If she already has a degree she can go directly to a Master's in education. Talk to the college. But it will make her very hard to hire.
an old rule of thumb was as a teacher don't get any more education until you are already hired in the job you plan to stay in. not sure if it still holds but certainly in rural schools a masters degree on someone you are looking at as a new hire is only going to be seen as an expensive hire.
I think this still holds true. I am a teacher now and have been for about 7 years. I have not started my Masters until now knowing that I am going to stay at my current location for as long as possible. Many districts in that state of Iowa hire teachers with less experience so it will cost them less in the long run. Good luck to whatever she does.
My 2 cents,
Check out school counseling. An estimated 1200 job openings in the us in the next 2 years. You have to have a masters degree for the job. Starting pay ranging from 40-60(depending on experience).
I am in UNI's program(largely because they have a 90% job placement before internship) and love it. The program is amazing. I think drake may still have a program but am unsure. Classes are at night, and usually 2 nights a week. I have people in my classes commuting from Dubuque, Monticello, Iowa City, Cedar Rapids. I know Ames is a ways to commute. I don't know what her BA is in, but if it is anything in the social sciences I would give it a shot.
It is pretty tough competition to get in, around 150 apps for 24 positions. Either way something else to think about.
Good god....this type of thinking makes me shake my head.
But just like anything else, it depends on the area. The district where I currently teach has four elementary counselors on a three year grant, and after next year it is questionable if they will keep any, let alone all four. It is true that there are state laws mandating districts have certain positions filled, but there are ways to get around that--for example, one of the high school counselors becomes K-12 counselor, and has to travel within the district, and no one else will be hired.
Special Ed. with a reading endorsement is a great way to go, and personally, I would teach for a few years before getting a master's. Who knows, she may not like teaching and be sad she spent money on a master's degree that she wouldn't be able to use elsewhere.
Do you even have any idea how districts have to think today?
Absolutely. I work in public education as a school administrator.
Once again, the difference in masters vs. BA pay in education is 2-5,000. There is a lot of truth that schools like to hire rooks right now BUT to not go get your masters because you think you won't get hired somewhere else is ludicrous. The majority of schools are going to hire the best teacher they can find in most cases.
The whole idea that teachers won't go get their masters because they think they will be "stuck" at a school boggles my mind. Those kids are so lucky to have teachers like this.![]()
She has to have a degree/certification in education already in order to teach.
Right, I just went back to school and got my BA in Elementary Education. But if you already have a college degree you can skip the BA and go directly to the Master's in Education. It takes 1-2 years at ISU. I know 3 or 4 people taking that route right now.
I was on track to continue through my Master's and possibly further but after multiple discussions with principals, superintendents, and professors I decided to get experience before I continue with my education.
Take a look at the post by the person that said they were a professor in Education.
Right, I just went back to school and got my BA in Elementary Education. But if you already have a college degree you can skip the BA and go directly to the Master's in Education. It takes 1-2 years at ISU. I know 3 or 4 people taking that route right now.
I was on track to continue through my Master's and possibly further but after multiple discussions with principals, superintendents, and professors I decided to get experience before I continue with my education.
Take a look at the post by the person that said they were a professor in Education.
Yes. This is for real.Is this for real? Someone with a Masters may not get hired because they are more qualified and have to be paid more?
The whole "if you have your masters you won't get a job" crap is a myth. The difference in most schools is a few thousands dollars between BA and masters pay.
I still wouldn't get the masters until you have some teaching experience.
The critical piece is your wife is getting a special education endorsement. Critical! She will get a job with that. If she can wait on the masters and get a special ed AND a reading endorsement she will be golden. Then after a few years of teaching, go back and get the masters.