I would look at educational publishing... tons of opportunity there. Among the different positions:
Sales - lots of traveling and great commissions (If you are single, this one is fun!)
Educational consultant - work with school districts to implement new textbook/software, train teachers to use the product effectively (These positions involve lots of travel as well.)
Curriculum specialist - help align, write new curriculum (This is what I was doing before I went back into the classroom this year. Loved it! I worked for Pearson Digital. Sent in my resume on a whim, got the job and moved to AZ. I didn't even know that a job like that existed.)
You could also look at work as a corporate trainer. These positions are needed in many different industries including finance, communications, etc. They want people who have experience leading a class. These companies will train you and provide you with what you need before you actually begin teaching a class.
Hope this gives you some ideas, best of luck!
2007-03-22 08:13:13
·
answer #1
·
answered by santan_cat 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
You are qualified for lots of jobs with a teaching degree. I happen to know that there were some at Alabama Power that simply required a 4 year degree. Your completion of a degree is a sign of commitment in your character. Also there are many things that you do as a teacher that are qualities that many employers look for such as able to plan (Goodness knows you plan) Also being able to relate effectively with others. Think of everything you do as a teacher, and also your volunteer activities, make them sound super in a resume, and go look at corporate jobs. Some hospitals (children's maybe) have teachers for children who are there long term, and this is year round. Best wishes!
2007-03-22 06:34:15
·
answer #2
·
answered by fungirlbrooke 1
·
0⤊
0⤋
If you have an area of specialty, more the better. But even if your background is in general education, the ability to teach is a gift that transfers well into any other field that interests you. If the PS system is what you've been in, consider the private sector, or teaching GED for Job Corps.
2007-03-22 06:28:28
·
answer #3
·
answered by tracymoo 6
·
1⤊
0⤋
It depends on your area of expertise. However, as an educator you would be valuable to any large company that does staff development. There is also the sales route whether it's educational materials or not. Sorry about the cutbacks, and I genuinely hope that the teaching profession does not lose someone who already met the challenges of those first few years.
2007-03-22 07:16:47
·
answer #4
·
answered by bandit 6
·
0⤊
0⤋
Quit underestimating yourself!!!
Regardless of what you have your degree in... you have proved you can
1. Start something and finished it.
2. work your way out of a jam. No one, no one, roller skates through college. I'm sure you had some courses which were a b&(&( buster. You dealt with it.
3. work with deadlines. you are used to doing quality work, and doing it on time.
--
In a lot of jobs, a degree doesn't dictate who gets in, but a lack of one, does dictate who doesn't get in.
Now, get your resume together, and go to it!
Good luck!
2007-03-22 10:34:30
·
answer #5
·
answered by TedEx 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
simplest way is to flow to college and do ROTC, some states grant classes waivers for ROTC cadets, so all you will possibly might desire to pay is books and costs. From there, prepare to med college, and the militia pays for it as long as you get regular. via the time you're interior the militia doing you're interest you would be commissioned as a Captain. in case you prefer to flow as severe as PhD/MD/grad college, i does not "waste" time enlisting. it's going to take plenty longer for some thing you should knock out in 8-10 years vs 12-14ish. i replaced into going to enlist too, till I did some analyzing. The recruiter will make enlisting sound like a large theory. My suggestion, refer to those who're easily in, the two officer and enlisted and get their perspective. sure there are pluses to being enlisted first, i individually prefer to in basic terms get my training achieved and get my militia occupation rolling asap vs spending 4 years enlisting taking up line/community college courses as quickly as I easily have time, while i need to be going to college finished time.
2016-10-19 08:35:39
·
answer #6
·
answered by ? 4
·
0⤊
0⤋