'Teacher in charge'
The plural is teacher in charge. As in "there is one teacher in charge here".
The plural form of "teacher in charge" would be "teachers in charge." In this case, "teacher" is the singular noun being modified by the prepositional phrase "in charge," which remains the same in the plural form. Therefore, when referring to multiple teachers who are in charge, you simply add an "s" to the noun "teacher" to indicate plurality.
The difference between a teacher and a teacher assistant is their qualifications for starters. A teacher has to be certified in his/her discipline. An assistant teacher has no certification. The teacher is the person in charge of the classroom and its students. The assistant is there to help him/her. The assistant has no authority in the classroom over the teacher. The teacher tells the assistant what to do and when to do it. The assistant should leave all parental contacts to the teacher because they are not authorized to have parental contact regarding the parent's child. This is totally up to the certified teacher that is in charge. Certified teachers should not go out into their community and tell people that they are a teacher. This is falsifying their identity in trying to be someone that they are not.
Theres no one really in charge of the president, different from your teacher or boss. But the system of checks and balances makes it so the president cant take money for himself, any of that. It is also written down in the constitution.
Ask your teacher...
If your in middle school or lower, ask your teacher. Otherwise, ask the teacher in charge!
Christa Corrigan McAuliffe
There is no plural form of the word "teach," which is a verb.For plural subjects, use teach. (we teach, you teach, they teach).For singular subjects in the 3rd person, the form is teaches (he, she teaches).For the slang word for "teacher", the plural could be "teachs."
i just asked my teacher and no they cant as they have no proof
ask yo dumb a$$ teacher
I should charge 5%
It depends on the school district, charge on record, and whether or not you were convicted. I myself have a possession of marijuana and paraphernalia charge, but I pleaded not guilty and the charge was dismissed. I had to perform a few hours of volunteer service. I have been hired in 3 school districts as a teacher. The key is to be open and honest about the charge when an employer shows interest in you.