Is
Teaching for You?
Whether you're a college student looking for something worthwhile
to do with your life after graduation, or you hate your job selling
widgets because there's no meaning in it, chances are good someone
will suggest teaching as an option. Should you be attracted by the
seductive statistic that one-third of the teaching force is over 50
and will leave many openings when they retire?
That depends.
It depends on whether your interests, passions, personal style
and life goals fit with teaching. The following information might
help you make an informed decision.
What's so great about teaching?
Make a Difference
Do you remember which teachers had a positive impact on you, and
which ones took a sledgehammer to your confidence and desire to
learn? You could be one of the positive ones.
Autonomy
Except for your student teaching, your first year on the job and
a few visitations per year after that, what you do in the classroom
is up to you. If you have a neat idea, there's no boss to run it by.
Family-Friendly Schedules
What could be better than having holidays and summers to be with
the folks you love and do what you enjoy?
Creativity and Innovation
If you're the dull and overly obedient type, you might not want
to go into teaching. But if you love to dream up new ways to present
material, think about things or make learning fun, then the
classroom is for you.
Your Classroom's Your Stage
You spend your days with an audience that may think you're
wonderful. If performing is fun for you and you believe you know
things that can make a difference in some kids' lives, then you
probably owe yourself some time in front of the chalkboard.
Then why wouldn't you want to be a teacher?
Money
If you stay in the classroom, the cap on your income will
probably be about $75,000. If you're frugal, that could do nicely --
provided you don't cave in to envy of your college classmates'
business salaries.
Safety Can Be an Issue
It's still more dangerous to drive to school than to stand in a
classroom, but some teachers find cops roaming the halls and metal
detectors at the door unnerving.
Teaching Isn't for the Timid
If you love learning but can't stand the thought of being on
stage all the time, either in front of your class or herding kids
through a lunch line or a field trip, then you'd be asking for a lot
of unnecessary stress.
Some Schools Are Depressing
You can tell the minute you walk into a class whether the
atmosphere is an upper or a downer. There's no more invigorating
place than a school where kids are eagerly learning and actively
involved with teachers and other professionals. In teachers' lounges
in other schools, it's like the night of the living dead, with
people who mentally checked out of the profession years ago.
Social Worker/Teacher
In many schools, you're also a triage nurse for multiproblem
families. If that challenge speaks to you, then it's wonderful. But
some teachers go home each night burdened with the seeming
hopelessness of the baggage their young charges carry around with
them.
The most important thing to remember is that you should only
pursue a teaching career if you really want to, not because it's
convenient or there are openings. If you can keep a class interested
in what you're teaching, handle the different learning styles of 30
kids and help the lonely kid in the last row connect with somebody
who'll be his friend, then you might just make a difference in many
young lives.