How can you gain credibility and exposure for you and your
business, reach a motivated audience, develop a far-flung network, hone
your presentation skills -- and get paid to do it?
Many writers, artists, speakers and entrepreneurs have found an answer: they teach classes in adult education programs.
Adult
education is big business. In the new century, "change" is a hot topic
and learning is no longer confined to traditional degree programs. As
people want to grow their careers and enrich their lives, specialized
programs have evolved to reach this market.
Some teaching venues
require at least a master's degree. Others allow you to share your
unique skills, from designing brochures to tarot reading. Temple
University's continuing education program has offered a half-day class
taught by a cleaning lady. The subject? Speed cleaning. If a target
market exists for your business or if you have knowledge that people can
use on the job, chances are a target market exists for you in the world
of adult education.
By entering this world, you can demonstrate
your skills to a receptive audience, meet some terrific people, learn
more than you expected and even have some fun. Teaching requires more
than a good speaking voice and a knowledge-filled brain. Every minute
you are in the classroom, you are marketing yourself to your students.
You must keep students involved for up to eight hours. Since the
average adult attention span is about fifteen minutes, you have to
design exercises, activities and questions. You have to deal with the
unexpected. Students will arrive late, ask off-the-wall questions and
challenge your expertise. Occasionally, students will be rude, insulting
or even abusive.
Most people who teach find themselves exhausted
after even a short class, yet also exhilarated. Teaching can be a high
when everything goes well. The secret of successful part-time teaching
is to identify your purpose in teaching and fine-tune your skills to
your target market.
You want to reach students who are also
potential customers. If a school features astrology and visualization,
your course on finding the lowest mortgage rate won't fit, unless you
suggest people consult the stars to meet their financial goals.
People
who have added teaching to their promotional toolkit report finding
success and fun along the way. One public relations consultant gets
forty percent of her clients from adult education classes. A writer has
developed a secondstream of income and a never-ending source of ideas.
The opportunities are available to everyone, everywhere.
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