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Schools and Education General Discussion
Reply to "Teachers - How Hard is Your Job, Really?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]The ranking of different majors by SAT scores (total, reading, math, writing). Education is pretty much in the last place right above various vocational trades and technicians. http://www.businessinsider.com/heres-the-average-sat-score-for-every-college-major-2014-10[/quote] This would be meaningful if 1. the only way (or even the primary way) to become a teacher was to major in education as an undergraduate -- but it isn't 2. SAT scores had any relationship to any real-life factor, let alone teaching ability -- but they don't[/quote] [b]We are discussing mostly education majors and not career switchers.[/b] Career switchers tend to be former attorneys, former scientists, former mathematicians etc. etc. The point was raised that it was relatively easier to become a teacher (major in education) compared to other majors meaning they had lower HS gpa, lower sat scores, reputation of college doesn't really matter, college gpa is lower etc. There was no assertion that sat/gpa had any relationship to teaching ability. One can have low gpa/low sat scores and be a good teacher or vice versa. The point was that students with lower gpa, lower sat tended to major in education.[/quote] You do not have to major in education as an undergraduate in order to become a teacher. And I am not talking about career switchers. In fact, many colleges/universities do not even offer a major in education. If you want to become a teacher, you major in a field and also do teacher education. See this program at Towson University for secondary education, for example: http://www.towson.edu/coe/sced/undergrad/secondary.asp[/quote]
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