The same reasons anyone retires from any job such as:
1. Manditory based on having reached a maximum age.
2. Unable to function in their job.
3. Medical emergency
4. Want to change career.
5. No longer interested in working.
6. Threat of being fired or laid off
7. Offered a generous retirement package to good to pass up.
Many teachers retire at the mandatory retirement age for their country. Many also retire earlier due to work stress or sickness.
Most want to. After 25-30+ years of teaching it make sense to retire.
Anytime!
alot
yes of course a teacher can retire after 10 years of teaching
So she can be a teacher!
however long you want;)
Men: 65 Women: 60
The noun forms for the verb to retire are retirement, retiree, and the gerund, retiring.
If you have a contract for the next year you can't collect unemployment. You have a job. You can retire after a certain number of years in the system and at a certain age.
It depends on what kind of teacher you are. If you are a teacher teaching a normal class ( math english etc) then no you would not.
In the state of California, a teacher is guaranteed 100% lifetime pensions once they retire. This has caused some unrest to the tax payers of that state.
Well if you go by the rule book they fix an age. Teaching does never retire. A person used to teaching will always be found teaching something or the other to friends, neighbours ,youngters,and grandchildren. They never tire or retire.
Sheila Sustrin has written: 'The teacher who would not retire goes to camp' -- subject(s): Ballet slippers, Camps, Fiction, Teachers
The number of teachers retiring per year can vary depending on factors like location and the overall age of the teaching workforce. In the United States, for example, estimates suggest that around 55,000 to 60,000 teachers retire each year.
"Who shall retire" is correct. When asking a question about a person, use "who." "Which" is used to refer to things or a specified group of people.