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What do people do after retiring from ESL teaching?

Posted: 19 Jan 2009, 22:07
by Krisha
What career paths have other ESL teachers taken when they've finished?

Anyone know of some reputable companies started by ESL teachers?

Re: What do people do after retiring from ESL teaching?

Posted: 27 Jan 2009, 15:17
by systematic
Krisha wrote:What career paths have other ESL teachers taken when they've finished?
That's a very interesting topic starter :D
I know several former ESL teachers who have set up their own companies in real estate, tourism, boutique hotels, construction, up-market restaurants, and software/website development. Some have published a book or two and become full-time writers, others have made a reputation for themselves as members of the educational editorial staff of reputable newspapers and periodicals.

Dave of of the DAVE's ESL Café forum was previously a teacher here in Thailand and has followed with a hugely successful career with his website and as a writer of textbooks, and is a sought-after guest lecturer. Ian, the founder of the ajarn.com forum, started a boutique hotel on Ko Chang island that is doing very well.

Many build up their future careers as a sideline while they are still teaching
Krisha wrote:Anyone know of some reputable companies started by ESL teachers?
Have a look at these:

http://siamconsulting.com
http://ultralingua.com

Re: What do people do after retiring from ESL teaching?

Posted: 05 Feb 2009, 00:35
by systematic
generally, with the exception of those who own and/or manage TESOL training establishments and placement agencies, university lecturers, those who have qualified for senior positions such as DOS, and the permanent staff of international schools, the vast majority of TEFLERs is comprised of travellers, gap year students, and those seeking a short-term experience.

Certainly, even in developed countries such as the UK, the average TEFL teacher often earns even less than a blue-collar worker.

Re: What do people do after retiring from ESL teaching?

Posted: 30 Mar 2009, 06:42
by systematic
For some people who are courageous enough to meet the challenge and have the right qualifications, teaching English either at home or abroad can have its rewards. After a few years in my first career as a marketing executive I went back to college as a mature student and made a complete change. I was able to recently at 60 from decades of 'TEFFLing' and other work in linguistics and higher education. I had paid my kid through college who is now a chair professor, I have a house in France with a pool and several acres of vineyard; in Thailand, a wife and two lovely adopted children, a house with a pool, three cars, a motel, a tractor and 25 rai of farmland and livestock; excellent, inexpensive health coverage from the BUPA, and royalties on a few things I managed to get published, including a series of English textbooks.
I don't have, and probably won't get a pension, because I never lived anywhere long enough to qualify for one. I could have continued working for a few more years, but I do have a reasonably successful software company (also linguistics) which keeps me busy enough.
I do not regret 30+ years of ELT for one moment - and I never stopped learning the whole time.

Re: What do people do after retiring from ESL teaching?

Posted: 22 Aug 2010, 15:10
by marketingman
systematic wrote:For some people who are courageous enough to meet the challenge and have the right qualifications, teaching English either at home or abroad can have its rewards. After a few years in my first career as a marketing executive I went back to college as a mature student and made a complete change. I was able to recently at 60 from decades of 'TEFFLing' and other work in linguistics and higher education. I had paid my kid through college who is now a chair professor, I have a house in France with a pool and several acres of vineyard; in Thailand, a wife and two lovely adopted children, a house with a pool, three cars, a motel, a tractor and 25 rai of farmland and livestock; excellent, inexpensive health coverage from the BUPA, and royalties on a few things I managed to get published, including a series of English textbooks.
I don't have, and probably won't get a pension, because I never lived anywhere long enough to qualify for one. I could have continued working for a few more years, but I do have a reasonably successful software company (also linguistics) which keeps me busy enough.
I do not regret 30+ years of ELT for one moment - and I never stopped learning the whole time.
This is a hugely inspiring post. My guess would be that many people who might be thinking of EFL have similar concerns... is it just a 'gap year' thing or can it be sustainable? You have clearly proven that (with hard work / extra long term objectives) it can be done (and very successfully).

In light of my other topic, this is a breath of fresh air to know that there is a sustainable future in EFL :-)

Re: What do people do after retiring from ESL teaching?

Posted: 03 Sep 2010, 02:28
by markc
Lots of people only teach English for a year or two, but people who spend much longer teaching - like me - often end up managing language schools or training teachers. I had my own chain of language schools which I've now sold. I've also been involved in writing EFL coursebooks, and other tefl related materials.

Good and interesting story, Systematic.

Re: What do people do after retiring from ESL teaching?

Posted: 06 Sep 2010, 12:13
by LeeCh
I'm thinking of doing something similar for a career break (I hold a Masters degree an IT and have 10 years IT industry experience). I'm actually hoping not to go back to programming, and I was just wondering if anyone had or knew of anybody who had gone back to a different career once they had done it?

Thanks
Lee