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Further education lecturer job description: Typical employers | Qualifications and training | Key skills | Useful links | Find jobs and courses
Typical responsibilities of the job include:
The job commonly requires working evenings and weekends.
Teaching vacancies are advertised in local authority jobs lists, TARGETcourses Teaching, Appointments for Teachers, the Times Educational Supplement, the Times Higher Education Supplement and national, regional and local newspapers. A few specialist recruitment agencies also handle vacancies. Many people begin by part-time teaching and temporary contracts, enhancing their salary with writing, private tuition and exam marking.
The minimum academic requirement for entry into further education teaching is a degree that is relevant to the subject taught, although in reality only a small number of people become FE lecturers immediately after graduating. Most FE lecturers gain Qualified Teacher Status (QTS) via a secondary education level postgraduate certificate in education or are mature candidates who have several years' pertinent work experience.
Alternatively, a number of institutions offer specialist postgraduate FE teaching qualifications. The National Association of Teachers in Further and Higher Education publishes a list of qualifications in their booklet Training to Teach in Further Education. Some employers provide the opportunity to gain a teaching qualification via part-time study once in post.
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