Course content and structureThe PGCE is a professional qualification normally taught at a university or other higher education institution, with much of the course time is spent on placements in local schools. A trainee teacher will have to meet the Standards for Qualified Teacher Status and any course specific requirements to be awarded the PGCE. In England only, a trainee teacher also has to pass the QTS Skills Tests in literacy, numeracy and ICT. The training provider will then recommend the trainee teacher for QTS to the relevant General Teaching Council: or eligibility to teach to the: After gaining QTS, the candidate becomes a Newly Qualified Teacher (NQT) and embarks on an induction programme in their first post. EquivalenceA recent review of the equivalence of qualifications in Scotland declared the PGCE to be equivalent to a postgraduate diploma (which in turn is equivalent to the taught element of a master's degree). This left the PGCE with a rather inappropriate name as a postgraduate certificate is a lower level than the postgraduate diploma, requiring only half the amount of work. As a result, the PGCE in Scotland were renamed to Professional Graduate Diploma in Education (PGDE). From 2005 to 2007, most universities attached credits towards a master's degree to their PGCEs. PGCEs that do not carry master's credits are now known as Professional Graduate Certificate in Education. The PGCE sits on the Master's Level of the Framework for Higher Education Qualifications, while the Professional Certificate in Education sits a level lower on the at Honour's Level. Technically, the PGCE is a non-degree qualification (as it is directly related to a career, it is considered vocational) that does not grant any postnominals, though this is often ignored. The PGCE is equivalent to a master's degree from the USA, according to Education International, Inc., [1], an American corporation specializing in evaluation of foreign education and training, established 1977. FeesStudents on PGCE courses in England and Wales have to now pay tuition fees of £3070, of which a proportion can be paid by their local education authority (LEA). They receive a £6,000 training bursary (£9,000 for secondary shortage subjects, such as Mathematics, Science, English, Religious Education, Modern Foreign Languages, Design and Technology and Music, plus a Golden Hello of up to £2500 after successfully completing their induction period or £5000 for Mathematics and Science) or £4000 for a Primary PGCE, over the course of the year. Students in Scotland and Northern Ireland still do not pay any fees, but do not receive a bursary. There are also other financial incentives for teachers once qualified. Independent schoolsTeachers in independent schools in England, Wales and Northern Ireland are not required to hold any particular qualifications, although most schools now prefer applicants to have a PGCE, especially younger people going into teaching as a first career. This flexibility does allow them to occasionally hire older people who have practical experience, such as appointing ex-engineers as mathematics or physics teachers, or appointing people with high-level postgraduate qualifications but no formal teacher-training. Other qualificationsThe PGCE is not the only way to gain QTS in England and Wales. Students can also take a three-or-four-year Bachelor of Education degree (which, unlike the PGCE, does not require an undergraduate degree for entry). Undergraduate degree holders in England and Wales can also take part in the Graduate Teacher Programme (GTP), though, as it is not an academic qualification, is not well recognised in the rest of the UK or internationally. External links
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