Quote:
Originally Posted by Spoon Man
... as I understand it nothing in the military directly relates to that profession, but there are quite a few that would indirectly relate to it, and more than enough experience to make the heads spin of my students.
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Once you reach a high enough rank or level of competency the opportunities to teach, even informally are many and varied. On the informal level there are simple classes to your fellows, sure a lot of it is make yourslef look busy types of things but teaching none the less. The next step would be an actual planned and scheduled lesson, again given to your fellows but this time on much more organized level with lesson plans and outlines required so they can be saved with the list of attendees and will serve to meet a requirement for them. Lastly, every branch of service runs, maintains, and staffs their own schools. Even if your not teach math or social studies thes schools are a highly organized and thought out system, and regardless of the curriculum, you'd still be teaching.
As Madam Broshkina pointed out there is the Troops to Teachers program as well.