Talk:New York City Teaching Fellows
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
fellows pay $4000 in about 44 $90 installments
- In the longer article I'm not currently writing, it'd be worth mentioning that this breaks down to $2000 per calendar year of taking masters' classes, and assumes that one completes the master's degree in two years. The DoE will continue to pay most of your university tuition if it takes you a third year (as I've been told it takes most Math Immersion candidates), but won't pay after that, and won't pay for credits that aren't required by your master's degree. If you drop out of the fellowship earlier, you're liable for an additional $2000 per year of training you've completed, but not for the full tuition charged by your school. (For schools like City College, that is the full tuition, but not for places like Fordham University.) I can't fit that in phrasing-wise, but it's worth mentioning.
- It might also be worth elaborating on what "guaranteed a teaching position" actually entails, and the various mentoring systems in place. And high-impact teaching strategies, and the training curriculum (Guidebook) written by the New Teacher Project, which I think is made up mostly of Teach for America people. -Semisomna 12:08, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
This article has not yet been rated on Wikipedia's content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||
|