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BS: Getting out of teaching

Bryn Pugh 08 Apr 08 - 06:02 AM
Schantieman 08 Apr 08 - 06:51 AM
Cats 08 Apr 08 - 02:39 PM
GUEST,dianavan 08 Apr 08 - 03:02 PM
SINSULL 08 Apr 08 - 03:31 PM
SINSULL 08 Apr 08 - 03:31 PM
John on the Sunset Coast 08 Apr 08 - 03:53 PM
GUEST,diana 08 Apr 08 - 10:04 PM
Rowan 09 Apr 08 - 03:08 AM
Thompson 09 Apr 08 - 03:30 AM
Jeanie 09 Apr 08 - 04:05 AM
GUEST,A regular. 09 Apr 08 - 01:38 PM
wysiwyg 09 Apr 08 - 01:40 PM
bet 09 Apr 08 - 03:31 PM
ard mhacha 09 Apr 08 - 05:08 PM
Schantieman 10 Apr 08 - 07:34 AM
Lowden Jameswright 10 Apr 08 - 12:07 PM
Acorn4 10 Apr 08 - 01:20 PM
GUEST,A regular 10 Apr 08 - 01:22 PM
wysiwyg 10 Apr 08 - 04:11 PM
Acorn4 10 Apr 08 - 06:44 PM
Jeri 10 Apr 08 - 07:11 PM
meself 10 Apr 08 - 10:38 PM
Thompson 11 Apr 08 - 05:02 AM
Bryn Pugh 11 Apr 08 - 05:12 AM
Acorn4 11 Apr 08 - 06:37 AM
Acorn4 11 Apr 08 - 06:47 AM
Bobert 11 Apr 08 - 07:26 AM
GUEST,dianavan 11 Apr 08 - 02:44 PM
GUEST,A regular 11 Apr 08 - 02:53 PM
Alice 11 Apr 08 - 02:56 PM
Acorn4 11 Apr 08 - 03:44 PM
meself 11 Apr 08 - 07:05 PM
Thompson 14 Apr 08 - 04:00 PM
Bryn Pugh 15 Apr 08 - 08:25 AM
wysiwyg 15 Apr 08 - 10:34 AM
Big Al Whittle 15 Apr 08 - 12:42 PM
AllisonA(Animaterra) 15 Apr 08 - 01:02 PM
Acorn4 15 Apr 08 - 01:22 PM
wysiwyg 15 Apr 08 - 06:33 PM
GUEST,Julieann 05 May 08 - 02:27 PM
GUEST,A Regular 05 May 08 - 02:36 PM
Acorn4 05 May 08 - 02:37 PM
GUEST,dianavan 05 May 08 - 02:54 PM
Acorn4 05 May 08 - 06:44 PM
GUEST,dianavan 05 May 08 - 07:53 PM
Rasener 06 May 08 - 03:21 AM
Bernard 06 May 08 - 11:22 AM
Schantieman 06 May 08 - 11:39 AM
GUEST,A Regular 06 May 08 - 12:36 PM

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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Bryn Pugh
Date: 08 Apr 08 - 06:02 AM

I was in Higher Education - Senior Lecturer in Law at one of the "new Universities" - former Polytechnics.

All the fun went out of teaching. You can find 2:1 degrees in a Lucky Bag, today.

'They' did a trawl for early retirement.

I couldn't get me hand up quick enough.

Today, I get paid for two loves - gardening and Law, so, whatever else it might be, it can't be work.

When I first went into Academe, students would ask 'How do I get into HE Teaching ?', and I'd advise them. Towards the end, they got a one-word answer - 'DON'T'.

On my experience alone, there is life after teaching - and a bloody sight a better one than in Education. Good luck. Follow your dream.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Schantieman
Date: 08 Apr 08 - 06:51 AM

Well, I have officially resigned, and they've appointed my replacement so there's no going back.

As from 1st September I shall be officially unemployed, so if anyone wants someone to teach dinghy sailing, powerboating or yachting; or navigation and related skills in the classroom; or to run workshops on various aspects of folk (especially shanties) - or indded to sing in a club or festival, I'm available! Reasonable rates. (Advert mode off)

AND - it's an enormous weight off my shoulders and I'm much happier now :-)

Steve


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Cats
Date: 08 Apr 08 - 02:39 PM

Now this isn't exactly getting out of teaching but as from September I am going to do two days a week for the union from home, Mondays and Fridays, and go into school on Tues, Wed and Thurs. I expect I'll get quite a few people out of teaching with a reasonable package over the next few years in those 2 days!


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: GUEST,dianavan
Date: 08 Apr 08 - 03:02 PM

I'm getting out of teaching, too.

It's a bit sad because I will really miss my students and the relationship I have with their parents and the community.

I will not miss the new principal who micro-manages the school and stifles creativity. I will not miss watching young, eager, talented teachers become stressed and cynical in a short period of time. I will not miss teachers who cater to administrative demands at the expense of their staff and students.

Education is much more than being able to pass a standardized test. Gone are the days when each teacher brought their own, unique interests and experience into the classroom and helped to create a socially responsible school where everyone was valued.

I'm still adjusting and beginning to create a new life. This period of transition is not going to be easy but I am looking forward to being free of the social pressure, the alarm clock and a hyper-vigilant boss who expects you to be a teacher 24 hrs a day, 7 days a week.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: SINSULL
Date: 08 Apr 08 - 03:31 PM

Where do you live, Hopeless? In any major city you can tie into a lucrative sales position if you are willing to train for 3-6 months. PM me for details. I am not talking used car sales or door to door magazines. Run fast and far from pyramis schemes. Large corporations need people for business to business sales and your ability to speak in front of a group transfers to phone, internet and outside sales. Your local newspaper needs advertising sales people for phone and outside work. Lots of opportunites if you are willing to lern.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: SINSULL
Date: 08 Apr 08 - 03:31 PM

LOL lEarn.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: John on the Sunset Coast
Date: 08 Apr 08 - 03:53 PM

Altho' this began over a year ago, this is my first visit to it. I am not, nor ever was, a teacher--I do think I would have been good at it, for reasons not germaine here. My heart goes out to all of you who have lost the fire for teaching, often for reasons outside of your control. I wish you all the happiness, satisfaction and serenity you have not been finding in your chosen profession

I have read that folks in law, medicine, sales (my former profession) and other professions, experience similar unhappiness over time. The less a professional is able to control his/her work environment, the more the unhappiness.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: GUEST,diana
Date: 08 Apr 08 - 10:04 PM

I don't think its a matter of wanting control over your work environment. For me, at least, its a matter of professional decisions (within curriculum guidelines). My principal seems to think that the only thing that matters is that we do it her way and to acknowledge that she is (right or wrong) the boss. She also pits teachers against parents and teachers against teachers.   

I have always worked as a member of a team. Her top-down management style is suffocating us all. I wish she would stick to administrative duties and leave the teaching to us. She siezes on every petty, little error and blows it all out of proportion. She's a power freak.

I could change schools and start over but after 15 years, I think it will be easier to retire.

Yes, I have a union. Unfortunately, the principal does nothing that she isn't allowed to do. Its just that most principals choose not to exercise their power and authority unless absolutely necessary. She doesn't have to be so hyper-vigilant. I think she has a personality disorder but there is nothing I can do about it except stay away from her. She has actually forced me into retirement.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Rowan
Date: 09 Apr 08 - 03:08 AM

so if anyone wants someone to teach dinghy sailing, powerboating or yachting; or navigation and related skills in the classroom; or to run workshops on various aspects of folk (especially shanties) - or indded to sing in a club or festival, I'm available!

Schantieman, you remind me of an emergency teacher (the equivalent to "casual" and "supply" teachers elewhere) my school used to have available. I used to teach in Lynall Hall Community School; very "alternative" but part of the Victorian Education Dept and a leader in innovation until Kennet "Jeffed" it and the 10 other similar schools in the system.

The teacher I'm thinking of ran an art studio/shop (with his partner) called "Kites, Art and Penguins Dusted". The Penguins Dusted bit came from a line in a Ginsberg poem that mentioned "a pint of penguin dust"; people were invited to bring in a penguin (toy, picture, story etc concerning penguins) and he'd pull out a brush and gently dust it into an old glass pint milk bottle. He had it about 1/4 full at the time I noticed it.

His qualifications were really in art but he'd worked up a whole series of lessons involving kites. If he were required to teach "Science" he'd teach a series of classes centred on the science of kites. If he were required to teach "History" or Geography" he'd teach a series of classes centred on the history or geography of kites. "English"? Write some essays or analyse some texts on kites. "Art"? Make some kites. "PE"? Out into the yard and fly some kites.

Of course, the kids loved him and the teachers were pretty happy with him too; he was very popular and very sought after. Although he did a lot of work in Melbourne's northern suburbs he really got into his element when the regular art teacher on our staff took Long Service Leave; we snapped this guy up, but that leads into quite another (and positive) story.

He could well be an example for others to note.

Cheers, Rowan


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Thompson
Date: 09 Apr 08 - 03:30 AM

Just curious: what *is* all this paperwork and admin? What do you have to do each week?

(And if there's a lot of 'paperwork', would you make your fortune by writing a program to automate it and selling the program to a million schools - or getting together with a programmer to do so?)


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Jeanie
Date: 09 Apr 08 - 04:05 AM

Funny that this thread has returned this week: Just yesterday I posted my letter of resignation from my only remaining and very part-time permanent teaching job. (I'm already doing and enjoying lots of other freelance work).

I used to love this particular job in this particular school, but since the new headteacher has arrived, things have changed in much the same way that others have described in this thread. The new breed of headteachers and their management style - borrowed from "big business" - as described so well by Diana and Dianavan, seems to be spreading at an alarming rate.

My school no longer has staff meetings where people can put forward suggestions and air their views, knowing that their views will be listened to and respected, even if not actually followed. They are called "staff briefings". Headteachers are becoming the type of manager who delegates everything to the point that they, themselves, do precious little except swan around in an expensive designer suit, checking that their ideas, however unproven, impractical and outlandish, are fulfilled to the letter....that is, unless they are unavailable, out of the building, at some mysterious and unspecified "meeting". It is a management style, whatever the business might be, which suits the manager, but nobody else !

I feel very sorry indeed for full-time teachers who are having to adjust to working under such conditions. I am lucky, my job is so part-time that I have been able to leave it as soon as I saw the writing on the wall.

Very best wishes to you, Schantieman and Dianavan, and all other departing teachers, as we all embark on new adventures.

- jeanie


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: GUEST,A regular.
Date: 09 Apr 08 - 01:38 PM

I too will leave teaching this year. I will like being free of work at the end of the day, not having to use weekends to mark and prepare, not having to put up with administrations that care more about how they look to the public than what the kids learn. Education has become a world in which government statistics mean more than children, teachers are expected to do more and more with less and less until they try to do everything with nothing: it's time to say 'screw this'. I will be saying that in my resignation. There are other things to do with life, and being bled by a 'system' that doesn't care about its employees isn't it in my opinion. For those leaving, there is a better world ahead.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: wysiwyg
Date: 09 Apr 08 - 01:40 PM

I will be saying that in my resignation.

Your career, dead. Really want to burn a bridge (and contacts) you may need to cross again someday?

~S~


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: bet
Date: 09 Apr 08 - 03:31 PM

At age 30, you are still a spring chicken! I retired from teaching when I was 62. I agree things have changed a great deal in this field. The fun is gone. We have so many skills that are necessary for the job. I now spend my time in retail. At my age, and I'm 62++++ it's a good area.    I'm sure with all your developed skills you will make it to an area that you can enjoy.
Good luck!!!!! bet


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: ard mhacha
Date: 09 Apr 08 - 05:08 PM

I have many friends who are teachers and also a few who took early retirement, the problems with teaching is the unruly children.
The main problem according to all of the teachers is the near impossible task of teaching teenagers, these youngsters now have free rein to do whatever they please, no wonder my teacher friends have opted out early.

I am in complete agreement with the teachers, when I see the vast majority of our children staggering around the streets under the influence of drugs and drink, all of todays teachers have my sympathy.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Schantieman
Date: 10 Apr 08 - 07:34 AM

You don't need to say anything in your resignation except that you hereby resign from the staff of xxx school wef 31st August. OWTTE.

I agree about burning bridges - I agree about the way education, and the school's gone in the last 20 years but I might need a supply job back there sometime, so I'm keeping my opinions to myself as far as they're concerned. IF you want my advice, do the same. Or not. Up to you really!

Steve
(57 more days)


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Lowden Jameswright
Date: 10 Apr 08 - 12:07 PM

Leave the straight-line thinking and endless box-ticking, mindless multi-choice testing, pseudo management-speak mumbo-jumbos to the colourless epsilon-minus semi-morons that now govern the world of "teaching" to their own devices. You're young enough to get another life (or, more accurately, get your own life back).


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Acorn4
Date: 10 Apr 08 - 01:20 PM

Some time ago, there was a discussion on teaching on the "Jimmy Young Show" - one listener emailed:-

"Teachers don't have holidays, they convalesce!"

I think that about sums it up.

I managed to escape in me fifties -will email details when I've read all the thread and have a bit more time.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: GUEST,A regular
Date: 10 Apr 08 - 01:22 PM

Thank you to both Susan and Steve who gave very good advice. You are correct, of course. However, I will THINK it as I hand in the resignation.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: wysiwyg
Date: 10 Apr 08 - 04:11 PM

And remember why. :~)

You may curse me on the day you do it if that will help you hold your tongue in cheek. :~) More likely you will just be feeling badly on that day for the people left behind. I think a lot of us have had that experience in some job or other.

~Susan


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Acorn4
Date: 10 Apr 08 - 06:44 PM

I've never met anyone who's got out of teaching who has regretted it.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Jeri
Date: 10 Apr 08 - 07:11 PM

There is shit to put up with in every job. I think you have to consider whether the good you do the kids and yourself when you KNOW you've helped someone isn't enough to mitigate the harm the kids and you suffer. At some point, maybe you decide it's just time for a change because the shit isn't BAD shit, but it IS the same old shit.

I work with so many teachers who became frustrated. One by one, the good ones jump ship until the kids are left with teachers who either need the money or are hopeless idealists. The really weak and the really strong. I don't know that I'd hang in, but I have to admire those who know they don't want to do something and stop or know they do and never give up. I hope most of the ones left behind are the dreamers and believers.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: meself
Date: 10 Apr 08 - 10:38 PM

"the shit isn't BAD shit"

The only kind of shit I know that isn't BAD shit, is the kind you use to self-medicate after a day of "the same old shit".


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Thompson
Date: 11 Apr 08 - 05:02 AM

Is there anyone here who really loves teaching? Who gains from it? Who feels that this daily work adds to the sum of goodness in the world?


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Bryn Pugh
Date: 11 Apr 08 - 05:12 AM

The motto in the Senior Common Room was "We're always in the shit - only the depth varies".

I saw too many of my colleagues' marriages collapse, against the 'Rocks of Academe'.

If your marriage didn't fuck up, your mind did - and on what "They" were paying me as a SL, they could, and did, pay two L2s.

I went in as a blue-eyed optimist, and came out the world's greatest cynic. Bolshie students - sorry ! - clients - weren't the least of it.

Give you an example : in my Tutorial, a student - oh, shit ! I mean, a client, threw something on the deck.

"What's that ?" asks Bryn.

"A tape-recorder" comes the reply.

"Pick it up, switch it off and put it away" says Bryn.

"Why ?" comes the answer.

"You didn't ask my permission to use it" says Bryn.

"Other tutors let me use it", says the client.

"D'you see them here ?" asks Bryn.

"Anyway, I,m not going to switch it off" says the client.

"You may then explain to your fellow students [sic] why this tutorial is cancelled" says Bryn, walking out of his own study. Fifteen minutes later I was up before the Dean of Faculty on a disciplinary, and got a verbal warning for cancelling a tutorial without reason. I wasn't given time to involve my NATFHE rep.

Those who can, teach ; those who can't teach become Head Teachers, or Heads of Faculty. To whose detriment ?

I'm still working. Life is good. The only teaching I do today is the Morris to the kids at my grandsons' school.

Worthwhile ? You bet your arse it is !


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Acorn4
Date: 11 Apr 08 - 06:37 AM

To Dan, the originator of the thread - late thirties is still young. One of the effects of teaching is to make you feel about a decade or so older than you really are.

To those who favour "conspiracy" theories, is the plan "get a lot of young teachers who will throw themselves at the job for ten years then burn out so we can avoid having to pay pensions"?

I had a "burn out" when I was fifty three due to all the factors discussed in this thread -this was because of insomnia caused by the job. Stress will always find your weak point whatever that is -my wife met her nemesis about a year later than me with high blood pressure.

A "burn out" isn't just the same as being knackered -teachers are perpetually knackered -it's more like prsssing the accelerator on your car and nothing happening.

I had had two days off ill in 25 years and then ended up having seven weeks off -that gave time to think -this raises an important point that teachers often cannot think clearly because of the stess they are under.

I'd kept on good terms with the Primary School that I worked at, and would advise anyone thinking of a change to do this. My burnout happened in May, and It gave me the summer holidays to think about what to do -to retire then would have meant a virtually non existent pension. I decided to do supply work at the school that I worked at plus a couple of others close by -as a previous poster said supply work can be ghastly, but you don't have to go back to schools you had a bad experience with. Schools like to have a regular supply teacher they know is reliable to avoid paying agencies through the nose -often a teacher knows in advance when they are absent and you can go in primed and ready, although you do need to expect some of those phone calls at twenty to eight! The stress of supply work is different, but I was able to do it for four and a half years, and then retire at fifty eight.

I probably worked three days a week on average and spent the other two trying other things. I was lucky to get a job with a company that makes learning journeys for schools by researching suitable websites. This can be fitted in as and when.

I started to teach guitar lessons - just put a postcard in the local shop windows to get started - you can transfer your teaching skills to areas like this - I invigilate exams at the local secondary school -these don't just take place in the summer these days - I do exams marking History for OCR in the Summer - I also lecture for the WEA -teaching adults, mainly retired, who want to learn purely for the sake of learning. I do all this, except one WEA lecture a week without the use of a car and we've actually managed on a single car between us for the past 20 years as I worked at a school within walking distance, or within range of a trusty, cheap to run and ecologically sound pushbike.

I got my bus pass a month ago ,and feel younger than when I was fifty. I have loads of time for my hobby, music, have made four CDs,we go to folk clubs and festivals regularly, and we get paid gigs every now and then. Recently I decided to go back into my old school to help with an IT group and teach recorder. I like this patchwork existence (I think the modern jargon calls it a "Portfolio")

I think it's such a shame when teachers reach fiftysomething, colapse in a heap and say "I never want to step inside a school again". It's so depressing after spending most of your working life doing a job to come to that point. Also, when you're longing for the end of the day, week, term att the time you're wishing your life away!

Everyone's situation is individual, and your situation, Dan, is a bit different to mine- your age means you've got a long time to make an alternative career viable, and this is a point in your favour. Obviously it depends on what you've got in terms of family, mortgage committments, etc.

How about:-

Do an assessment of your finances and work out how you can make any savings.Could you downsize housewise -this would get your mortgage paid off quicker? We actually downsized and are now upsizing again having paid off our mortgage.

Could you go part time? -this would guarantee some income and if you did , say, three days you would have four days, if you include the weekend, to dabble in other things which might/might not take off?

Could you do supply? -you might have some horrific experiences at first but try to establish a relationship with school where your face fits - I managed this with just two or three local schools using a pushbike, so if you've got a car available even better. The paper work seems to be the thing you hate most and supply cuts most of this. If you can think on your feet, supply is ideal, and even if you can't, a lot of supply is booked well in advance when people are on courses. Could you do it at your own school? Mangement are the way they are mainly because everyone is on the same treadmill.

I'm going to post a little parody I did after this.

Also, could we perhaps have a thread "funny things that happened in school" as a counter. Most people who make the escape attempt to succeed in the end and don't regret it.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Acorn4
Date: 11 Apr 08 - 06:47 AM

Follow up post:-

Kick in the Proverbials

We don't need no education,
We don't need no self control
There's really nothing you can teach us,
Cos we already know it all.

Hey, kids,
Leave those teachers alone
Hey, kids
Leave those teachers alone
All in all it's just another
Kick in the b***s

Forms, initiatives and targets,
Inspectors never satisfied,
Monitored, assessed, evaluated,
Graded, jaded, crucified

Hey, kids,
Leave those teachers alone..

They're all headed for the burnout,
Hollow eyed, no life no fun,
No sense of humour allowed in the staffroom,
Po faced daleks everyone

Hey, kids,
Leave those teachers alone..

They can speak but we won't listen,
Fart and belch and answer back,
Attention span of a daddy longlegs,
Just give us Nintendo and mindless clack.

Hey, kids,
Leave those teachers alone...

You can't confiscate our mobiles,
We got our rights, you can't do nowt,
Tell us off and we will sue you,
Or get our dads to sort you out.

Hey, kids,
Leave those teachers alone...

Except that in the case of my wife's old school substitute "mums" for "dads"


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Bobert
Date: 11 Apr 08 - 07:26 AM

Well, well, well...

First of all, it's been 36 yerars since me last teaching job so for all of youn folks who have are resigning there is life after teaching...

Secondly, sorry, buty all you folks who are giving up your teaching jobs are fonna find out that you can give up the "job" but you will still be teachers???

(Huh, Boberdz???)

Okay, for you newbee retireee, you may not get it now but...

...you will...

Trust me...

B;~)


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: GUEST,dianavan
Date: 11 Apr 08 - 02:44 PM

"Is there anyone here who really loves teaching? Who gains from it? Who feels that this daily work adds to the sum of goodness in the world?"

Yes, but I try not to dwell on it because then I feel guilty for leaving.

I love teaching and my relationships with students and their parents have nurtured me for many years. I do believe, however, that I will be replaced by a younger, more energetic teacher, eager and willing to kiss ass. Eventually, that teacher will also burn out and be replaced. Unfortunately, this results in an unstable staff with little or no experience who gladly does what is ordered without question.

This, of course, creates a system that that is always starting over from scratch. Experienced teachers know which methods work best but young teachers are still experimenting. If anything, the older you get, the more efficient you become. The more efficient you become, the more extra responsibility you are expected to shoulder. In other words, the older you get, the more you do.

Once you reach a point where you start cutting back on the amount of volunteer work you do (as a matter of self-preservation) the more you are viewed as 'dead weight' by the administration. I said no more phone calls at home, no more e-mails, no more unnecessary staff meetings and no more coaching and sponsoring. The principal (I believe) decided that I was a bad example for the younger teachers. I was also known to ask too many questions. She has made my job unbearable.

My lessons were tried and true so I didn't have to experiment to know how my students learned best. I've already thrown out the material that was useless and boring. I can leave the building at 3:30 because I know what I will be doing tomorrow. Young teachers stay until 6:00 (this looks very good to admin.) because they are still trying to put their lessons and materials together.

Basically, there is absolutely no respect for experience or creativity. The administration just wants little worker bees who do what they are told, regardless of educational rationale.

I've decided I've given enough of my life to a bloodless system who rewards only superficial teachers. Those who are passionate about education (teaching and learning) will not be supported or valued by hyper-vigilant, micro-managers. In fact, they will take all the joy out of your chosen profession.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: GUEST,A regular
Date: 11 Apr 08 - 02:53 PM

It's called 'constructive dismissal'. It is in the economic interest of school divisions to get rid of teachers who are past a dozen or so years experience because they are then top of the scale and for the cost of two at the top you can get three at the bottom of the scale and STILL have 30 kids in a room.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Alice
Date: 11 Apr 08 - 02:56 PM

Dan, I moved into sales in my 50's. I am 56 now. My job does involve travel, but if you are in an urban area, you may not have to leave home the way I do. I have health insurance, a retirment fund matched by the company, and great coworkers. I am building up my client list, as this is only my second year with the company.
Selling is a lot like teaching and performing. It is all about listening and communicating, helping someone else get what they need from what you have to offer them.

By the way, lunch with my co workers yesterday became a discussion of how the environment of schools has degraded so that kids act like The Lord of the Flies. One among us is a former teacher who will never go back with the conditions in schools today.

good luck


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Acorn4
Date: 11 Apr 08 - 03:44 PM

Dianavan has hit on two very important points here - guilt and goodwill.

I changed from Secondary to Primary teaching in mid career, because there was less paperwork and crap -it had followed me within three years, when Tony Blair decided he had to wear Maggie Thatcher's knickers. At that point there was still the notion of "goodwill" - the unpaid work you do above and beyond the call of duty that most teachers did because they felt what they were doing was worthwhile. Nowadays the goodwill is taken for granted as part of the job.
Of course you want to work until midnight every day and weekends!

And of course the guilt -that pile of marking that has been staring at you for two weeks! The whole system relies on this guilt.

I remember well that black cloud that started gathering above my head on Sunday afternoon. Music helped me to cope plus getting drunk into oblivion on Friday night.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: meself
Date: 11 Apr 08 - 07:05 PM

"Is there anyone here who really loves teaching?"

Um - did you catch the title of the thread?


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Thompson
Date: 14 Apr 08 - 04:00 PM

Meself, yes, I caught the title of the thread.

And I asked *what* exactly was all the admin that people were straining to keep up with, but no one answered.

The tape recorder story - there was a lecturer in Trinity College, Dublin, who came in every day to find some of the students replaced by whirring cassette recorders. Finally one day he came in to find *only* cassette recorders.

The next day, the students came in to find that their cassette recorders were recording - his cassette recorder.

They got the idea, and started attending the lectures again.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Bryn Pugh
Date: 15 Apr 08 - 08:25 AM

Ah - but did he get a bollocking from the Dean of Faculty, like I did ?

Five quid says he didn't.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: wysiwyg
Date: 15 Apr 08 - 10:34 AM

"Is there anyone here who really loves teaching?"

Teachers tend to love TEACHING-- not substitute parenting, substitute administrating, and/or substitute policing. If they loved those things, they'd have gone into childcare, administration, or police/corrections work. When the thing one loves is no longer possible, the healthy response is to seek opportunties where one CAN use one's gifts and talents responsibly.

Some teaching skills are transferable to other venues, where they can be put to use effectively.


I didn't learn this in teaching, but I did learn it in a burnout situation-- you can accomplish a lot more, and far more positively, with less cost to self, without doing uphill work that drains the self)-- 99% of the time. The guilt over leaving an untenable situation in favor of better allocation of effort often has been installed by the institution profiting from the guilt. Guilt robs effectiveness toward goals.

One of the first things any "agent of change" in any setting must learn (and practice despite pressure) is committed, resolute stewardship over one's personal, internal resources. If the work is important, it's important to be at one's best to do it-- not ragged around the edges AND inside.

~Susan


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 15 Apr 08 - 12:42 PM

'We were recently subjected to a review of our marking by our link inspector'

Now that just shows how little some idiot who devised this, knows about teaching. If you apply the same criteria to every classbook that you mark, you would make a right bollocks of the task of teaching.

Some children need endless praise and encouragement to even make a start at classwork.

How can an outsider who doesn't know your relationship with the pupil, possibly gauge the effect you are hoping to achieve with the way you mark the book? The whole point is to motivate, as best you can, with what you have.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: AllisonA(Animaterra)
Date: 15 Apr 08 - 01:02 PM

Well, I submitted my resignation letter yesterday. For the past several years I've wondered how I could keep up the pace that public (government-run) teaching requires, how I could keep up the energy, maintain the schedule, and also have a life outside of the classroom.

Now my husband-to-be is helping me make it possible. After this school year is over, we are going to spend more time making music together, savoring life, and finding new ways to slow down while living happily and frugally ever after!

We'll still teach, go into schools, work with kids (and grownups) and share the music. But I'm so tired of the warehouse style of education. I'm so grateful to be given the opportunity to go my own way.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Acorn4
Date: 15 Apr 08 - 01:22 PM

Good on you, Animaterra, you won't look back!

To those of you still feeling hopelessly stuck and getting on in years, the survival technique is to go into "hibernate" mode, like a computer during staff meetings, etc, when(if) the class are getting on quietly and just use bursts of energy when you need it.

A number of years ago there used to be a magazine called "Escape" produced especially for teachers who wanted to dig that tunnel; not sure what happened to it.

The powers that be will never learn until there are no teachers left!


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: wysiwyg
Date: 15 Apr 08 - 06:33 PM

WAY TO GO ALLISON!

~S~


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: GUEST,Julieann
Date: 05 May 08 - 02:27 PM

Have just picked up this thread as I am at the point of giving up teaching. I am 54, teach in special ed and just about hanging in there.

I had some time off work two years ago due to stress. I went back to work but I no longer have the energy to be creative in the classroom as paperwork takes up so much of that time. I now do the job that two teachers used to do. More assistants to manage and more children with highly complex needs.

Teaching has become obsessed with meeting government targets and I feel as a society we are creating more problems than solving them by being driven this way as parents and teachers of the future generations.

I am disillusioned and feel swamped by state intervention and meddling.

Three weeks to make that decision.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: GUEST,A Regular
Date: 05 May 08 - 02:36 PM

My resignation was in last week. I am very pleased.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Acorn4
Date: 05 May 08 - 02:37 PM

Go for it!

I've never met anyone who has regretted it. You won't have that huge black cloud gathering over your head on a Sunday afternoon!


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: GUEST,dianavan
Date: 05 May 08 - 02:54 PM

I love teaching but have to go. The paperwork (and I don't mean marking) is more than I can take. Being 'accountable' and communicating with so many others requires about 50% of my time. I would rather be teaching. I have the skills and my students are very successful. Unfortunately, most of my time is spent doing what a secretary could do.

Wouldn't it be far more effective if Special Ed. teachers worked as a team and had a secretary (at half the pay) to do all of the scheduling for meetings, phone calls, letters and filing? I would then be free to do what I was trained to do. Of course it will never happen because it makes too much sense.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Acorn4
Date: 05 May 08 - 06:44 PM

I recently read a book on the Tudors and there was a section on how they chose to educate their children. There was a debate going on even then about methods/philosophies. I haven't got the exact quote but one of the most respected teachers of the time said that the current trend in education seemed to be that children were like an empty jug that you filled with water and even though it spilled out of the top, you carried on filling it. We haven't really got very far in 500 years , have we?


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: GUEST,dianavan
Date: 05 May 08 - 07:53 PM

If the secretary required seven years of post-secondary education, it would be fair to give him the same pay. Of course the secretary would also have to know how to teach.

The point is, guest, that I can do secretarial work but it is a waste of my skills and training. In addition, it is doubtful whether or not a secretary has the skills to teach, especially those students who require alternate methods of instruction. If a secretary wants to teach, they can earn their degree the same way I did and get a teacher's pay.

I doubt very much if parents would want their children taught by secretaries but if the public school system continues to mis-use their teachers, that is exactly what will happen. I want to teach. If I wanted a secretarial job, I wouldn't have removed myself from the work force to get a teaching degree.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Rasener
Date: 06 May 08 - 03:21 AM

You are dead right dainavan.
We need to get back to the old basics.
Secretarial Pools
Matrons in charge of hospitals

I see little point in a qualifies teacher who is very good wasting half their time on paperwork. Just think how many more children they could help.

As you say its too simple for pompous ivory tower bosses to understand.


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Bernard
Date: 06 May 08 - 11:22 AM

Couldn't agree more!


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: Schantieman
Date: 06 May 08 - 11:39 AM

Go for it, Julieann

I resigned a couple of months ago nad am counting down the days to the end of term. Sailing, Cadets stuff, and NO MARKING! ;-)

Steve


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Subject: RE: BS: Getting out of teaching
From: GUEST,A Regular
Date: 06 May 08 - 12:36 PM

I will miss the kids. And that is all I will miss.


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