As someone who taught kids in person and fell into a deep depression with how Kafkaesque that job was and then found so much more gratification as a SWE, all I can say is, the author's experience is not universal. (And I am a parent, so it's not about disliking kids.) I will say though that remote work is definitely dystopia. I need an office and the presence of people physically.
grimgrin|2 days ago
kj4211cash|2 days ago
3D30497420|1 day ago
I recall being pretty miserable working in a maze of cubicles surrounded by coworkers. I don't think there are single solutions for any of these questions. What works well for one person will not work well for another.
electrosphere|2 days ago
I found a little thriving town in the university with all the important things I needed and the most important thing of all: human social interaction and seeing people around me.
watermelon59|1 day ago
Would you mind elaborating on why that was the case? I’m super curious because I’ve considered switching careers to become a teacher.
lr4444lr|1 day ago
You might be lucky to reach a small minority of your students, assuming environmental forces of poverty, dysfunctional family, and peer influence don't muzzle their gifts. But the day in day out bulk of your work isn't those "Mr. Holland's Opus" moments: it's handling a bunch of kids who don't want to be there in a bureaucratic set of rules imposed on you from above. And private schools are not immune to these problems either.
daxfohl|2 days ago
gehsty|2 days ago