hiii, so I just discovered your blog (very beautiful work!) but I had a question about your job if you want to answer. So I have a similar background (maths degree, then maths education (sort-of)) and I'd like to know a few more details about the kind of job you do as a consultant and how one gets into such a job. I'm asking because I'm about to graduate and starting to think about what to do for a living. Obviously no pressure! share whatever you're comfortable with
First, a disclaimer. I'm in Australia, and I'm not sure where you are - so how much of this applies or makes sense will vary depending on your location.
I did a maths/physics degree and then went onto a teaching degree, then worked teaching in high schools. After a while I got a job with TasGov teaching teachers to use technology in educationally purposeful ways, did that for a few years. Then moved states and started working for a non-profit company that mainly does education work for government, initially casual/part time, but now I'm full time.
Currently, the area of the company I work in makes content for teachers/students/families on a project basis. EG the government will pay us to make a website full of maths resources to support maths teachers - some resources we write ourselves, but there are lots of good maths resources out there already, that we link across to as well.
My role is across two projects at the moment, and I have different work in each team, but basically my days are spent a) writing and managing education material for publication on our teams' sites, b) reviewing existing education material for inclusion in our sites, c) metadata and vocabulary work d) misc other work like delivering workshops at conferences, delivering webinars, hosting a podcast (lol!). It's pretty varied, but all centred around education and mainly STEM-based, because that's my background, so they are the kinds of projects I tend to get assigned to.
I'm not sure if that's super helpful, but I do want to say that the teaching thing has opened up a lot of doors for me. I really enjoyed teaching - at least the 'working with students' part of it, the admin and bureaucracy around it, not so much :D But I also kept my eyes open for other possibilities, and applied for things that interested me along the way.
Let me know if you have any other questions :D