I'm in college right now pursuing a degree to teach Mathematics for the 4th-8th grade, I graduate in Dec. 2008. This is the list of math classes I was required to take. -College Algebra -Trigonometry -Discrete Mathematics -Math Modeling I -Linear Algebra -Calculus I -History of Mathematics -Foundations of Higher Mathematics I -Probability, Statistics and Statisitcal Modeling -Plane Geometry -Foundations of Mathematics II -Number Theory -Calculus Concepts and Mathematical Modeling II -Problem Solving This list is from Lamar University in Beaumont, Texas. There could be other requirements at other univerisities. But this list of math courses are strictly on the 4-8 Math degree. EC-4 majors obviously take easier and less courses. Also, a 4-8 Math/Science major takes most of these classes but not all of them since they are specializing in science as well.
Teachers are always supposed to teach. Otherwise why are we paying them?
it means the board that teachers write on to teach their students it means the board that teachers write on to teach their students
well if teachers are good teachers they can teach well and do writing well, history well, math well and reading well.
because he was the first one to invent math
People who teach math! Well, a math teaher is a person who helps you do math.. they help you add numbers togather multiply..etc... Also, the other person who wrote the commint is right because a math teacher is a person who teaches math so they add ers to teach get it? teacher teach so it has something in common so that's why they say math teach..
It depends what kind of teachers they are ( science, math, history, gym). And how many subjects they teach.
It depends on what type of teacher it is. If your teachers love to sing they might teach a singing method. If they like dancing they would teach a singing method. It should always depend on their personality.
Math teachers nowadays teach their students math by making them memorize equations, memorize steps and processes, by giving examples for students to follow and analyze. I don't think math is meant to be that way. According to my teacher in my university, Math is not just learned by memorizing, following the step by step process, and by looking at examples and copying the exact the same process on how it is derived. It is learned by understanding the CONCEPT of what is being taught in math. Teachers should make their students analyze the CONCEPT of what is taught to them. They must teach their students to understand WHY such step occurred in the process.
The Teach for Texas Loan Repayment Assistance Program (TFTLRAP) aims to recruit and retain certified teachers in communities and fields (such as math, science, and foreign languages) in Texas that have a shortage of teachers.
The best is to have a college degree and be a math major. Many math teachers do not have degrees in math, however, my personal opinion is that formal math education is a big plus (pun intended) for math teachers. Some math teachers have computer science backgrounds. In many cases, teachers who want to teach math without a math degree need to pass a test to do so. So if you want to be a math teacher, go to college and major in math! Then you also have to get a teaching credential. Some schools have combined math bs and teaching programs.
No they do not. The salaries teachers make depends on the schools, their position within the school, and length of time teaching; not by the subject they teach.
It was founded on April 19th 2000 as a way to teach mathematics in a more fun way for children. it provides math for all grades is operated by math teachers and mathematicians.