Jessica Ann,
Just wanted to let you know that information around here in Pensacola changes daily. When I first called the Escambia School District Office here, they told me I would HAVE to get Florida certified in order to teach here, that they would not except a Texas certificate(which is not true for everyone). Then they told me that I could get my FL certificate while teaching here.
So, I was planning on doing that when I got hired. The school will usually pay for it, and you take classes at night or on weekends. But when I got here, they were under a hiring freeze and they told me I would have to get certified all on my own and pay for it.
That wouldn't have been too bad, but it didn't make sense to me to spend the extra money and time if we were only going to be here until about November. And with them under a hiring freeze until June...they wouldn't be much time teaching in the fall.
So I call back this past week to see about the hiring freeze and they told me that they just need my Texas Certificate number and they can check on their computers to see if it is "to a high enough standard" and they can hire me if it is. They would then issue me a temporary certificate, like Ann said. And the TX cert I have is the highest you can get in Texas (like all normal, 4 year teachers get), so I should have no problem. (BUT they still can't hire me because they are under the hiring freeze til June.) But I did everything straightened out.
What you can do now is to go to the districts' webpages for the school districts you are interested in teaching in. You can fill out an application online for most schools now. However, the apps only last a year or two, so I wouldn't fill out the Florida one yet. Anyways, you can do all that and contact the Human Resources people at the school district you are interested in and that way you will know what they require. The only problem I had was that I was told 3 different things. So just make sure that the information you get is valid. Have them check your certificate when you get it with their state's standards. (They can't check mine until my fingerprinting card arrives to the Texas Education Agency! I have been waiting since December! They are picky about this whole new fingerprinting stuff!)
For the applications to the school districts, you have to list references, so make sure you keep names of every co-op teacher you have worked with and names of your University Supervisors. Ask them for an address, phone number, and e-mail where you can contact them in the future. You'd be surprised what you forget! Anyways, you should have all that for your resume anyways, but I just wanted to let you know.
Where are you at school Jessica Ann? I graduated from Texas A&M so I was curious. Anyways, if I can help, I would be glad to. Let me know if you have anymore questions and I will try to answer!
-Nicole