Academic Planning: Elementary Education
The top 5 things to consider when planning a major in elementary education
- Take Ed 2121, Ed 2111, and Ed 2601 in your second or third semester. It’s fine to take these in the fourth semester too, but by then you’ll have applied for the program. Only Ed 2121 and Ed 2111 must be taken together; this is a great place to start to explore the major. We suggest taking these in the spring of your first year. There are also Education Intellectual Community (IC) courses for students anxious to jump directly into major content.
- Keep your GPA up. A minimum GPA of 2.50 overall with 2.75 minimum GPA in elementary education major and licensure area(s) is required for program admission. You will need 3 letters of recommendation from UMN Morris professors in the fall of your sophomore year, so establish good relationships with faculty early. (Don’t work more than 10-15 hours if you’re a full-time student.)
- In addition to taking two visual and performing arts courses and two social science courses in different disciplines, students need to take two science courses (one with a lab) in different disciplines. Great options for elementary teachers include the solar system course in the physics discipline, basic biology, and earth science courses. El Ed teachers will not teach much chemistry, but they DO teach basic physics (force & motion, electricity, and space science), earth science (geography, geology, etc.), and biology (both plant & animal).
- Work or volunteer in children’s fields: summer camps, babysitter/nanny jobs, after-school programs, in school volunteering on UMN Morris holidays, etc. Contact the UMN Morris Office of Community Engagement to learn about opportunities to work in after-school and evening programs with children. Join the on-campus chapter of the Education Minnesota Aspiring Educators Organization
- In addition to obtaining a K-6 Teaching License, consider pursuing an optional endorsement in one of the following five areas: 1) preprimary, 2) middle-level communication arts and literature, 3) middle-level mathematics, 4) middle-level science, and 5) middle-level social studies.