I mostly agree with Rokapoke here. But to address the topic of this forum, I think it is simple. I would probably make a pretty decent teacher (I have enough intelligence, not genius, but enough, and I am a proffessional public speaker/trainer), however I would never consider that as a profession due to the limits in payscale. Yes, teachers make a 'decent' living, however, in my current proffession, the potential is there (with about 10-15 more years of experience and another 1-2 certifications) to make 6 figures a year. I have not heard of any teacher ever having that potential. My first employment in my field started between 40-45k a year, and keeps going up. Pretty sure (though not positive) that teachers do not start there. In addition, if we would raise the pay-scale (aside from the funding issues it would cause) I think that there would need to be a somewhat higher degree of education needed in the profession. Yes, to teach a first or second grade class, you don't need as much actual knowledge about the subjects, but maybe some psychology or socialogy emphasis would be good. To teach the higher grade levels, more knowledge is needed obviously, but maybe a different type of social training would need to be emphasised there. It boggles me that there is no difference between the teaching degrees of a High School teacher and a Kindergarden teacher. This may be one one of the factors in our declining school system.
Of course, a bit off topic, another decline of our school systems is "standardized testing". Texas is severely guilty of this and actually bases school funding on the results of this testing. What this ultimately does is cause the cirriculum to be devised solely around this test and not around the true needs for moving on to college education, or becoming a productive member of the workforce.
A third issue to me is the lack of practical training in our school system. Right now, yes, computer and software engineers are comming out pretty good, but in the near future we will be saturated with people with those skills, and yet a lot of people wont know how to do real world work. This includes things such as: Automobile repair, welding, construction, agriculture, carpentry, etc... I see this as a problem. You may or may not realize that a certified automobile technician now can make a pretty good living (heard of them starting out at least $22/hr or more). Same goes for many other physical skills. However, this is just my own personal rant, and you should not feel compelled to respond to this point (unless you really want to).