Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teaching would be my dream job. The only reason I don't teach is because I am old school and probably spank kids if they misbehaved, and that is a big No NO.
However, if my kids wanted to do this...I would basically have a business plan for them to ensure that they can make money with side gigs in education. And I would support them financially (like living rentfree with me etc) so that they could actually afford this career.
I’ve never heard someone refer to teaching as a dream job.
I can’t imagine many of us think we are living a dream as we grade papers at 10pm, get yelled at by angry parents for disciplining their child, get treated like children ourselves at pointless faculty meetings, etc.
- teacher
I’ve known quite a few people retire and then go into teaching and they love it. DS literally says he’s “gotta get rich first,” so he can teach
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teaching would be my dream job. The only reason I don't teach is because I am old school and probably spank kids if they misbehaved, and that is a big No NO.
However, if my kids wanted to do this...I would basically have a business plan for them to ensure that they can make money with side gigs in education. And I would support them financially (like living rentfree with me etc) so that they could actually afford this career.
I’ve never heard someone refer to teaching as a dream job.
I can’t imagine many of us think we are living a dream as we grade papers at 10pm, get yelled at by angry parents for disciplining their child, get treated like children ourselves at pointless faculty meetings, etc.
- teacher
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teaching would be my dream job. The only reason I don't teach is because I am old school and probably spank kids if they misbehaved, and that is a big No NO.
However, if my kids wanted to do this...I would basically have a business plan for them to ensure that they can make money with side gigs in education. And I would support them financially (like living rentfree with me etc) so that they could actually afford this career.
I’ve never heard someone refer to teaching as a dream job.
I can’t imagine many of us think we are living a dream as we grade papers at 10pm, get yelled at by angry parents for disciplining their child, get treated like children ourselves at pointless faculty meetings, etc.
- teacher
Anonymous wrote:Teaching would be my dream job. The only reason I don't teach is because I am old school and probably spank kids if they misbehaved, and that is a big No NO.
However, if my kids wanted to do this...I would basically have a business plan for them to ensure that they can make money with side gigs in education. And I would support them financially (like living rentfree with me etc) so that they could actually afford this career.
Anonymous wrote:My niece is a teacher in NYC. It's her first year, she earns $75,000, amazing benefits and has the summers off. Plus she likes her job - at least so far. I don't think it's a bad profession and she easily got a job as soon as she graduated.
(she got her degree at masters at a NY Suny public).
Anonymous wrote:I work in ed research. A few years of teaching experience and then a pivot to an adjacent career is a good option. Graduate school would probably be needed but teachers also often need to get advanced degrees to earn step increases.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't do it!
I'm a high school English teacher, and I actively discourage any young person from following this path. Teaching and education have changed and devolved radically over the past 20 years. It is a difficult job and the behavior of students and disrespect from parents will have you questioning your life choices as you sit down for yet another multi-hour grading fest in the evening or on the weekend.
almost everyone these days would tell you not to do whatever career they are in. they think the grass is greener elsewhere. not true. every profession has changed and devolved radically over the last decade or so. not just teaching. all jobs are difficult. all jobs involving the general public will involve dealing with disrespect. all jobs will have you questioning your life choices. just because a job is tough and has changed and has to deal with people and pay has gone down and workload has gone up ...does not make it a bad job. all professions could have written the PP. choose what you love and what you think you'll be happy doing and do it.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter studied elementary ed at a small liberal arts college where she received a full tuition scholarship. She is very happily teaching under excellent conditions at a small international school
Anonymous wrote:Those of you getting obsessively hung up on ECs apparently couldn’t be bothered to even read the topic of the OP’s post (which is about going into teaching). We get it, W&M is a reach. The student has other options they’re considering and maybe you could be helpful by suggesting additional schools. It’s sad to read so many parents trying to create mini-adults with complete resumes, curated story arcs, evidence of ECs aligning with majors, etc. OP’s kid sounds like a solid student and contributing member of society who would make a great teacher!
OP, what about Mary Washington as a safety? They have a good teaching program and are strong in liberal arts, English, etc. I also like Dickinson College as a possible target.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your kid is not getting into William & Mary with a 3.8 and a 1310 whether in state or out of state. It's not happening.
Sadly, this is true. Last fall's class had a 4.53 at the 75th percentile and a 1530. Even the median had a 4.35 and a 1470.