I have a friend who is a teacher of universal science in primary school (ie has a rich general culture and teaches all sorts of subjects) and teaches students separately, attends seminars, dance parties (teaches and dances to students), leads playground openings in the city, etc. It is so busy that there is really no more than a month of rest in the year - as in other professions. I agree with the above comment that the teaching profession is mostly a vocation, because you must not just have a diploma, but love what you do in order to be able to perform it properly! And now let's lighten up a bit. :) Since several people have already said above that the teaching profession is very difficult and time consuming, I suggest anyone who thinks this way, to catch the much easier and easier task of working on a lathe and milling machine for about the same pay! You have 20 days off a year, not. So, you will have security! :) It's 10 hours a day, maybe more, otherwise there are 8 on the piece of paper called "contract" (that is, no surprise here either, because you will also be writhing during teaching hours during non-working hours). The Sabbath goes without saying. It is true that you will not be sitting behind a desk, but constantly doing it, but you repeat in your mind that this is for health! :) You will even save yourself from such difficult seminars, because when turning you are "glued" tightly to the machine until the last second and agile you have to work out the daily norm, which is usually 20-30% higher than physically possible. This will teach you to develop as individuals! You won't have to touch germs with pencils, chalks, textbooks and notebooks, because you work exclusively with oils, ferrous and non-ferrous metals, ten-year-olds are well soaked with rags and breathe wonderful air (refreshed with the breath of half Mendeleev table) in only a seemingly foggy and dusty workshop. And the vapors from the acid bath in the next room help you to be cheerful and perfectly able to work. In such an environment, microbes simply do not grow, that even cockroaches escape. What better news for you !? :)
The noise of lathes, cutters, press brakes, presses, punches and drills is like fine music, caressing your ears, and has nothing to do with the nasty and boring silence in the classroom! :) The metal shavings that bounced in your eyes, the periodic cuts, abrasions and broken fingernails will complete the work cycle and help you get unique memories of your work for a lifetime! Once you get home in the evening, even a long shower will not deprive you of the scent of the working atmosphere! The black under your nails will still be as saturated as it was during the shift. At least once a week, the of the workshop will come to make you happy with words like "You'll finish this after a new order pops up now and you'll make it first!" Or "Bai Georgi didn't come today and he has to you take his norm too! ". Abe, the idyll is great, so I wonder how there are so many balaclavas who prefer the unbearably hard work of a teacher on a clean desk to the casual squatting in the metalworking shop. :))) Irony aside, I work as a freelancer and would not return to full-time employment in a company or government agency. The responsibilities are more, often the working hours are noticeably longer, but I also have the complete freedom to allow myself a few days off almost any time or to go out at any time of the day for a walk around the city, outside it. The income is many times higher than the teacher's salary or that of a regular bachelor.
1 woolfchatter answered
If that makes you feel better, do it, I personally don't see it bad or embarrassing to graduate as a lawyer and become a teacher. In my opinion, you need at least 2 subjects, because you only have to go around several schools with history to get the full staff. I personally do not know anyone who is a teacher and takes so much. Half the staff of a young teacher is about BGN 300. after taxes.