Any teachers here?

finish the degree is probably a good idea. Find a coin that's going to kill it and become rich and dont worry about anything from there on out

Do it and drop a fuckton of redpills onto zogged kids
Do the God's work user

OP I was a high school teacher for like two semesters, did it for free (math, physics and chemistry). I got a big brain for jobs like programming or high finance or engineering, holding two degrees in the later one and other accomplishments in the past two (inb4 larping)

Let me tell ya something, the job itself is very easy if you know your shit and can pretty much autopilot but if you want to be a GOOD teacher that your students remember you for then you're gonna have to work the extra mile. One thing I learned on the job is that all the teachers know when you're bullshitting them in class, copying others and even when you take off your phone and/or whisper during a test. They're just being lenient enough to not give a fuck or help you out.

Oh one last thing, if you're in here for the money just don't do it.

>did it for free
Lol fuck off jannie

I can spare the time to volunteer a lot of it. I've done so as a chef, zoo guide, at marketing, photographer, painter, babysitter, personal trainer and more among other things. I always wanted to be a teacher so I became one for a while. Volunteering helps me learn more things faster.

I feel like high school Math/Physics/Cs teacher would be a comfy career change from dev once I get around 40. how hard is it to get into, do you need teacher certs?

Yeah but nothing too special, just a paper or two that say you know what you're teaching. After my time there they offered full employment so my guess is that you should aim to be proficient at what you want to teach, get some credentials like diplomas or certified courseworks and ask around. I did so since an acquaintance of mine was looking to fill a teacher role so jumped at the opportunity.

Dealing with black kids is exhausting and you'll never make enough money to feel it's worth it.
>taught 4 years and switched to software development