At this point we need to be going the other way and making degree requirements illegal, at least for general liberal arts schools. Some specific requirement in the field they are teaching would be nice.
I think they still require you to pass a test in the subject you want to teach, and it probably only matters for high school and certain STEM classes in middle school. The big thing is being able to work with kids. Even if you are correct reducing the influence of the groomer filled teacher's union makes the program worth it.
Considering the first two years of college is 'relearn everything you already know/catchup on what you didn't', the required 'electives' to pad out their over-paid staff, and the state of 'higher education' in general, a field hand with a Farmer's Almanac is a more qualified teacher than 90% of what's out there. At least that person has real-world experience and knows what a kid will need to get through life unlike the pampered rainbow house plants we call teachers.
Considering the state of education departments across the board at all colleges everywhere, I'd call 2-3 years of college far too fucking much, as all these people are interested in is spreading <s>communism</s>cough liberalism and atheistic faggotry. I'd rather have a man with a high school education who ran a farm and did his own accounting teaching kids math, than some over-accredited alcoholic cat-mom with pronouns in her twitter next to a ukraine flag.
At this point we need to be going the other way and making degree requirements illegal, at least for general liberal arts schools. Some specific requirement in the field they are teaching would be nice.
I would think it should depend on what they are teaching and at what grade level.
I think they still require you to pass a test in the subject you want to teach, and it probably only matters for high school and certain STEM classes in middle school. The big thing is being able to work with kids. Even if you are correct reducing the influence of the groomer filled teacher's union makes the program worth it.
Considering the first two years of college is 'relearn everything you already know/catchup on what you didn't', the required 'electives' to pad out their over-paid staff, and the state of 'higher education' in general, a field hand with a Farmer's Almanac is a more qualified teacher than 90% of what's out there. At least that person has real-world experience and knows what a kid will need to get through life unlike the pampered rainbow house plants we call teachers.
Considering the state of education departments across the board at all colleges everywhere, I'd call 2-3 years of college far too fucking much, as all these people are interested in is spreading <s>communism</s>cough liberalism and atheistic faggotry. I'd rather have a man with a high school education who ran a farm and did his own accounting teaching kids math, than some over-accredited alcoholic cat-mom with pronouns in her twitter next to a ukraine flag.