It's not the teachers who would  necessarily lose most from the closing of schools, it's the admin staff.  Teachers could find another teaching job. Who needs another VP of  Diversity or Title X enforcer?
  Growth in Administrative Staff, Assistant Principals Far Outpaces Teacher Hiring
  Labor Department counts 271,020 K-12 “education administrators,” with an average wage of more than $100,000 a year Ira Stoll October 1, 2020 educationnext.org
 
 
  The  staffing numbers intuitively match what observers have experienced as  an expansion of federal laws and regulations—red tape—that required  administrators to comply with.
  Are schools really spending more on administration than they used to? The short answer is yes.
  A recent Education Next blog post, “ Could Covid Finally Disrupt the Top-Down Education Bureaucracy?”  by the founder of the Campaign for Common Good, Philip K. Howard,  included this passage: “While teacher pay has stagnated over the past  two decades, the percentage of school budgets going to administrators  has skyrocketed. Half the states now  have more noninstructional personnel than teachers. The Charleston  County, South Carolina, school system had 30 administrators earning over  $100,000 in 2013. Last year it had 133 administrators earning more than  $100,000. Union officials and central bureaucrats owe their careers to  the bureaucratic labyrinth they create and oversee.”
  That paragraph touched a nerve and generated some  pushback from skeptics.  One, in private correspondence, claimed we were mischaracterizing or  misunderstanding “custodians or teacher aides.” The reader pointed to a  table  from the U.S. Department of Education drawn from the department’s  National Public Education Financial Survey, claiming it contradicted the  claim that administrative spending had increased.
  Such a  financial survey, though, is a hazardous operation. The school district  administrators that fill out financial surveys have every interest in  obscuring spending on administration, mischaracterizing it as spending  on instruction. It’s a little like asking your ne’er-do-well husband to  report how much money he spends on beer. He’d rather report it as  “supermarket expenses,” or “food and beverage expenses,” or some other  broad category that blurs what it really is.
  That particular  Department of Education table, for what little it is worth, shows that  the share of current expenditures for public schools spent on  “instruction” decreased to 60.90 percent in 2015-2016 from 61.53 percent  in 2000-2001, while the sum of the shares devoted to “school  administration” and “general administration” also decreased slightly, to  7.59 percent in 2015-2016 from 7.66 percent in 2000-2001. But, as the  note at the bottom says, that table “excludes spending for state  education agencies.” Spending by state education agencies probably  should count as administrative spending, because it rarely involves  directly teaching students. Another line called “other support  services”—which includes “business support services concerned with  paying, transporting, exchanging, and maintaining goods and services for  local education agencies; central support services, including planning,  research, evaluation, information, staff, and data processing services;  and other support services”—might also be defined as administration.  That has grown modestly, to a 3.62 percent share in 2015-2016 from 3.28  in 2000-2001. Whether the people doing the planning and evaluating are  properly defined as administrators or as planners and evaluators is  something people may debate; for sure, though, they are not teachers.  They are not even teacher aides or custodians.
  A clearer picture is available from another Department of Education table. It lists “ Staff employed in public elementary and secondary school systems, by type of assignment.” Here are some highlights, based on the most recent year for which data are available:
 
 | School Year | School District Administrative Staff | Principals and Assistant Principals | Teachers |  | Fall 2000 | 97,270 | 141,792 | 2,941,461 |  | Fall 2017 | 155,273 | 189,155 | 3,169,750 |  | Increase (my calculation) | 59.6 percent | 33.4 percent | 7.7 percent |  
 
  Ah-ha.  Those numbers are hard to argue with. The education department may  characterize an additional assistant principal as “instructional”  spending, and the assistant principal may even have some roles such as  coaching teachers or disciplining students that affect instruction. But  an administrator is an administrator, regardless of whether she is based  in a school or in a district office, just like beer is beer regardless  of whether it is bought at the supermarket or at the liquor store.
  Anyone  curious to pursue the matter further will discover even more data that  support Howard’s original point. Additional information to corroborate  the idea of skyrocketing administrative spending may be obtained from a  different source: the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. This is federal Department of Labor data collected in a national survey of all employers. The category of “ education administrators, kindergarten through secondary” in May 2019 included 271,020 people earning a mean annual wage of $100,340. In  1999,  there were 186,220 people in this category, earning a mean annual wage  of $65,480. That is 45.5 percent growth in the number of administrators.  For comparison’s sake, the category “ elementary school teachers, except special education,”  encompassed 1,430,480 people in 2019 earning a mean wage of $63,930. In  1999, this teacher category included 1,357,340 people, earning an  average of $39,560. That is 5.4 percent growth in the number of  teachers.
   Public school elementary and secondary school enrollment over this rough period showed only modest growth, to about 50.7 million in fall 2017 from about 47.2 million in fall 2000. The  number of public elementary and secondary schools  grew to 98,469 in 2017-18 from 93,273 in 2000-2001. The math works out  to nearly three $100,000-a-year administrators for every school.
  For  those who want to get really technical about it, the Bureau of Labor  Statistics has developed an alternative methodology for these  occupational surveys and has published its numbers based on that  alternative model-based method, which it calls  MB3. By  that alternative count, the number of “education administrators,  elementary and secondary school” grew to 264,240 in 2018 from 236,460 in  2015. That is 11.7 percent growth in three years. During the same time  span, the number of “elementary school, except special education”  teachers grew to 1,415,580 from 1,366,870, or 3.6 percent. The MB3 data  are only available for 2015 through 2018.
  One may quibble  about methodological flaws involving data collection, sampling error and  assumptions, response rates, or comparison over time in either the two  Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates or the Department of Education’s  “staff employed…by type of assignment” table. The Bureau of Labor in  particular  cautions  that its Occupational Employment Statistics are “less useful for  comparisons of two or more points in time,” and says “it is difficult to  make conclusive comparisons of OES data over time. However, comparisons  of occupations that are not affected by classification changes may be  possible if the methodological assumptions hold.” All  three series of numbers, though, are telling similar stories of  administrative staffing growth far exceeding the pace of hiring  classroom teachers. The numbers intuitively match what observers have  experienced as an expansion of federal laws and regulations during the  same period that have required administrators to comply with—No Child  Left Behind, the Obama administration’s Race to the Top and waivers  programs, and a redefined and more robustly enforced Title IX of the  Education Amendments of 1972.
  Moreover, none of these administrative staffing figures include the growing administrative burden on existing teaching staff. Special  education teachers, for instance, spend more time each week on  paperwork than they do on grading papers, communicating with parents,  sharing expertise with colleagues, supervising paraprofessionals, and  attending Individualized Education Plan meetings combined, according to  a study conducted in 2006.  A 2019 report from the South Carolina Department of Education showed  that 70 percent of teachers in that state believed that the amount of  paperwork they are required to complete prevented them from effectively  facilitating student learning. These burdens are not reflected in  budgets or employment figures but represent real costs in terms of staff  time, diminished instructional capacity, and endemic burnout in the  teaching profession.
  The optimal  number of administrators, or of federal and state regulations, is  something about which reasonable people may differ. Reasonable  people may also differ about the optimal ratio of administrators to  teachers, and of both to students. Not all administrators are bad;  surely there are cases in which hiring additional administrators at the  school or district level have improved student outcomes. Without  full-time administrators, compliance burdens fall more heavily on  classroom teachers or risk going unmet. Some charter schools have  strategically split the principal role into an operations leader and an  instructional leader, a move that adds an administrator but may well be  good for school quality.
  One reason, though, that politicians got  away with allowing the number of $100,000-a-year administrators to grow  four or seven times as fast as the number of teachers is that even when  someone smart like Philip K. Howard does blow the whistle on it, the  first reaction of too many academics and mainstream journalists is to  snipe at him and deny the reality of the situation, instead of  investigating or following up the news he unearthed.
  Ira Stoll is managing editor of Education Next. |