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22 answers

Elementary School: it would be reading, language, writing and math.

Middle School: reading, writing, language, social studies, science and math.

High School: By the time you get into high school you must complete at least 4 years of English, 4 years of Math, two years of Science, Social Studies which also includes, U.S. History or Civics. Some high schools now have a career center where you can choose your college choice subject.

2007-11-24 14:38:30 · answer #1 · answered by Nay-Nay 1 · 0 0

As a high school teacher you can become certified to teach many subjects. Unfortunately, the more subjects that you teach the more work you will have. Depending on the school, you could teach several different courses (English 1, Reading, English 2, Journalism, etc) and have up to 6 different classes of students (at around 30 each). So the more different courses you teach the more hours you spend in preparation. In Elementary school you usually teach all the subjects (or share duties with another teacher and teach half of them) but have the same group of students all day (or two groups that are shared between two teachers). I think it would probably be best to go observe classes at both levels before settling on one. There is a huge difference in the curriculum and structure.

2016-05-25 06:46:06 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

There is no one subject most important. Computers, English, Math, Science, & Speech I use daily.

The only thing I would say that schools are lacking in are teaching monetary skills: using credit wisely, learning about the time value of money (interest), and how to save and invest for your future.

There will be NO Social In-Security for the kids in school when they become of retirement age.. You will have to learn to invest in your future.

2007-11-24 14:31:05 · answer #3 · answered by Greg 1 · 0 0

Thats a pretty hard question because you do need most of the subjects they teach in school like math, science, lang. arts, etc. but you dont need everything they teach you in those classes.

For example in math, when in real life you will probably only be adding, subtracting, multiplying, or dividing. You will probably never see slope-intersept form ever again (unless you were to become a mathematician when you grow older).

For science the only thing you will really need to know is the different types of illnesses and how to cure them. I guarantee in your life time you wont need to know how electricity works or the basic parts of a cell (unless you were to become a scientist or a doctor).

And as for language arts, english, ,literature, whatever you like to call it, the only thing you will have to know about this subject is really how to read and write. I guarantee in life you will not have to separate a sentence with verbs and subjects. Of course an exception would be made if you were to become a writer or an english teacher.

For other classes like computers, orchestra, foreign language , etc, it all depends where you want to go for your career.

For example you migh look into a pre-law course if they have one at your school if you want to become a lawyer one day. Or you would go into calculus and geometry honors if you want to be a mathematician.

But overall in primary school you mostly learn basic things that you will have to know in life whether your flipping patties at Burger King or the person that discovers a cure for AIDS or the common cold.

I would like to say that my answer is math because you need more skills out of everything taught in that subject. You need to know how to work with numbers, read a graph, etc.

2007-11-24 21:14:43 · answer #4 · answered by Mara <3 4 · 0 1

Language

2007-11-24 14:23:48 · answer #5 · answered by mimi33 2 · 0 0

Unfortunately,it is to be "afraid" through "peer pressure".
I:E "you master or miss are not as good as :master or miss , (so and so).
That breeds classicism and you could go all your life believing this from a very early age.
I think that way of classification of anyone is despicable.

2007-11-24 14:29:07 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It's relative, on what you want to be when you get older. Then that one becomes the most important.

2007-11-24 14:26:13 · answer #7 · answered by camern11 3 · 0 0

English and Math

2007-11-24 14:24:56 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It should be science, because in the context of science you can teach all other disciplines- math, writing, art, reading, research, technology, history etc.

2007-11-24 14:29:31 · answer #9 · answered by SkyLights90N 4 · 0 0

Liturater because you have to take it in elementery school, middle school, and all four years in high school

2007-11-24 14:33:18 · answer #10 · answered by OMG 3 · 0 0

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