ChatterBank3 mins ago
Working after retirement
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No best answer has yet been selected by Rhianna1825. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.As an ex-teacher you are multi-skilled and have a lot to offer any employer. Your organisational skills will be high, not to mention your educational qualifications, Key Skills, especially communication skills. There are too many to list here, so don't sell yourself cheaply to B&Q !
I retired as a Senior Teacher six years ago and was immediately offered a job by the local education authority as a Work Experience Officer - having been a W/exp co-ordinator for many years. If you have a Health and Safety qualification they may take you on as a pre-placement visitor, which is a great job, visiting employers all over the place, which is what I do now most of the time.
Try contacting your own authority to see if they have anything to offer; I can tell you it's like a holiday camp after 'lion taming' for thirty years !
My pleasure, Rhianna. The frustrating thing about AB is that one rarely gets any feedback from one's advice, so thanks again, and I would be very interested to hear how you get on. And by the way, I am 73 and have been told by my managers that they couldn't do without me ! So forget your age, it's what you know and what you are that counts, and anyone who has thirty years of teaching behind them can teach most people a thing or two !
It depends on your qulifications, to an extent, but have you thought of applying to teach with the Open University? I've recently started and am thoroughly enjoying it. There's a lot of contact by phone and e-mail, plus monthly tutorials. Even the marking is interesting! (When did you last hear a teacher saying that?)
The downside is that it is chronically underpaid and, as with most vocational jobs, you can find yourself working full-time for a minor salary if you're not careful!
May is the time for applications for tutoring most courses which start in January/February, although in some regions and on some courses there are still vacancies for the October presentations.
http://www3.open.ac.uk/employment/associate-lecturers/main_1.shtm
Rhianna. Yes I am secondary background (PE. Technology, Careers). When I was asked to assist in setting up a centralised database for the authority's W/exp programme I was offered two days a week at �180 per day- that was six years ago. Once the programme was up and running they only wanted full-timers to manipulate the data, so I'd done myself out of quite a nice job. I still wanted to work as part of the team so I was offered the position of training and leading a small team of Health and Safety visitors who check the suitability of placements before the students (Yrs 10/11) go out for two weeks. The pay is not great, only �8.75 and hour plus 50p a mile car allowance, but the job satisfaction is terrific and I get to visit some wonderfully interesting places. I won't reveal the EA, however.
A lot of authorities use a charity called Trident to do these visits but others have their own staff. Having a secondary background, with experience of co-ordinating w/exp is undoubtedly an advantage, of course. You would also need to take a fairly straightforward Health & Safety qualification,usually paid for by the EA if you are appointed. I wish you luck, and definitely approach your EA to see what they have to offer someone with your experience. Let us all know how you get on.
How about approaching your local kids clubs.
They are fun to work for as they are in a relaxed atmosphere. mainly running in the school holidays.
They go on great excursion and your teaching skills would be very usefull to the needs of a kids club.
Having worked for one myself i can recomend it.
I hope you find what you are looking for.
Good luck.