Anyone suggesting teaching as an easy route...
a) Doesn't really know what teachers earn (it would take 5-6 years to get to £35k without taking on a TLR).
b) Doesn't really understand what a teachers workload is. Especially if they teach a secondary school core subject up to A-level.
yeah but you do get a shed load of holidays, proper sick pay and pension so the benefits are A LOT better than most jobs but teachers seem to moan a lot more about it 😆
mind you, I couldn't and wouldn't want to deal with a classroom full of teenagers, so you have my respect.
Train driver? Money's about right, takes a couple of years to get there though.
According to the adverts on the back of buses in Aberdeen you could be earning that for driving the bus.
Northwind - Member
I took a commonplace skill (financial fannying about) from an industry that undervalues it (banking) and transferred it to an industry that thinks it's black magic (universities) and therefore overvalues it and pays 50% more for much the same work.
Interesting, Northwind.....when you say "transferred it to the university industry", do you kind if I ask what exacly you do for them? Are you an accountant?
Is taking time off for a degree an option?
Process/chemical engineering, then get a job in one of the oil and gas opperators (Shell, BP etc), graduate starting salalry is £35-40k.
Just need some aplitude for maths and science.
Open a bike shop... 😕
Air traffic control earn alright.
[b]Northwind[/b] - Member
I took a commonplace skill (financial fannying about) from an industry that undervalues it (banking) and transferred it to an industry that thinks it's black magic (universities) and therefore overvalues it and pays 50% more for much the same work.
If Universities are paying 50% more than banks we have an even more serious budgetary problem in Education than we all thought.
The Professors I know (top of their respective games) make about £65-£75
jekkyl - if I was a teacher I wouldn't have the time to be typing this on here 😆 The OH is though. The holidays are good, but she spends about 5 weeks of those working anyway - either marking or preparing for the following term. She probably does around 3 hours at home per evening and about 5 hours each weekend on top of a full time table.
So the workload is pretty heavy during term time, with the pay off coming in holidays.
Prior to meeting my (English teacher) wife, I'd have claimed teaching was an easy game. My opinion has changed, drastically.
Anyone who thinks it's a case of turning up just before the pupils, reading some stuff out of books at them, and then heading home shortly after they leave, has a very incorrect understanding of what is involved.
jambalaya - MemberIf Universities are paying 50% more than banks we have an even more serious budgetary problem in Education than we all thought.
The Professors I know (top of their respective games) make about £65-£75
I don't think you've understood my post at all 😕 For the work I'm doing, I get paid nearly twice as much. (entry salary £31K with better salary progression and better benefits) I'm not comparing higher paid roles.
Obviously not just education you can do this- friend of mine went from being a junior teacher to being a banking trainer, same skills were more valuable in one industry than in others.
I don't think sparky's have to do the 4 years at college any more that I did. I work on highway electrical systems and that sees me good for around £80k a year self employed, with about £25k in overheads and running costs, so £55k wages. The employed sparks I work with earn £35-40k
move to Aberdeen and work in O&G engineering on contract basis, you'll be wiping your bum with £35k.
isn't there as job going at the bbc that you don't need to be any good at and if you do it badly enough, you get a half mill handout in a less than 2 months?
also, if you'd prefer scotland, i believe there's a football related opportunity in glasgow requiring no more than a modicum of knowledge of well known catch phrases - long term improvement; game of 2 halfs, we dominated but the decisions went against us; you're a fat tube, traynor. would take longer but the payoff after a couple of years of not meeting any targets could be around the 3/4 mill mark
[i]If you've got head for heights, try the overhead powerlines. Transmission pays about £60k on top and distribution about£40-45k. There's a chronic shortage of linesmen at the mo in this country. Try balfour beatty , amec or babcock.[/i]
I think I'd quite like that. I'd imagine one's life insurance premiums may be quite high though.
