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Would leaving a coding job for a teacher job typecast me from future coding work

5 pointsby thejacenxpressover 11 years ago
I've been talking with a recruiter about a potential instructor role at a private company (not a college/university). It's great pay and 3 months vacation...which sounds like fun because I'd really enjoy teaching and learning new things. However, if I'd leave there 2-3 years later for a coding job, I'm worried the 2-3 of teaching years would be looked upon as 'non-coding' time, even with working on side projects. I'm curious to anyones thoughts. Thanks

3 comments

gypsy_daveover 11 years ago
My experience tell me:<p>* The Company name&#x2F;brand can do as much to typecast you as the position. Eg, Dave&#x27;s Zert Manufacturing vs Trendy Bay Co<p>* &#x27;Instructor&#x27; can simply be a high-end gradient of many different roles. It doesn&#x27;t necessarily say &#x27;non-coder&#x27;. A senior architect can be understood to be an instructor of sorts. How this is all documented on a resume is fairly flexible.<p>* Academic teaching time would definitely typecast you negatively as a programmer, but not so much with System Administration experience. I&#x27;d avoid it unless you are headed into Academia. I don&#x27;t have any very specific examples of this other than the perception I had of various co-workers who had come from university jobs. They had detectable institutionalization.<p>My general advice would be to have a clear picture of where you want to end up and do your best to have each link in the chain moving you in the same direction. It&#x27;s easy to justify getting sidetracked by relationships, geography, and economic considerations.<p>I&#x27;ll end with a useless caveat about subjective answers. Everything obviously depends on the specifics of the company and job.
zellioover 11 years ago
I can only speak for my personal preference but if you could show good works for that period of time I don&#x27;t see it being an issue. Use the few years and huge vacation to contribute to major open source projects, stay current and keep coding. I don&#x27;t see why it should be an issue. It shows flexibility, aptitude, and a drive to better the self.
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arisAlexisover 11 years ago
I was a coder but i got a job as an ms office teacher for 10 years. I was still coding for fun but that didn&#x27;t help when I started searching for a job. I wasn&#x27;t a coder anymore.
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