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4 answers

Generally speaking, a master's degree is required to teach most academic classes at a community college. Having multiple master's in different subjects does usually result in higher earnings but a PhD makes the real difference. At this level, the bachelor's degree(s) is usually immaterial.

If a vocational instructor (many only require a bachelor's degree) had two then he might be available to teach in more subjects and therefor possibly make more or be more easily employed.

2007-11-14 10:32:12 · answer #1 · answered by CoachT 7 · 3 0

Community Colleges pay more than Universities do for their instructors
BUT you must have your Masters degree
2 bachelor degrees do not equal 1 Masters

2007-11-14 10:32:59 · answer #2 · answered by Mopar Muscle Gal 7 · 0 0

No. They base it on, Masters, PhD and experience.

Look at any community college's pay schedule to see how it works. They are all publicly posted in their HR websites.

I have one here from Cerritos College where I used to work.

2007-11-14 12:00:24 · answer #3 · answered by Vicente 6 · 0 0

the community college pays them.

2016-04-04 01:26:44 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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