Graduate teaching assistants
May 2005 employment and annual earnings distribution, wage and salary workers
Graduate Teaching Assistants: Assist department chairperson, faculty members, or other professional staff members in college or university by performing teaching or teaching-related duties, such as teaching lower level courses, developing teaching materials, preparing and giving examinations, and grading examinations or papers. Graduate assistants must be enrolled in a graduate school program. Graduate assistants who primarily perform non-teaching duties, such as laboratory research, should be reported in the occupational category related to the work performed.
Postsecondary teachers held nearly 1.6 million jobs in 2004. Most were employed in public and private 4-year colleges and universities and in 2-year community colleges. Other postsecondary teachers are employed by schools and institutes that specialize in training people in a specific field, such as technology centers or culinary schools, or work for businesses that provide professional development courses to employees of companies. Some career and technical education teachers work for State and local governments and job training facilities. The following tabulation shows postsecondary teaching jobs in specialties having 20,000 or more jobs in 2004:
| Health specialties teachers | 150,000 |
| Graduate teaching assistants | 143,000 |
| Vocational education teachers | 127,000 |
| Business teachers | 85,000 |
| Art, drama, and music teachers | 78,000 |
| Biological science teachers | 76,000 |
| English language and literature teachers | 69,000 |
| Education teachers | 60,000 |
| Mathematical science teachers | 53,000 |
| Computer science teachers | 45,000 |
| Engineering teachers | 42,000 |
| Nursing instructors and teachers | 41,000 |
| Psychology teachers | 37,000 |
| Foreign language and literature teachers | 27,000 |
| Communications teachers | 26,000 |
| History teachers | 24,000 |
| Chemistry teachers | 23,000 |
| Philosophy and religion teachers | 23,000 |
Median annual earnings of all postsecondary teachers in May 2004 were $51,800. The middle 50 percent earned between $36,590 and $72,490. The lowest 10 percent earned less than $25,460, and the highest 10 percent earned more than $99,980.
Earnings for college faculty vary according to rank and type of institution, geographic area, and field. According to a 2004-05 survey by the American Association of University Professors, salaries for full-time faculty averaged $68,505. By rank, the average was $91,548 for professors, $65,113 for associate professors, $54,571 for assistant professors, $39,899 for instructors, and $45,647 for lecturers. Faculty in 4-year institutions earn higher salaries, on average, than do those in 2-year schools. In 2004-05, faculty salaries averaged $79,342 in private independent institutions, $66,851 in public institutions, and $61,103 in religiously affiliated private colleges and universities. In fields with high-paying nonacademic alternativesmedicine, law, engineering, and business, among othersearnings exceed these averages. In others fieldssuch as the humanities and educationthey are lower.
Many faculty members have significant earnings in addition to their base salary, from consulting, teaching additional courses, research, writing for publication, or other employment. In addition, many college and university faculty enjoy some unique benefits, including access to campus facilities, tuition waivers for dependents, housing and travel allowances, and paid sabbatical leaves. Part-time faculty usually have fewer benefits than full-time faculty.
Earnings for postsecondary career and technical education teachers vary widely by subject, academic credentials, experience, and region of the country. Part-time instructors usually receive few benefits.
(from the Occupational Outlook Handbook: TeachersPostsecondary)
See more recent statistics for employed workers below.
May 2005 employment and annual earnings distribution, wage and salary workers
National Occupational Employment and Earnings by Industry (NAICS sector and 3-digit industry group)
| Graduate teaching assistants | |||||
| Percentile earnings distribution | |||||
| 10th | 25th | 50th | 75th | 90th | |
| Educational Services employment: 116,920 mean earnings: $29,180 (EC) (def) (IG) | $14,440 | $19,950 | $27,350 | $36,320 | $45,440 |
| Educational Services employment: 116,920 mean earnings: $29,180 | $14,440 | $19,950 | $27,350 | $36,320 | $45,440 |
| Other Services (except Public Administration) employment: 560 mean earnings: $28,280 (EC) (def) (IG) | $19,200 | $21,130 | $25,170 | $31,670 | $42,690 |
| Religious, Grantmaking, Civic, Professional, and Similar Organizations employment: 560 mean earnings: $28,280 | $19,200 | $21,130 | $25,170 | $31,670 | $42,690 |
source: Occupational Employment Statistics Program; about these estimates
The (EC) links lead to data from the Economic Census from the Census Bureau.
The (def) links lead to 2002 NAICS industry definitions from the Census Bureau.
The (IG) links lead to Industry at a Glance industry profiles from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.