Anonymous wrote:Thanks for the reply and link!
So in layman terms:
If I were to call or email a school in which there is a vacancy, provide my “resume” and interest, interview, and should there be an opening in which I am a good fit, would they offer me a provisional license? Is that how it works?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The easiest/smartest way if you know you want to do it more than a few years is to get a masters in education.
You’ll jump up several thousand a year on the pay scale, and have a true student teaching/internship experience. It will pay for itself in a relatively short period of time.
The career switcher models all have you take a bunch of classes anyway, but you have to do it while teaching and you won’t get a salary bump since it’s not a full masters.
Would you recommend getting a MAT degree?
Get any type of masters that you want, something that you’re interested in. The masters pay rate isn’t determined by the type of masters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The easiest/smartest way if you know you want to do it more than a few years is to get a masters in education.
You’ll jump up several thousand a year on the pay scale, and have a true student teaching/internship experience. It will pay for itself in a relatively short period of time.
The career switcher models all have you take a bunch of classes anyway, but you have to do it while teaching and you won’t get a salary bump since it’s not a full masters.
Would you recommend getting a MAT degree?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for the reply and link!
So in layman terms:
If I were to call or email a school in which there is a vacancy, provide my “resume” and interest, interview, and should there be an opening in which I am a good fit, would they offer me a provisional license? Is that how it works?
There will still be some courses and testing for you to complete
Anonymous wrote:The easiest/smartest way if you know you want to do it more than a few years is to get a masters in education.
You’ll jump up several thousand a year on the pay scale, and have a true student teaching/internship experience. It will pay for itself in a relatively short period of time.
The career switcher models all have you take a bunch of classes anyway, but you have to do it while teaching and you won’t get a salary bump since it’s not a full masters.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for the reply and link!
So in layman terms:
If I were to call or email a school in which there is a vacancy, provide my “resume” and interest, interview, and should there be an opening in which I am a good fit, would they offer me a provisional license? Is that how it works?