
Learn How to Become a Teacher in Your State
View Requirements in Your State and Find the Degree You Need to Become a Teacher
Cert, AS, BS, MA and Doctorate in Education
AS, BS, MS, Grad Cert and Doctor of Education
BS, MS, EdS, EdD and PhD in Education
Applied Behavioral Analysis, Graduate Cert; Education, MA; Special Education, Med
Early Childhood Education Associate, Certificate and Bachelors
Doctor of Education (Ed.D.) in Leadership and Learning in Organizations
MS in Communicative Sciences and Disorders
Master of Education - various concentrations
AS, BS, MS and Post-Masters Cert in Education
BS, MS, Doctorate and Grad Cert in Education
Cert, MS, Doctorate and Post Grad in Education
Cert, MS, Doctorate and Post Grad in Education
Learn How Teacher Certification Works
Becoming a licensed teacher in the United States is a state-regulated process - which means there is no single national set of requirements. Each state controls its own approval standards for teacher-preparation programs, required exams, student-teaching expectations, and application procedures. What does not change from state to state is the general sequence: education, an approved preparation program, required exams, supervised student teaching, and a formal licensure application.
It is worth understanding some important terminology before you start planning. In many states, certification and licensure are used interchangeably - both refer to the formal authorization to teach. An endorsement is something different: a specific subject area or grade band authorization added to a base license. None of these terms is fully standardized across state lines.
Whatever your starting point - no degree yet, a bachelor's in hand, or a career you are ready to leave - the right preparation program is state-approved in the state where you plan to teach, leads to the certification you need for your target grade band and subject, and fits your schedule and timeline. The guide below will help you figure out exactly where to start.
Choose Your Starting Point
Your current education level and background determine which pathway is best for you. Select the description that best fits - the route, timeline, and program type that follow will look different depending on where you are starting from.
No Degree Yet
You are in high school, starting college, or have some credits but have not yet earned a bachelor's degree. A traditional undergraduate teacher-preparation program is your most direct route. You will complete your degree and your state-approved prep program simultaneously.
→ Traditional B.S./B.A. in Education or content-area degree with an approved prep component
Bachelor's Degree Holder
You already hold a bachelor's degree in education or in a content area. Depending on whether your undergraduate program included state-approved teacher preparation, you may enter through a post-baccalaureate certificate, a Master of Arts in Teaching, or an alternative certification route.
→ Post-bacc certificate, MAT program, or state alternative certification route
Career Changer
You are leaving another career and bringing subject-matter expertise or professional experience. Many states offer expedited alternative routes designed specifically for career changers with a qualifying bachelor's degree - some include paid classroom placements before full licensure is granted.
→ Alternative certification program or district-based residency pathway
The Teacher Certification Pathway - Step by Step
Most states follow this general sequence for initial licensure. Specific requirements - which exams, how many student-teaching hours, GPA minimums - are set at the state level and change periodically. Always verify current rules directly with your state education agency.
Meet Education Requirements
Most states require at least a bachelor's degree. Many specify a minimum GPA - commonly 2.5 to 3.0 - for admission to an approved teacher-preparation program. Some states accept a degree in the subject area you plan to teach instead of an education degree.
Complete an Approved Prep Program
States require completion of a state-approved teacher-preparation program - undergraduate, post-bacc, MAT, or alternative certification. Programs include coursework in pedagogy, child development, and your subject or grade band, plus supervised field experience hours before student teaching.
Pass Required Exams
Most states require one or more licensure exams, though some allow waivers or alternatives based on GPA or prior test scores. Common assessments include Praxis Core, state-specific basic skills tests, and subject-area exams. Requirements vary significantly - see the state table below.
Complete Student Teaching
A supervised student-teaching or clinical practice requirement is standard across virtually all states. Most programs require, in most cases, a full semester (approximately 10-16 weeks), though requirements vary. Alternative routes may substitute a residency or co-teaching model. Pre-student-teaching field experience hours are typically required separately.
Clear Background Check
All states require a criminal background check and fingerprinting before issuing a teaching license. Timing, scope, and disqualifying offenses vary by state. Most candidates submit fingerprints through the state education agency or a designated vendor early in the process.
Apply for State Licensure
Once your program recommends you and all state requirements are met, you submit a licensure application to your state education agency. Processing times range from a few weeks to several months, depending on the state and time of year. Apply well in advance of your intended start date.
Important: These steps represent the general national framework. Requirements for specific subjects, grade bands (elementary, secondary, special education), and alternative routes are set at the state level and are subject to periodic change. Always verify requirements through your state's official education agency before enrolling in a program.
Teacher Certification Requirements by State
The table below summarizes the minimum degree requirements, student teaching expectations, and primary required exams in each state. State education agencies set requirements and are subject to periodic change. Use this as a general planning reference - always verify current requirements directly with your state before enrolling in a program.
Verification required: Exam requirements vary widely by pathway and may be waived, substituted, or eliminated based on GPA, prior testing (SAT/ACT/GRE), or recent policy changes. Many states no longer require a standalone basic skills exam or allow waivers under certain conditions. The information below reflects generally current requirements but is not a substitute for checking your state education agency's official licensure guidance.
| State | Min. Degree | Student Teaching | Primary Exams Required |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject · edTPA (used in some programs; requirements evolving - verify current rules) |
| Alaska | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject |
| Arizona | Bachelor's | Full semester | NES Essential Academic Skills (or waived) · NES or AEPA Subject |
| Arkansas | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject · edTPA (used in some programs; requirements evolving - verify current rules) |
| California | Bachelor's | Full semester | CBEST · CSET Subject · CalTPA (edTPA no longer standard in CA programs) |
| Colorado | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (or waived) · PLACE or Praxis Subject |
| Connecticut | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject · edTPA (used in some programs; requirements evolving - verify current rules) |
| Delaware | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject |
| Florida | Bachelor's | Full semester | FTCE General Knowledge · FTCE Subject Area · FTCE Professional Education Test |
| Georgia | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject · edTPA (used in some programs; requirements evolving - verify current rules) |
| Hawaii | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject · edTPA (used in some programs; requirements evolving - verify current rules) |
| Idaho | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject · edTPA (used in some programs; requirements evolving - verify current rules) |
| Illinois | Bachelor's | Full semester + field hours | ILTS Basic Skills · ILTS Subject (edTPA requirement evolving - verify current rules) |
| Indiana | Bachelor's | Full semester | CORE Academic Skills (or waived) · Praxis Subject |
| Iowa | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject · edTPA (used in some programs; requirements evolving - verify current rules) |
| Kansas | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject |
| Kentucky | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject · edTPA (used in some programs; requirements evolving - verify current rules) |
| Louisiana | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject |
| Maine | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject |
| Maryland | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject |
| Massachusetts | Bachelor's | Full semester | MTEL Communication & Literacy · MTEL Subject |
| Michigan | Bachelor's | Full semester | MTTC Subject (basic skills test may be waived via SAT/ACT/GPA - verify current rules) |
| Minnesota | Bachelor's | Full semester | MTLE Basic Skills · MTLE Content (edTPA used in some programs) |
| Mississippi | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject |
| Missouri | Bachelor's | Full semester | MoCA Subject · MoPTA performance assessment |
| Montana | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject |
| Nebraska | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject |
| Nevada | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject |
| New Hampshire | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject |
| New Jersey | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject · edTPA (used in some programs; requirements evolving - verify current rules) |
| New Mexico | Bachelor's | Full semester | NMTA Basic Skills · NMTA Subject |
| New York | Bachelor's | Full semester | EAS · NYSTCE CST · edTPA (requirements recently modified - verify current rules) |
| North Carolina | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject · edTPA (used in some programs; requirements evolving - verify current rules) |
| North Dakota | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject |
| Ohio | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · OAE Subject · edTPA (used in some programs; requirements evolving - verify current rules) |
| Oklahoma | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · OSAT Subject |
| Oregon | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject · edTPA (used in some programs; requirements evolving - verify current rules) |
| Pennsylvania | Bachelor's | Full semester | PAPA or Praxis Core · PECT or Praxis Subject |
| Rhode Island | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject |
| South Carolina | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject |
| South Dakota | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject |
| Tennessee | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject · edTPA (used in some programs; requirements evolving - verify current rules) |
| Texas | Bachelor's | Full semester (min. 12 wks) | TExES Subject (basic skills assessed within certification system; no standalone basic skills exam) |
| Utah | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject · edTPA (used in some programs; requirements evolving - verify current rules) |
| Vermont | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject · edTPA (used in some programs; requirements evolving - verify current rules) |
| Virginia | Bachelor's | Full semester | VCLA · Praxis Subject · VRA (reading endorsements only) |
| Washington | Bachelor's | Full semester | WEST-B · WEST-E (edTPA no longer required - verify current rules) |
| West Virginia | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject |
| Wisconsin | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject · edTPA (used in some programs; requirements evolving - verify current rules) |
| Wyoming | Bachelor's | Full semester | Praxis Core (may be waived) · Praxis Subject |
Student teaching listed as "Full semester" reflects the common standard (often approximately 10-16 weeks, though requirements vary by state and program). Pre-student-teaching field observation hours - typically required separately - range from 75 to 150+ hours and are generally set at the program level. Many states no longer require a standalone basic skills exam or allow waivers based on SAT/ACT/GRE scores or GPA. Exam requirements are current as of early 2026 and subject to change. Verify all requirements with your state education agency before enrolling.
Career Changers: Alternative Routes to Teaching
If you already hold a bachelor's degree and bring content expertise from another field, alternative certification programs may allow you to earn your teaching license more quickly than a traditional undergraduate route. These programs are available in most states and are especially common for high-need subjects, including math, science, and special education.
Alternative certification programs typically include:
- Compressed coursework in pedagogy and classroom management
- A supervised teaching residency or co-teaching placement
- The same state licensure exam requirements as the traditional route
- Background check and fingerprinting (same as the traditional route)
- Some include paid classroom placements while completing requirements - availability varies by state and program
Alternative routes vary significantly by state:
- Some states have robust district-based or university-based programs
- Others have limited program availability in specific subject areas only
- Timelines range from a few months to two years, depending on the state and program
- Not all alternative certification routes transfer across state lines
- See the state table above to identify which exam system applies in your target state
Exams and Common Gatekeepers
Most states require one or more standardized assessments before a license is issued, though some allow waivers or alternatives based on GPA or prior test scores. Requirements differ by state, subject area, and grade level. The categories below cover the most commonly required assessment types. Your state's specific exams are listed in the table above.
Basic Skills / Core Academic
- Praxis Core Academic Skills for Educators (Reading, Writing, Math) - used in many states, often waivable
- State-developed basic skills tests (CBEST in California, MTEL in Massachusetts, VCLA in Virginia, FTCE General Knowledge in Florida, WEST-B in Washington)
- Many states allow waivers based on GPA, SAT, ACT, or GRE scores
- Some states (Texas) embed basic skills within the subject certification structure - no standalone test required
Subject-Area / Content Knowledge
- Praxis Subject Assessments (discipline-specific content knowledge) - used in most states
- State-specific content exams (CSET in California, MTEL Subject in Massachusetts, TExES in Texas, FTCE Subject Area in Florida, NYSTCE CST in New York, OSAT in Oklahoma, OAE in Ohio, WEST-E in Washington, MTLE Content in Minnesota)
- Elementary Education Multiple Subjects assessments
- Principles of Learning and Teaching (PLT) assessments
Performance Assessments
- edTPA - used in some states and programs; requirements have been reduced or eliminated in several states in recent years. Verify current status with your program and state agency before assuming it is required.
- CalTPA - California's state-developed performance assessment (edTPA no longer standard in CA)
- MoPTA - Missouri's performance assessment system
- Final program evaluations and supervisory observation sign-off (standard in virtually all states)
Note: State education agencies set exam requirements and are subject to frequent change. Several states have reduced or eliminated specific exam requirements in recent years, and many allow waivers based on academic performance. Verify current requirements with your state agency or program advisor before registering for any assessment.
How Long Does Teacher Certification Take?
Timeline depends heavily on your starting point, state requirements, and the route you take.
Bachelor's degree with an integrated teacher-prep program. Student teaching typically occurs in the final semester or year of a program. Includes all coursework, exams, field experience hours, and licensure application.
For bachelor's degree holders completing a post-baccalaureate certificate (often 1-2 semesters to 1 year, depending on program structure) or a Master of Arts in Teaching (typically 1-2 years). Part-time enrollment extends these timelines.
Range varies significantly by state and program. Some programs place candidates in classroom roles within weeks; others require more extensive preparation before entry into the classroom. Availability and structure are state-specific.
What slows candidates down most: exam preparation and retakes, background check processing delays, student teaching placement availability, and state agency application processing times, which can take several months near the start of the school year. Plan for these bottlenecks early.
Program Path Options
Your route to licensure depends on your education level, timeline, and the state you are in. Here is how the four main program types compare, and who each tends to fit best.
Top-Rated Teacher Preparation Programs
Accredited programs are evaluated across program approval breadth, route flexibility, student support, and licensure-readiness. These programs consistently meet the bar for working adults at the undergraduate and graduate levels.
PROS
Degree pathways spanning AS through Doctor of Education Part of the respected Purdue University system makes PUG a recognized public research institution Designed for adult learners with prior work and life experience ExcelTrack competency-based option may allow faster completion for qualified students Regionally accredited through the Higher Learning Commission Graduate certificate available for targeted professional credential building Career-focused curriculum aligned with today's educational workforceCONS
Self-paced and competency-based formats require strong self-direction and independent study habits Program availability may vary depending on the student's state of residencePROS
Programs available at every level — Certificate · AS · BS · MA · and Doctorate in Education Faith-integrated curriculum for students seeking a Christian academic environment One of the largest nonprofit Christian universities in the United States Fully online options available across all degree levels Regionally accredited through SACSCOC Affordable tuition relative to many comparable private institutions Broad specialization options across education and leadership-focused tracksCONS
Faith-based academic framework may not align with all students' personal or professional preferences Large institutional size may mean reduced individualized access to faculty compared to smaller programsPROS
Degree options spanning BS · MS · EdS · EdD · and PhD in Education Established national reputation in online doctoral-level education Social change mission embedded throughout curriculum and program design Accredited by the Higher Learning Commission Multiple doctoral pathways — EdD for practice-focused professionals · PhD for research-oriented learners Residency and cohort elements foster peer community among online students Broad specialization options across curriculum · leadership · and policy tracksCONS
Time to completion for doctoral programs can vary and may extend beyond initial planning estimates As an online-first institution — some employers may conduct additional verification of credentialsHow We Select Featured Programs
Programs featured on this page are evaluated against a consistent set of criteria focused on licensure preparation, route flexibility, and support for working adults. No program pays to be featured here. Selection reflects editorial assessment only.
State Approval Breadth
Programs hold state approval across multiple states, increasing the likelihood of alignment with your target licensure state. Single-state or narrowly approved programs are noted where applicable.
Route Variety
Featured programs offer more than one entry route - traditional undergraduate, post-bacc, MAT, or alternative certification - allowing candidates at different education levels to find a pathway that fits.
Online Flexibility
Programs offer online or hybrid enrollment options that allow candidates to complete coursework without leaving their current job or location, with student teaching completed in the candidate's local area.
Regional Accreditation
Every featured institution holds regional accreditation from a recognized body (HLC, SACSCOC, NECHE, or equivalent). This is the minimum bar for employer recognition, credit transfer, and federal financial aid eligibility.
Exam and Licensure Support
Programs provide structured preparation for state licensure exams and include advising on state-specific certification requirements. Candidates should verify that a specific program meets their target state's current requirements before enrolling.
State approval status, program offerings, and accreditation are subject to change. Always confirm current program approval with your state education agency and with the program directly before enrolling.
How to Compare Teacher Prep Programs
Before requesting information from any program, use these criteria to evaluate whether it is the right fit for your state, subject area, and teaching goals. The right program isn't necessarily the most well-known or the most affordable - it's the one that aligns with where you plan to teach, what you plan to teach, and what your timeline requires.
| What to Evaluate | What to Look For - and Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| State Approval | Confirm the program holds state approval in the state where you plan to be licensed. Approval in one state does not automatically transfer to another. Ask the program directly and verify with your state education agency. |
| Subject and Grade Level | Verify the program leads to certification in the specific grade band (elementary, middle, secondary) and subject area you intend to teach. A general education degree does not automatically cover every endorsement area. |
| Student Teaching Placement | Ask how the program arranges supervised placements. Can you complete student teaching in your local area, or is relocation required? What are the expectations for pre-student-teaching field experience hours? |
| Exam Preparation Support | Understand what the program provides to help you prepare for required licensure exams. Pass rates and exam support resources vary considerably between programs. |
| Format and Pace | Online, hybrid, or on-campus; full-time or part-time; number of start dates per year; any required in-person components. Confirm the format actually fits your schedule and employment situation before enrolling. |
| Total Cost and Timeline | Calculate the full cost, including all credits, fees, and exam registration. Per-credit tuition can be misleading on its own. Clarify the expected time to completion and any flexibility for working students or part-time enrollment. |
Is Teaching the Right Fit? A Practical Reality Check
Before choosing a program or route, it helps to think honestly about the role itself. Teaching is a highly rewarding profession - and a genuinely demanding one. Here is what prospective teachers consistently say matters most when making the decision.
Grade Band Differences
- Elementary (K-5/6): Generalist role covering multiple subjects. Relationship-building and developmental awareness are central. Typically requires an elementary education certification, not a subject-area license.
- Middle School (6-8): Transition-focused grade band. Often requires both a subject-area and a middle-grades or secondary certification, depending on the state.
- High School (9-12): Subject-specialist role. Typically requires secondary certification in a specific content area. Depth of subject knowledge is expected.
- Special Education: Requires a separate special education endorsement or certification in most states and is in high demand nationwide.
Who This Path Tends to Fit
- People who find genuine satisfaction in explaining things clearly and watching understanding develop
- Candidates are comfortable with continuous feedback from students, parents, and administrators.
- Those who can sustain energy and emotional consistency across a full school day
- Career changers bringing real-world subject expertise to secondary or CTE programs
- Individuals who value schedule predictability, summers, and a defined professional calendar
There is no single profile for a great teacher. The decision is personal. Talk to working teachers in your target grade band and subject area before committing to a specific route or program.
Explore Related Topics
For bachelor's degree holders comparing non-traditional routes and MAT vs. alt-cert decisions
Is Teaching Right for Me?
Role-fit and career exploration - deeper guidance beyond this pathway overview
Teacher Salary & Pay - What to Expect
Salary ranges and pay expectations by state, grade level, and experience
Ready to Compare Top-Rated Programs?
We've evaluated accredited teacher preparation programs across route flexibility, breadth of state approval, online options, and licensure support. Review our top-rated picks and request information from the programs that match your path.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between teacher certification, licensure, and endorsement?
In many states, certification and licensure are used interchangeably - both refer to the formal authorization issued by a state agency that allows you to work as a classroom teacher. Endorsement is a distinct term: it refers to an add-on to a base license that authorizes teaching in a specific subject area, grade band, or student population, such as English Language Learners or students with disabilities. Terminology and requirements vary by state.
Do I need a degree in education specifically, or will a subject-area degree work?
It depends on the state and grade level. For secondary (high school) certification, most states accept a bachelor's degree in the content area you plan to teach, provided you also complete an approved teacher-preparation program. For elementary certification, states more commonly require an education-specific degree or significant education coursework. Many states allow subject-area degree holders to pursue certification through a post-bacc or alternative route. Check your target state's requirements directly with the state education agency.
What changes from one state to another in the certification process?
Quite a lot. Required exams - and which specific tests - differ by state. Minimum GPA and coursework requirements vary. The list of state-approved programs and the definition of an approved alternative route are set at the state level. Student-teaching hour requirements, pre-student-teaching field experience expectations, background check procedures, and application processing times also differ. The only reliable source for your state's current requirements is the state education agency itself.
Can I teach while I am still completing my certification?
Many states offer emergency, provisional, or intern teaching permits that allow candidates to teach in a classroom before fully completing all requirements. These permits are typically issued when a district cannot fill a position with a fully licensed teacher and are especially common in high-need subject areas. Some alternative certification programs are specifically designed around this model, with candidates entering a classroom in a mentored role while completing coursework. Availability varies significantly by state.
How do I know if a teacher-prep program is approved in my state?
Ask the program directly which states it holds approval in, and then verify with your state education agency. Many states publish searchable databases of approved teacher-preparation programs on their official education department websites. Do not assume that regional accreditation or CAEP accreditation equals state approval - state program approval is a separate determination made by each state, and it varies by subject area and grade level within the same institution.
How long does it typically take to process a teaching license application?
Processing times vary by state and fluctuate throughout the year. Some states process applications within a few weeks; others take 2 to 4 months, especially near the start of the school year, when volumes peak. Background check processing is often the longest single variable. Plan for delays and apply well in advance of your intended start date. Contact your state education agency directly for current processing time estimates.
Will my certification transfer if I move to a different state?
Interstate reciprocity is not automatic in most cases. Requirements vary widely: some states grant full reciprocity with minimal additional requirements, while others require additional coursework, exams, or a waiting period. Most states participate in the NASDTEC Interstate Agreement, which facilitates, but does not guarantee, reciprocity. If you expect to move across state lines, research the reciprocity process in your destination state before choosing a prep program.
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Find an accredited teacher-preparation program, review your state's current requirements, or request information from programs that offer the route best suited to your background and goals.
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Individual state education agencies set teacher certification requirements, which are subject to change. Information on this page reflects generally current requirements as of early 2026 and is intended as a general planning reference only. Always verify current requirements - including approved programs, required exams, student teaching expectations, and licensure application procedures - directly with your state education agency before enrolling in a program.











