin heirarchy! Tighten it up, show some restraint, give the taxpayer at least a taste of common sense leadership!

Feel free to correct me if I'm wrong, but I can guarantee you pouring more money into education will not result in better student scores as most of the money is siphoned off by the admin side of things.

I need a free lunch, whose turn is it to buy?
 

johnr

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Most fulltime employed people work 235 days a year. That's removing 3 weeks paid vacation, and 10 days of holidays.
 

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