Teaching Profession

As Prices Go Up and Student Needs Rise, Teachers Are Filling in the Gaps

By Sarah D. Sparks — May 08, 2025 4 min read
Guy E. Rowe Elementary School teacher Lisa Cooper paints shelves in her kindergarten classroom on Aug. 17, 2022, in Norway, Maine. She and many other teachers and administrators are spending countless hours volunteering their time and using their own money to buy supplies and materials for their students and classrooms.
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

Teachers have long pulled from their own pockets to pay for classroom supplies. Now, rising inflation and widening student needs have made that more expensive.

“At this point, the school has pretty much said they can’t pay for anything, which has been pretty shocking,” said Dominique Foster, a 20-year veteran early childhood specialist at Friendship Public Charter School’s Blow Pierce campus in the District of Columbia. "[Administrators] just don’t know how much money there will be, so they’re trying to stretch it. If you want to do anything, they might say you can do it, but you better pay for it yourself.”

In a survey released by the crowdsourcing platform DonorsChoose April 28, teachers reported spending on average $655 of their own money for their students this school year, up $45 from the 2023-24 school year. They sought more than twice that in outside money to meet basic classroom needs.

DonorsChoose is the largest education crowdfunding platform in the United States, with teachers in about 9 in 10 school districts nationwide requesting aid through the site. In March, the group surveyed more than 2,500 K-12 teachers nationwide who use the site about their experiences and priorities in the 2024-25 school year. The group also analyzed data from the crowdfunding requests of more than 7,000 teachers who work in schools with a majority of students from low-income families and a majority of students who are Black, Latino, Native American, Pacific Islander, or multiracial.

The sample was representative of the teachers who crowdfund, which prior studies find are more likely to come from low-income schools and states that provide the least per-pupil funding. The survey may not be fully representative of teachers—it relied on teachers who use the platform—but their spending is in line with other teacher surveys, which have noted rising out-of-pocket costs for teachers since the pandemic.

“Materials are becoming harder to purchase on our own with the inflation,” one Texas high school teacher who took the DonorsChoose survey said. “My paycheck has not gone up, but supplies and things I need for my students have increased.”

In fact, nearly half of teachers who took the survey also reported taking a second job—from education-related ones like tutoring and coaching to other gigs, like bartending and retail—to make ends meet.

Foster has paid some $5,000 out-of-pocket this year, as budgets tightened for her school and her mostly low-income families alike.

“I don’t ask the parents for snacks anymore, because groceries are crazy, so I pretty much buy most of the snacks,” Foster said. “We’re spending $15 here, $20 here. ... And I like really nice activities in the classroom, so I’m willing to spend my own money. ... It adds up.”

Crowdfunding demands for students’ basic needs multiply, too

Teachers also increasingly seek support from crowdfunding sites to help cover more than just academic tools and classroom goodies. DonorsChoose found the number of requests for classroom support related to basic student needs—food, clothing, and hygiene—has more than tripled, from just over 13,800 in 2020-21 to more than 47,800 this school year.

Students’ mental health—particularly in high school—also remains a top concern for teachers, with nearly 7 in 10 reporting that they need more professional staff, training, and class resources to support students struggling with mental or emotional issues.

“I see firsthand how much students are struggling and how important it is for them to have a safe, supportive space to process their challenges,” one Colorado middle school teacher said as part of the survey. “The need for more mental health resources, staffing, and accessible interventions is greater than ever.”

Requests for classroom furniture, like flexible seating, have also more than doubled since 2020, from about 15,500 to nearly 40,300 this year, and crowdsourcing proposals for art supplies nearly doubled, from more than 16,100 to just over 30,000 in the last five years.

“Teaching has always been a tough job to do in terms of literally taking care of all the responsibilities, especially given the resources,” said Alix Guerrier, the chief executive officer of DonorsChoose. “But definitely since 2020, there was this incredible step change in the responsibilities that teachers have, and that step change has been lasting.”

In tight budget years, Foster said she and her colleagues have been advised to lean on crowdfunding for things the school can’t afford. But relying on crowdfunding sites can exacerbate funding inequities.

Studies find, for example, that while most crowdfunding requests focus on core subject areas like mathematics and language arts, those projects are less likely to be supported compared to arts, financial literacy, or other less common subjects. Foster agreed, noting that crowdfunding requests for a fun class project, such as analyzing model skeletons, or those with catchy titles, tend to be more successful than workaday requests. She and her colleagues work together to plan project requests.

Not all teachers have that luxury; some districts have moved to ban crowdsourcing, saying there aren’t adequate controls on the materials teachers purchase and that the practice makes it harder to track overall school funding.

While districts and other groups have come under pressure to remove materials related to diversity, equity, and inclusion, more than 8 in 10 teachers—and nearly 9 in 10 teachers at low-income schools that serve a majority of students of color—said it was important or very important for their classroom materials to reflect their students’ identities.

Guerrier said teachers are also seeking more help to introduce their students to new career fields.

“We actually do see evidence even in elementary that teachers are thinking about this, that they’re aware of the changes [in career education], they’re aware of the public discourse,” he said.

Events

This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Assessment Webinar
Rethinking STEM Assessment: Strategies for Administrators
School and district leaders will explore strategies to enhance STEM assessment practices across their district, within schools and classrooms.
Content provided by Project Lead The Way
Federal Webinar Keeping Up with the Trump Administration's Latest K-12 Moves: Subscriber-Exclusive Quick Hit
EdWeek subscribers, join this 30-minute webinar to find out what the latest federal policy changes mean for K-12 education.
Artificial Intelligence Live Online Discussion A Seat at the Table: Math & Technology: Finding the Recipe for Student Success
How should we balance AI & math instruction? Join our discussion on preparing future-ready students.

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

Teaching Profession Opinion Larry Ferlazzo: 10 Things I Will (and Won't) Miss When I Retire
After 23 years, I am bidding farewell to my classroom. But I'm far from done with education, he explains.
4 min read
Conceptual illustration of classroom conversations and fragmented education elements coming together to form a cohesive picture of a book of classroom knowledge.
Sonia Pulido for Education Week
Teaching Profession Will a J-1 Visa Freeze Disrupt Teacher Staffing?
A federal pause on appointments for J-1 visas could affect districts, which have used international teachers to fill staffing holes.
5 min read
Eleazar Sepulveda, an educator on a J-1 visa from Chile, teaches kindergarten at Veteran’s Hill Elementary School in Round Rock, Texas.
Eleazar Sepulveda, an educator on a J-1 visa from Chile, teaches kindergarten at Veteran’s Hill Elementary School in Round Rock, Texas, on June 18, 2024. It's unclear whether a recent pause on interviews for the visa will affect districts' attempts to find teachers abroad to fill hard-to-staff positions.
Lauren Santucci/Education Week
Teaching Profession Inside the Rare and Rewarding Work of Teaching the Hmong Language
Teachers in less commonly taught languages such as Hmong face unique challenges and opportunities in dual-language classrooms.
4 min read
Kalia Yang leads her kindergarten and 1st grades in Lake View Elementary’s Hmong dual language immersion class on May 28th, 2025 in Madison, Wisc.
Kalia Yang leads her kindergarten and 1st grades in Lake View Elementary’s Hmong dual language immersion class on May 28th, 2025 in Madison, Wisc.
Narayan Mahon for Education Week
Teaching Profession From Our Research Center STEM Teachers Tell Us What Gets Them Jazzed About Work
Teaching STEM classes can be difficult and frustrating, because many students lack the confidence or skills to tackle those subjects.
1 min read
Two girls learn at a microscope. STEM, science, future.
Vanessa Solis/Education Week + iStock/Getty Images