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Stoughton teacher Ted Mummery works on a home
economics project with 7th-grade student Ryan Olson.
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By Joanne M. Haas
Shortly after starting his dream job of teaching at age 49,
Ted Mummery could hardly believe his ears when he went to the local bank
for a new car loan.
He was rejected.
How can you be telling me this? Mummery said, recalling his
reaction. I know the pay is low, but it isnt that low. This
is an eye opener. The public should know that first-year teachers struggle
a lot.
Mummery began this fall as a first-year family and consumer education
teacher after years of private business experience.
He is paid about $26,600 a year to teach the 600 or so 7th and 8th graders
of River Bluff Middle School.
Despite his decades of private business experience, the bank rejected
his loan based upon his teacher pay and a debt of $35,000 for student
loans used to earn his teaching degree from the University of Wisconsin-Stevens
Point.
Mummery is confident he will secure a car loan elsewhere without returning
to the private sector, where his computer skills would easily net a much
higher salary. He is certified to teach both family and consumer education
and computer science.
While Mummery is not planning to leave the profession he just joined,
he is learning just how difficult life is for teachers under school district
revenue controls and the Qualified Economic Offer law.
Mummery is raising three children and repaying his $35,000 student loans.
He knows it would be much easier making two to three times as much in
the private sector, but he is uniquely determined to remain a teacher.
Drawing on lifes experiences
Mummery has been an assembly worker, a supervisor, and a business owner.
He even lived off 25 acres of Missouri land for seven productive years
in the 1970s. But it was a visit to a nursing home in the early 1980s
that eventually pushed this true multi-tasker on another path.
There was a waste of education just sitting there with nothing
to do, Mummery said of the nursing home residents he met 20 years
ago. Such full lives with so much information, and it just sits.
So when Mummery hit yet another ceiling in yet another profession, he
had something of an epiphany prompted in part by the image of all those
residents whose life experiences may have never been tapped by society.
I wanted to do something with my life that gave me fulfillment,
and that would make a difference, he said. Teaching is one
of the best careers. I had a long life behind me, and that would aid me
in being a teacher.
From high school to the Army
After he graduated from Beloit Memorial High School, Mummery joined the
U.S. Army. Then in the early 1970s, he worked for Chrysler Corp. in Belvidere,
Ill., until a round of layoffs eliminated his job.
From there, he and his wife moved to Missouri, built a two-story log
house and lived a back to the land existence. After their
three children were born, they returned to Wisconsin where he landed a
job as a driver for a cement company and was promoted through the ranks
to supervisor.
He then owned and operated his own frozen yogurt eatery called La Claires
in Stevens Point from 1988 to 1993. From there, he joined a manufacturing
company and worked his way into the top manager spot in the woodworking
division. Along the way, he did other things such as arts and crafts,
stained glass and holiday decorations that he sold.
Mummery never considered college until a little more than five years
ago when the time seemed right to become a teacher. After investigating
different fields, he settled on family and consumer education.
It teaches life, parenting, relationship skills, financial skills
and all these human growth and development skills.
And everyone should know how to cook, said Mummery, who is
one of few men teaching in the field.
The skills he learned in business are used every day in the classroom
where he enjoys working with young people.
Connecting with students is very rewarding to know youve
made an impact, Mummery said. Many of the issues I deal with
are life and death -- pregnancy to sexually transmitted diseases. I just
enjoy helping people with their lives.
We dont get change without learning, and knowledge helps us make better choices.
Posted November 15, 2002