View Full Version : Masters to teach at community college?
I would like to teach math at a community college somewhere in the US, would getting a masters in pure mathematics be sufficient to get such a job? When I say job, I mean a full-time (year-round with or without summers) position. When I say sufficient, I mean would it be easy (or maybe I should say not difficult) to find such a job. Are there things that I should do in order to better my chances of getting such a job?
Ideas? Thanks!
Dr Transport
Dec5-06, 08:14 PM
From my experience, a masters is a requirement to teach at a community college.
physics girl phd
Dec6-06, 01:28 PM
A master's degree is a requirement, but I THINK many community colleges want you to have a PhD nowadays... so with regards to EASE of getting a job, I'm not so sure.
^_^physicist
Dec6-06, 07:38 PM
At the community colleges in my area a masters normally is the requirement to be the professor; however, my friends at the community college have stated that a couple of the professors only have bachelors degrees with a lot of work experance (but these guys are taking computer science courses).
As for the PhD requirement...yeah I haven't heard of that, in my area at least.
Plastic Photon
Dec6-06, 11:45 PM
If you want to lecture, lecture. I took calculus courses from two lecturers while at cc: one had just his masters and one had her masters but also an engineering degree
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