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I would like to become a HLTA, and have been told that my Childminding qualification can help towards this. Does anybody know if this is true

2007-04-25 04:43:42 · 4 answers · asked by freemichele 2 in Education & Reference Primary & Secondary Education

4 answers

hey not sure how true it is but im sure it will help get you on a course!, im a student teacher and know people that did childminding qualifications that helped them get my course rather than doing A Levels

contact your local college they'l help you more than i can every college is different you see, or you could always call into a local school and ask for their advice im sure they would know the best way of getting onto a HLTA course

hope it helps
San
xx

2007-04-25 08:16:25 · answer #1 · answered by sandradapanda 2 · 0 0

Difficult to say, but in England some TAs are graduates or postgraduates , so they are by-passing the need for HLTA status. Their employing school or LEA simply gives them HTLA status and responsibilities-- without the need to qualify-- and also puts them on a significantly higher pay scale(often more than double what an HTLA would normally get) plus a hefty annual increase. Quite a few go on to train as teachers in whatever subject they're qualified; often training at the same school.

2007-04-25 23:37:13 · answer #2 · answered by darestobelieve 4 · 0 0

That relies upon on your modern skills. in case you have a level yuo can take a one 365 days graduate practise programme that's artwork based. in case you have a commencing up degree you may 'magnificent up' in 2 years finished time learn, in spite of the shown fact that in the process prepare you will spend approximately 2 days a week at uni. you additionally can do a registered instructor programme - that's for non graduates, is artwork based and rakes 2 years. you nonetheless might desire to have Uni point skills to start off eg an HND. i'm somewhat apprehensive which you think of you're already coaching, coaching assistants (HL or different) are in simple terms that, assistants not instructors. and that i'm not demeaning the region you play, it incredibly is significant although that's not coaching.

2016-10-30 06:29:50 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Teacher and Teaching Assistant qualifications vary widely in every state (even every district).

Check with your state department of education to determine if there are specific requirements for Teaching Assistants in your state. Then also check in with the HR person(s) in the district(s) you are interested in working for.

There won't be a cookie cutter answer that works nationwide - education - to a large degree - is still a state by state program and they all it

2007-04-25 08:18:11 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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