Living Well in Retirement
Retirees Try Teaching as a Second Career
For some seniors, becoming the head of the classroom fulfills a lifelong dream.
By Robert K. Otterbourg, Contributing Writer, Kiplinger's Retirement Report
May 4, 2009
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EDITOR'S NOTE: This article was originally published in the January 2009 issue of Kiplinger's Retirement Report. To subscribe, click here.
Matthew Epstein's mother wanted him to become a teacher, but he chose a legal career instead, in part because of the better pay. For 21 years, he practiced law in Concord, N.H., and spent a dozen years running two nonprofit groups in Chapel Hill, N.C.
Today, Epstein, 60, is fulfilling his mother's dream -- as well as his own. He says math was always his "intellectual passion," and he enjoyed a part-time job as a law-school instructor. In August 2008, Epstein started teaching high school math at a rural charter school in Saxapahaw, N.C. To meet state certification requirements, he took several education courses and refresher math classes.
Epstein spends seven hours a day in the classroom and several more hours preparing. Reaching struggling children makes the time investment worthwhile. "Breakthroughs are not very dramatic, but rather there are small changes with a lot of backsliding," he says. "In a way, it's most rewarding when a student backslides but then turns it around. I realize we are preparing them for life."
New Routes to the Classroom
Retirees are finding it easier than ever to switch careers to teaching. Every state has alternative certification paths for aspiring public school teachers. About 20% of the 35,000 people who use alternative certification are age 50 and older, according to the National Center for Education Information (www.ncei.com), a research group on teacher training.
Alternative certification allows candidates who have a college degree to bypass several years of classroom instruction and six months to a year as a student teacher. Instead, they take several education courses, with some states requiring an apprenticeship as a student teacher. (For requirements in every state, go to the Web site of the University of Kentucky's College of Education at www.uky.edu/education, click "Index" and then "Certification in Other States.")
Brian Salzer, principal of Newton South High School in Massachusetts, trains second-career teachers for the city school system through the Newton Teacher Training Institute. The institute provides a state-approved one-year program. "Older teachers bring expertise from previous careers," he says. "Students see that these teachers have real-world credibility that some students feel career teachers may lack."
James Shelton, 56, came to teaching via the U.S. Navy. After graduating from the Naval Academy in 1974, he became a nuclear submariner and retired as a captain 30 years later. He liked his stints as an instructor at the Navy sub school.
When Shelton left the Navy in 2004, he and his wife moved to the Seattle area, where he had been stationed in the late 1990s. After learning of Washington's alternative certification program, he took education courses at the City University of Seattle.
In 2008, Shelton became a full-time math teacher at a high school in Edmonds. "I like to see the light bulb go off among some of my students," he says. Sometimes, he gives students real-life examples, from his career in the Navy, on how math is used in engineering and physics. Shelton says he spends a "considerable amount of time dealing with students' academic, personal and behavioral problems."
Paula Borgasano, 56, of Woburn, Mass., says she wanted to become a teacher since she was five, but she never completed college. She stayed home with her three children and worked as a medical secretary.
But her dream never died. Borgasano returned to college and got a master's degree in education. For six years, she's been teaching second grade in Lowell. In her class, 60% of the students are Cambodian and 20% are Hispanic.
"I enjoy working with kids and increasing their reading and writing skills," says Borgasano. "At that age, they're like sponges. For them, school is a safe haven, considering Lowell's high crime rate." She's a mentor to many younger teachers, she says, "based on my life's experiences."
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Reader Comments (14)
Posted by: Actual Career Teache at 05/01/2009 03:47:23 PM
Why can't these greedy bastards retire already? At 60, you can't relate and you don't have the strength to control 30+ unruly teenagers. Stop crowding the scene and let your kids work.
Posted by: CoachD at 05/01/2009 08:03:38 PM
Is this comment a joke? You consider yourself a teacher? "Why can't these greedy bastards retire already? At 60, you can't relate and you don't have the strength to control 30+ unruly teenagers. Stop crowding the scene and let your kids work."
Posted by: Martha Healy at 05/01/2009 08:58:26 PM
This week the National Teacher of the Year honored at the White House was a Connecticut second career teacher. He had been a police detective. He now teaches special needs children. So I guess he has skills, interest, passion, and patience.
Posted by: Been There, DoneThat at 05/01/2009 09:08:09 PM
A teacher in today's classrooms has zero authority and a lot of responsibility, far greater work load than was experienced in the job the person retired from. I speak from experience. For four years, I taught Java Programming, Geometry, and Chemistry. I'm certified in all three fields, with a degree in chemistry and retired from a career as a computer programmer. My students wanted to be entertained and passed without the work. If they didn't get their way they gang up on the teacher and become disruptive. Then the teacher is blamed for not being able to control the students, as though it was their fault. The administration will NOT back you up. I've consoled English teachers who would break down in tears at the end of each school day from the abuse they got from their students. Plus there is a surplus of teachers now with almost every state cutting back in educational expenses and eliminating positions. There is no job security. Perhaps work as a substitute if you want to make a few bucks or go back to your old job. Teaching is for people who have no other choice. Until teachers have some authority over who they teach, the profession is not a healthy one to be in, especially when you are older than 60.
Posted by: Another Teacher at 05/01/2009 09:21:53 PM
Wow, A.C. Teacher, it sounds like you're afraid of some competent competition. Are you afraid that the NEA won't be able to save your entrenched hide.?
Posted by: david welch at 05/02/2009 08:24:31 AM
i spent 30 years teaching at a middle school and retired five years ago. at age 62, i have no desire to go back and put up with all the bs paperwork, meetings, stupid administrators and unruly students. i think this author needs a reality check by spending a few months/ years in an actual classroom and then let him write his article.
Posted by: dbark1 at 05/02/2009 05:02:27 PM
"Actual Career Teche" is the reason public schools are now an abject failure. To this "teacher" its all about them. This country MUST attach a dollar amount to every student or give them free choice of schools. That would undoubtedly wouild drive schools to excellence. Performance = excellence and we aren't getting it from self serving protected unions.
Posted by: Incensed at 05/02/2009 06:44:18 PM
What a toxic remark. Why would you feel that someone who is moved to teach, from the heart, is greedy? You have issues.
Posted by: susan at 05/03/2009 09:33:12 AM
I have been teaching 34 years, and it is no walk in the park. Hats off to those who can find reward in teaching as a second career and best wishes to them. Any suggestions for my second career? I am ready to get out but don't know where to go...
Posted by: Randy Lions at 05/03/2009 11:04:53 AM
While "Actual Career Teache's" comment seems harsh, I can tell you from experience that it was a lot easier to teach teens when I was 30 than it is at 50.
Posted by: jon samuels at 05/03/2009 01:06:04 PM
Anyone going down this road better check and make sure they aren't victims of the pension offset laws, currently in force in 14 states such as California, Alaska, Colorado,Illinois, Mass, Ohio, Texas and others. You may be shooting yourself in the foot if you enter this profession.
Posted by: jon samuels at 05/04/2009 04:06:19 PM
Regards my earlier posting, this pertains to Social Security benefits, both for you, your spouse and your children. In these fourteen states, your SSI benefits will be reduced if you have any benefits from a teacher's retirement system, and they can be substantial. Consult the NEA site for further information.
Posted by: bill at 04/24/2010 11:28:14 PM
i had every possible qualification in the Houston Independent School District when I applied for alternative certification 20 years ago after retirement with a scientific federal agency. i was 46 years old. i also had a degree in mathematics a minor in psychology and some graduate work, aced their qualifications tests and had a great interview afterwards. i had 4 kids in a houston area high school and had been a substitute teacher in the early 1960s while gaining my college degree. however, i was not offered a teaching or assistant teaching position for which i could then become a regular certified teacher. HISD prefers to hire teachers who steal, smoke dope and are accused of molesting their students. Go figure. they lost a potentially great teacher. I am not at all surprised that our school systems are failing. the system stinks big time and has failed the kids.
Posted by: bremiageava at 04/30/2010 07:02:35 PM
Hello I am currently out of work in Tulsa,Oklahoma. I have applied to most of the job sites more times than I'd care to recall and sent off hundreds of resumes. However, i have not been able to find a single good response to my resumes. If anyone knows about particular job site where i can look for a good job, please revert me with the location details. I will be thankful to you for your early response.