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teaching credentials,and Masters in Education. Is it enough to teach his subject at college as well as to work at the administration?

2006-06-20 22:34:50 · 4 answers · asked by Like 2 in Education & Reference Teaching

In my opinion, such a person has knowledge of his subject, thanks to Bachelor in that subject and teaching credentials, but how to teach-knowledge is acquired in Masters in Education, isn't it?

2006-06-20 22:58:24 · update #1

4 answers

Knowledge is power unless you don't apply it correctly or you are over stated in what you think you know and what you acctually know, ya know! Personal experience should tell the person he has not MASTERED something!

2006-07-04 15:46:35 · answer #1 · answered by want2flybye 5 · 0 0

All colleges in the USA (that I am familiar with) require a Master's degree in the subject in order to teach. With a bachelors degree in the subject, and Masters in Education.. you could be a High School (or Middle school, or elementary school) administrator or teacher (here in Texas you also need to get your certification to teach)

2006-06-30 08:39:16 · answer #2 · answered by ♥Tom♥ 6 · 0 0

It depends on your university. I attended Missouri Southern State University. It was during my Bachelors that I learned how to teach (methods and content-areas). Masters degrees can either narrow the scope of your content area (in preperation for a specialist degree) or it can broaden the scope. Considering that a Masters degree is the easiest degree to earn, I would argue that your Bachelors should prepare you for teaching and your Masters should deepen your understanding and hone your techniques.

2006-06-30 22:24:16 · answer #3 · answered by James F 3 · 0 0

masters in education means you know how to teach. but to teach a perticular subject, you have to get masters in that subject.

2006-06-21 05:43:12 · answer #4 · answered by atahsina 5 · 0 0

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