It definitely depends on the school. I know that in my school we change every year, but I think in some schools, you keep the same homeroom all four years. You can ask a student at your high school if you're not sure.
2006-08-28 03:33:15
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answer #1
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answered by Angela 1
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In US, in most of the highschools as far as I know, have different homerooms during the 4 years. But, it also depends on ur schedule and the classes u choose to take.
2006-08-28 03:33:23
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answer #2
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answered by flit 4
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In a public school you will need a teacher certification - which will require a BA and student teaching. During student teaching you will receive no income for 16 weeks unless you work nights (VERY difficult during student teaching). States offer different options for the certification. Some offer Early Childhood Ed which is birth through age 8 (third grade) that would let you teach K, but some only offer Elementary (K-6). Both are different than the degree in Child & Family Development that many schools offer. While it also trains you to work with young children, it does NOT certify you to teach above preschool.
Another option is to find out if any of your local public schools offer a preschool program on-site. Its a growing trend and many schools are piloting preschool programs. Not sure if they would require you to be degreed or certified, but you get the same benefits as a public school teacher and would most likely earn quite a bit more than you do now.
I would suggest contacting a school and asking to "shadow" a K teacher for a day to see what a typical work day is like. Mention to them that you work in early childhood ed as a preschool teacher and are considering pursuing teacher certification. I assume that you are required by your preschool to have a criminal background check and TB test on file. You might mention this to them as their volunteers & employees must have these.
Also, some larger preschools offer tuition reimbursement for teachers intending to become degreed or certified. If yours does not, there are also several scholarships from ECE professional organizations at the state and national level that might help you with the financial aspect of continued schooling. Best of luck!
2006-08-28 04:02:41
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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not in mine. i got a new teacher each year... and we were required to go to home room for special things... I think i saw home room 7 times each school year... the first week of school and when someone effed up and we went on lock down for whatever reason.
Now i did have the same pricipal for all 4 years. (each grade had a principal that moved with you and there was a head principal for the whole school... it was like the mafia... he was the head and the other 4 were his pit bosses)
depends on your school district
2006-08-28 03:34:49
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answer #4
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answered by Kynnie 6
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its easyer for the teachers and main ppl to just leave them in one homeroom
2006-08-28 03:31:06
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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invisible is physically powerful..you may learn how to get alongside w/ all instructors..in case you run away or conceal from problems you will basically save on getting them,even worse ones until you learn..
2016-09-30 02:15:03
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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not in Canada
2006-08-28 03:33:20
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answer #7
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answered by Michelle 6
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in mine we do. BxSci
2006-08-28 03:35:09
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answer #8
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answered by cookie 2
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