To teach within the public school system in the United States at the pre-K through high school levels, you must have a bachelor's degree in a teacher education program from a regionally accredited college or university and state teacher certification. This would take approximately four years to complete as a full-time student, provided you take the program as prescribed by the college or university. Being you have an existing degree, you can go through the Alternate Route Program to obtain teacher certification in the state you wish to teach. Click on the related links section (Answers.com) indicated below this answer section for more information on the Alternate Route Program.
A Master of Divinity degree is an M.Div
It is typically abbreviated M.Div.
in most seminaries, you must have a Master of Divinity before you can enter the Master of Theology program
Teacher is a noun; master is a noun (a master) and a verb (to master).
Primary Master Primary Slave Secondary Master Secondary Slave Primary or Secondary will depend on which cable are you using to connect the drive. Master or Slave will depend on the drive's jumper configuration.
The University of Arkansas, Fayetteville offers a Master of Arts in Teaching degree where you can choose History as an option to teach.
It depends on what your master's degree is in. I know for a fact that you need an English, Math, History, or Science degree. You could just have one of these and you could be that teacher.
no
station master minds the train teacher trains the mind
adjective, it describes the noun teacher
It depends on what kind of teacher. Most elementary and secondary school teachers get a four-year Bachelor's degree, although some schools now want a Master's degree too-- that can take another year and a half. If you want to be a college teacher, you need to have at least a Master's to be an instructor, and to be a professor generally requires a PhD (an additional four years, and sometimes longer).
In this sentence, the word "master" is a noun, specifically functioning as the subject complement for the noun "teacher."