It depends on the state you are in - I know in MA you could get a substitutes license - but what you need to do is contact your state's department of education for primary and secondary education.
2006-09-12 07:56:09
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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I doubt that any school district would hire you before you have your B.S. degree. However, I believe students should do some student teaching long before their senior year in college. I know several people who went into teaching and found out they didn't like it and ended up going back for a degree in something else (more$$$ spent) Some just went to work in the local factory where they had spent their summer working- there was more money to be made there than there was in teaching.
2006-09-08 08:23:42
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answer #2
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answered by confused 2
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It depends on the demand of the teaching profession in your area. I know people who only have had their associates and were allowed to teach (but didn't get the pay) while they worked on their BS. You are not really a teacher but an assistant. With NCLB the standards are getting very high for teachers so without at least a BS or BA and all your Praxis testing you are hurting in the field. Most schools demand their teachers all be highly qualified.
2006-09-08 08:37:23
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answer #3
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answered by meriverguide 2
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In NV the speech instructors that I dealt with having supervised scientific care residences for the disabled, all those instructors have been qualified speech pathologists. So I doubt a BA/BS in specific ed may well be adequate. you should be attentive to very lots approximately tongue placement, swallowing technqiues for circumstances like dysphasia, and so on., and those are actually not taught in the coaching section. Speech therapist be attentive to sign language, possibilities to speech such as pictures, and lots greater. Why no longer get the speech pathology degree and a coaching certificates on an identical time, after which you would be able to have a broader base of coaching for employment. yet meanwhile, call the coaching branch of your community college district and discover out what it takes to qualify on your specific college district to grow to be a speech teather.
2016-10-14 11:29:15
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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Without a degree, the best you can expect is an Ed Tech position, which would expose you to classroom conditions but does not pay well. However, it might give you the exposure to determine whether teaching is really the career for you.
2006-09-09 03:46:19
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answer #5
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answered by keepsondancing 5
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I doubt any state would allow it. You can substitute teach while you finish earning your BS, which would give you some experience as well as some money in the meantime. Most schools are pushing for "highly qualified" teachers now. I still don't know what that means. I suppose I'm not it, lol.
2006-09-08 10:18:05
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answer #6
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answered by elizabeth_ashley44 7
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In the state of PA you have to have your BS before you could apply for emergency certification. I don't know of any states that will let you teach with an associates.
2006-09-08 10:43:03
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answer #7
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answered by Sara 2
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I don't know about all states, but in connecticut you can teach with a bachelors while you work on your masters. You can't teach with an associates here.
2006-09-08 08:12:53
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answer #8
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answered by joojoobii 2
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Not in any state I've lived in. You could be a paraprofessional (t.a., program/student support).
2006-09-08 14:13:49
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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