One of the unique things about most teaching programs is that they in fact DO prepare you to do a specific job. You are even provided with an "internship" = student teaching. The state requires you to take a number of standardized and essay tests called PraxisII - in the case of TN three. The credit requirements are among the highest, there are mountains of paperwork, checks, and other issues; in short a teaching degree is one of the most intensive undergrad degrees AND one of the few that does guide you down a specific career path vs. a "liberal arts" degree that gives you a little of everything and prepares you for nothing. My school graduated a large number of teachers but a small percentage of music teachers. Most of the "teachers" had jobs before they graduated; so it is not a case of just throwing bodies out there. I was amazed at one of the education career fairs that my university offered - schools from all the surrounding states begging our grads to teach there, yet not one single table had any music openings.DP wrote:"I don't know what I want to do when I grow up, I think I'll teach" I also know more than a few dozen more who were somehow or other talked into their collitch program....whether they were undecided, cajoled, encouraged, or brain-dead.
I have considered being a music teacher since the 80's, but was a johnny-come-lately to the field until the last few years, it is not a recent whim. I receive publications every month that tell of the need for music teachers, yet I do not see the jobs to back it up. I had literally applied for dozens of jobs coast to coast yet had few interviews and even fewer offers.
This was a well thought career choice that I temporarily regret.
I realize that when it comes to tuba I am "good but not good enough" and I am not one of the many to mortgage the rest of my life pursuing one of the few family-feeding playing jobs.
I have a "take no crap" personality. I am also very driven and like to produce results and not fluff. * I have seen many good and successful band directors possess the same trait. I just need to find a school where the inmates do not run the institution. Perhaps they are still out there, perhaps not.
We shall see what comes of it all.
P.S. I have applied for dozens of corporate training jobs around the country in the last two months - a good suggestion from some - but have yet to hear diddly on those. Mainly because they typically want a degree that has nothing to do with education
* This is also one of the same reasons I have not pursued church music fulltime. With only a few expections, most church music programs I have seen are laughably bad and really would prefer to stay that way except maybe for Easter and Christmas, maybe. The "slacker" minsters of music seem to do quite well financially; the driven ones usually bounce from job to job and ultimately leave the field.





