Anonymous wrote:I have a Masters degree in the subject I teach (high school). I got it because I love the subject and having true expertise in this area vastly enhances my ability to teach/explain it to my students.
I also have a Masters degree in Education, which I needed to get teaching certification because my undergrad degree was also in my subject, not Education. The coursework for the Ed degree was childishly, almost insultingly simple, and I'm still pissed off that it cost as much as the academic degree. The sheer simplicity and uselessness of that Ed degree compared to the academic MA make me fear for the quality of education in our secondary schools.
Sounds like it was just a bad program. What school was it? I attended a leadership program at a very prestigious school for all of one semester. The curriculum was insulting and did not provide any preparation for taking on a leadership role in a school. Perhaps why our schools are lacking strong leaders.