Currently in my 6th year of working in education, I’ve taught elementary and middle school PE before transitioning to a behavior specialist position. I got RIF’d but was asked to come back and teach 8th grade language arts. Im surviving right now but know ELA will be a one time deal. I’m heavily considering going the law enforcement route. I love problem solving, investigating, and helping others. I’ve done several ride alongs with local departments and I’m leaning towards the Sherriff’s office. I’m curious to hear from former teachers and others out there that have made the switch. Are you happy you made the change? Has it been tough going from a normal m-f schedule to 12 hour shift work? I have elementary age kids but my wife is supportive. My other option would be to get another masters degree and go admin within education. Would love any guidance or advice you all have. Thanks

  • Just find a department with a SRO program. Then you can have a little of both worlds.

  • I’m a school admin. My husband is a cop. Our jobs both suck a lot in different yet sometimes similar ways. And the end of the day his job sucks more than mine but pays a bit more too. 🤷‍♀️

    I’m genuinely torn between the two. I have people in my corner saying I’d be great in either role. I really do enjoy working one on one with challenging students and consider myself skilled at de-escalating and generally good with all people from different backgrounds. I can’t stand the classroom and the apathy that is running rampant. The morale in education is just so bad right now and the cuts are gonna keep coming. I know things aren’t rainbows in LE but at least the career has stability I’m longing for and a chance to be in a dynamic fast pace role.

    I think the things you dislike about education will be amplified tenfold in law enforcement. The apathy, the lack of parenting, the “do whatever you want” mentality, the morale, the way people view you and trash you as a human for your profession. Now add to that shift work, less days off, significantly more danger, and a constant exposure to events that even one of would give most people PTSD.

  • We had a teacher make the change. He was a little shaky at first but he hung in there and he worked it out. Check your pension system, his teaching time allowed him to join a better tier on the pension ladder. Bonus is that his time counts on the end as well.

  • I was never a teacher but I’m guessing you’d find some similarities. First I’d think both are careers of passion. Few people get into these professions for financial reasons. Most do it because they have a genuine passion for serving others. They both have there own unique set of challenges where admin tend to stand in the way rather than help guide you towards making a strong impact. Also for every success story there are 5-10 failures and you need to learn how to manage those emotions. Not letting yourself get too high or too low

    A strength and maybe a weakness of mine is that I’m never too high or too low. I sort of ride that midline.

    I feel like it just means you’re able to keep things in perspective.

    As for your question, I would say if it’s something that you really want to do and feel you would be successful, then do it. I have a feeling you would probably excel and would be able to de-escalate the situations and have strong inner personal skills based off of your current profession and the way you are answering questions on this post.

    Whatever you decide, I wish you luck

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    Poster bas to find work before June. Federal isn’t quick. Even DHS won’t get you onboarded that quick unless you aspire to reside in the most scenic locales this country has to offer.

    I actually made it past phase 2 with them. Was very optimistic until I met the magic box..

  • You never know until you try. It’s not for everyone, but everyone it is for maintains that it’s the best job they’ll ever have.

    You were already used to talking to people like children, and being a cop is largely talking to adults who are acting like children, in a way that hopefully doesn’t get you into a fight unless they force it.

    12 hour shifts, I think you will like, because 15 days off a month is really nice. Most people who are on the schedule love it, including myself. In normal business it feels great, but you get the added bonus of being able to take a whole week off by only burning 20 to 24 hours of leave.

    Be prepared to work night shifts and weekends, but the family learns to live around it easily. Sometimes it means having Christmas with the kids on December 23rd instead of Christmas Day, and I don’t think you’ll hear them complaining.

    I’m coming around to the idea of 12s more and more. Some of my circle are saying “what about the summer and winter breaks?” That’s really one of the only reasons I’m still in education. For that time off with my own kids. But I also am tired of living in survival mode till the next break and then dreading going back when it’s over.

  • I did 7 years as a teacher and a coach and it was the best decision I made. Do it!

    That’s great to hear! What was your teaching background? How long have you been in LE? I assume a lot of the skills we use in education have carried over?

  • I was an adult education instructor for 3 years before becoming a cop. I still miss it. I would like to do both, but being a cop pays significantly more. I might go back to it in retirement, or try being a sub for high school and see if I want to teach there.

    If you're looking for job stability, policing is pretty solid. The trade off is working pretty much every holiday. I think a lot of people go into policing with this idealism of making the world better, but you're just a cog in the machine.

    Also, there's a bit of a time limit to becoming a cop because of the physical requirements. The older you get, the harder it gets. I'd give it a try but maintain your teaching credentials to fall back on.

  • I know several people that made the jump from education to LE. They are great officers. I Know they are loving the pay increase as well

  • If you enjoy problem solving, investigating, and helping, I’d go the admin route. You’re already 6 years in, the admin pay is better, you can handle the discipline side of it, and just like policing, everyone will hate your decisions!

    I work at a larger school as an SRO, our discipline admin stay plenty busy.

    Pretty much. I went from military police to education and there are similar shades.

    Won't catch me being admin tho. They deal with all the worst parts of the profession, and their contract days are longer.

  • If you want to be active and running/driving around with long sometimes unpredictable hours then be a cop/SRO.

    If you really need the consistent schedule as a teacher like your the only partner that can do day care drop offs or or basket ball practice tumbling whatever then stay until that kid grows up a few years or your figure out how to manage the schedule.

    But a cop in general is gonna make more money than a teacher. Not by much in my state but it’s still a raise.

    But LEO is most likely gonna pay more

  • ok, i went the opposite way; tried enforcement, and went into education figuring education is the state's prevention side of law enforcement. idk, i'd be careful about glorifying police, or any, work. the help you're able to offer, a lot of the time people don't want. you get lied to all the time and people try to get around you. in fact, some people will try to kill you. i will say, the comradery really was the best i've experienced when working with other officers. don't let me discourage you, because i also daydream about being an officer, but just try to look at every angle because it would be a big commitment. like, i dont know, but I would think your entire life would have to revolve around being accountable and ready to go 24/7; now compare that to having summers off, for example.

  • Try it, if you don’t like it, you can go back to teaching.Just be dealing with bigger kids to baby sit and deal with.

  • Work with a guy who left teaching to become a cop with the goal of becoming an SRO. Kinda gets both things