In our country many take education to be teachers, and when they finish, they as well find that they can't get jobs. When I went through education college I was at the top of my class academically, and no one had any better grades than I did. They had a public school superintendent speak at the graduation, and they also he me speak as part of the graduation ceremony. I was the model student. When it came to the practical application I had a classroom teacher that didn't do me right, and I ended up with the lowest grade for that, that I had in all my college experience. I never had a C in any class before that or after that. This teacher also gave me poor ratings. She didn't have me doing any teaching until the teacher supervisor was coming, and then she said, now what can we have you do when this supervisor gets here. Well, I was up demonstating what I had not learned, and it proved disasterous. I substitute taught in public school classrooms for 10 years, and many times I thought, "this could be my classroom, and my job if things had gone better. After the first few months I had learned enough so that I was performing well, and all the schools and teachers wanted me to substitute for them. One principal told me that I was his first wish, and if he couldn't get me he would chose someone else, but I never got a permanent teaching position because of my poor experience with that one teacher. But it is okay as I did okay substitute teaching until I got a chance to work in the tourist industry, and then I liked that much better! I would chose working with tourists any day over the teaching, and in a way I was teaching, only in a different setting. I know of a quite a few people that do not perform well while learning to teach, and then they end up doing something else. It could be like you are talking about that they turn out too many teachers, and there really isn't enough demand for all of them, so most of them end up having to do something else.