I suggest you go to graduate school and get an MBA.
Masters degree for community college and PHD for any other college and a teaching certificate.
Obtaining a health administration degree is not more difficult than any other degree. I think some universities offer classes which are a little easier to pass than others.
The amount of education required to be a teacher varies with the type of teaching and the location. On average, a teacher must have at least a Bachelor's degree. Some states allow a teacher to have a degree in something other than teaching.
The other geography is called Human Geography, the study of humans and their interaction with the land. It includes the subcategory of cultural geography. Human geography is also called Social geography.
Rugged geography creates mountains which makes transportation more difficult in Greece which leads to difficulties in communication while the mountains separate them from each other.
The university of Oklahoma offer a bachelor degree in nursing and a host of other university teaching hospitals. they are very experienced indeed, I hope the answer was helpful to you.
It is difficult to answer this with a yes or no answer. Although some of their teaching and beliefs are controversial compared with the other Christian faith.
You need to have a teaching degree to teach children other than your own... At least that is the law in Canada.
J. Russell Smith has written: 'Foreign lands and peoples' -- subject(s): Geography, Textbooks 'Neighbors in the Americas' -- subject(s): Geography, Study and teaching, Textbooks 'The ocean carrier' -- subject(s): Rates, Merchant marine, Shipping 'Our industrial world' -- subject(s): Economic geography 'Our country and northern neighbors' -- subject(s): Description and travel, Geography, Textbooks 'The world's food resources' 'American lands and peoples' -- subject(s): Description and travel, Geography, Textbooks 'Our state and North America' -- subject(s): Description and travel, Geography, Textbooks 'Industrial and commerrcial geography' -- subject(s): Commercial geography, Economic geography 'Neighbors in the Americas' -- subject(s): Description and travel 'The devil of the machine age' -- subject(s): Economic policy, Industries 'World folks' -- subject(s): Geography, Textbooks 'Foreign lands and peoples' -- subject(s): Geography, Textbooks 'Human geography' -- subject(s): Geography, Study and teaching 'Industrial and commercial geography' -- subject(s): Commercial geography, Economic geography 'Geography and our need of it' -- subject(s): Geography, Study and teaching 'Other world neighbors' -- subject(s): Geography, Textbooks 'Our neighbors in Europe and Asia' -- subject(s): Geography, Textbooks 'Our industrial world' -- subject(s): Economic conditions, Economic geography 'Grassland and farmland as factors in the cyclical development of Eurasian history' -- subject(s): History, Land use, Pastures
You must obtain state teacher certification within the state you plan to teach, unless the two states have a reciprocity agreement.
Yes, A degree in science education will help you become a science teacher. However, a degree in science education will not provide much assistance in teaching any other subjects.
That depends on whether you want to teach Science in elementary school or college. If you want to teach it in elementary school, then you need at least a Bachelor's degree with a teaching certificate... you will have to do some student teaching along the way. If you want to teach at a college, you need a Master's degree at minimum, and it is much easier to get a job if you have a PhD. You do not need a teaching certificate (those are for teaching kids), but there might be minimum experience requirements teaching depending on the school, and so you want to make sure that you do some TA (Teaching Assistant) or other in-classroom work while you are getting your degree, just so you don't come out knowing everything about Science and nothing about teaching.