ErictheRed wrote on 02/23/12 at 21:21:51:
Any American teachers here? I'm thinking of quitting engineering (too antisocial, dry, technical, etc) and becoming a high school science teacher. Of course my salary will be cut in half
. Any advice, words of wisdom, etc? I'm 33 years old, currently in Colorado, feeling very unfulfilled with my job. I took a Strong Interest Inventory and MBTI (psychological tests to guage your interests and personality type, and recommend careers for you), and 4 of the top 10 recommended careers were elementary school teacher, high school teacher, college professor, and college instructor! I think they might be trying to tell me something...
I'm not a teacher mysekf, but my wife just retired from 31 years of teaching, and a great many of our friends and acqaintances are teachers. My wife very much enjoyed the teaching, but as time passed, less and less of her time could be devoted to real teaching and more and more was taken up by test-teaching, test-preparing and test-administering. There was no curriculum in the best sense, just a set of standards listing what students would be expected to know ontests. This was concomitant with parents and students less and less respectful of teachers, even reaching the point of open contempt - which is something rather shocking to encounter in another adult.
It is all the fruit of the war on public education that has been in progress in this country for many years. When the public schools are condemned by the country's leaders every day in the press and the teachers are blamed for the ecucational consequences of social injustice and rampant poverty, why should it surprise that so many parents have contempt for teachers?
My wife was an excellent teacher, with a Master's degree and a National Board Certification - this latter placing her among the educational elite - and she repeatedly received bonuses for the performace of her students on tests. She worked inthe urban public schools out of a frankly political dedication to the public education and a belief that the urban kids are the ones most in need of help. But she ended up wishing that she had gone into something besides education, not because she lost her love of children or of teaching, but because teaching has become more or less impossible in this country. She advises the young people she meets to be very careful about going into education.
The very latest thing has been the attack on teachers' pensions, which has deprived many currently employed teachers of their promised retirement benefits and left them with the need to work many more years than the expected. Fortunately my eife retired just soon enough to escape that.
Many people in this country imagine that teachers as a group are lazy and have easy jobs. The political enemies of the public education exploit this.
Personally in light of all of this, I would be very careful before I signed up to be a teacher.
Her experience was similar to mine. I hated it for that reason. Even worse, I was encountering teachers that were so jaded by the politics that they didn't even care about the teaching anymore. I typically found a number of totally incompetent camps that were all too ready to divide blame. You had the parents, the teachers, the government and the administrators. All the camps had ready set in motion ways to blame other parties for what was effectively the failing of these groups to work together. Whats wrong with this picture? No where in here is there a mention of THE KIDS you are supposed to be teaching.