Friday, February 25, 2005

The Cynical Career Counsellor Explains Your Future As

A High School Teacher

What? You really want to know that one? Have you seen the people who work here? What in the hell makes you think they have a lifestyle that could in any way be appealing? Seriously, I know these people, and they're freaking misfits, every one. Summers off? Yeah, that might seem nice--but let me explain.

S0, you'll go to college, but before that, maybe you'll work in some job to raise cash for school. Remember that job--if you'd stayed there, you'd have kept on earning money--probably more as you climbed up in seniority and skill, and you wouldn't have had to pay tuition fees. Instead, you'll waste five years at college, when you could learn everything you needed to teach in two. If you ever calculate the difference between going to college and teaching, or staying in your old job, you'll realize that you'll have to work until you're 85 to be ahead on the deal.

When you graduate, you won't find the job of your dreams just waiting--you'll either travel to some godforsaken outpost where all the kids are siblings, engaged to each other, or both, or you'll rot on some substitute teaching list waiting for the phone to ring. After a year, you'll figure out that the more popular subs are those who find subtle ways to bribe the teachers who call them in to work.

Subbing will be tough--you're fresh meat for the truly sociopathic members of the school community--which is about 50% of any given school's population--and few of the regular staff ever get your name right, unless they have to seek you out to blast you for parking in their spot.

Eventually you get a job at a school--not full-time, of course, and the salary of teachers early in their careers is about half of their older, burned-out colleagues, so you won't really be pulling in much more cash than some of the kids you teach manage to earn in their after school jobs. The difference is they still live at home, so they can use their earnings to buy late model cars and clothes that fit, while you lie to yourself that no one laughs at your Pinto and that one day you won't need to pin those pants that a more svelte incarnation of you once wore with ease.

Staff meetings are hell--the pathetic divorcees who live alone with their cats have one venue each month to vent their anger at the world, and you must suffer through it--of course, maybe you'll be lucky enough to share a department with these special individuals, and that means even more quality time hearing why your gender is scum. The only thing worse will be those rare unpleasant social gatherings that include drink--these interactions will scar you for the rest of your life.

Students, of course, will be the source of all that is both good and terrible about your day. Parents won't believe their kids need the ritalin, but you'll know better, and it only takes one or two angry violent teenagers to ruin a decent class. Sadly, some of the worst will excel only in their attendance records.

Even the good ones can't be trusted. They'll mock your wardrobe, particularly if you ever wear the same article of clothing in any 10 day period, and you'll eventually realize that you are lied to about 40 times a day. Your favorites will eventually disappoint you when you find mocking charicatures of you scribbled on the backs of the binders they forget in your classroom. Your feeble attempts to be "relevant"--which means painfully embarassing misuse of 10 year old ghetto slang--will be particular fodder for their parodies that stop when you walk too close...

Eventually, you'll be too old to try to connect any more, and it becomes a sad parade of years wishing 10 months gone to enjoy the all too brief moments of July and August. You become the old fart that everyone wishes would retire, but you can't really afford to. You and your students are united only in your mutual loathing of each other. After the first 10 years, you give up even trying to make the occasional class interesting--too many swine have brutishly trampled the pearls of your creativity.

Parents treat you no better--sure there are the occasional ones who find something positive in what you do, but every parent night has at least a couple who've shown up to work out their anger from their own tragic high school experience on you. Even the good ones are convinced that you are a scam artist stealing a full-time paycheck for working four or five hours a day.

Your family, if you have one, will be under constant financial pressure, and your pile of marking and preparation work is a burden that you carry like Atlas shouldered the globe. You are the only one who ages in a room full of the perpetually young, making you constantly conscious of your own mortality and physical deterioration.

Of course, if it gets too bad, you could always switch to counselling...

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

oh sheesh! and to think that i liked teaching, if only to show those teachers what teaching was all abt .. looks like I was wrong ;)