<p>The title is self-explanatory, and I am aiming for specifically undergrad.</p>
<p>We have one.</p>
<p>The title is self-explanatory, and I am aiming for specifically undergrad.</p>
<p>We have one.</p>
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<p>None, as far as I know. Although many went to UMich and think of themselves as Ivy-grads <em>gag</em>.</p>
<p>I think none in my school.</p>
<p>None. They are excited if they have a diploma from UGA on their wall which many don't.</p>
<p>ew, would go to an ivy to become a school teacher....</p>
<p>haha, j/k.</p>
<p>but umm....zero</p>
<p>None. My school doesn't have any PhD teachers either. I don't see why anyone would waste an education like that on being a high school teacher, unless it's a prestigious teaching position.</p>
<p>We have one, who went to UPENN for undergrad and is highly sought after for recs. as a result.</p>
<p>None for undergrad, although one got her Ph.D. from Yale (she is French and went to the Sorbonne for undergrad). She's leaving though.</p>
<p>Of the teachers I know at my school, most of them went to local private colleges or campuses in the UNC system (although none of them went to our flagship, Chapel Hill).</p>
<p>I've never asked my teachers where they went...</p>
<p>Lols, none. Public schools unite!!</p>
<p>I'd say plenty. I know five of my school's history teachers went to Ivies. (2 Brown, 1 Dartmouth, 1 Harvard, 1 Princeton) My freshman year English teacher went to Princeton and my sophomore year English teacher (my favorite teacher of all) was a Rhodes scholar at Oxford (certainly more impressive...and I love his teaching)</p>
<p>I'd say that out of all the teachers who've taught me, those from Ivies GENERALLY did a pretty good job. Though there're always exceptions. My eighth grade teacher (from Yale) was HORRIBLE.</p>
<p>Since my school is a public magnet school ranked high up in the nation, the vast majority of the teachers have master's degrees in their fields of study and a few have Ph.D's.</p>
<p>I know that one of the younger teachers went to Harvard and came right back to teach at the school, and I believe several of the other teachers went to high-ranked universities.</p>
<p>Most of the teachers have degrees in the fields they teach.</p>
<p>Tons upon tons! Off the top of my head, I can name like 5 or 6 of them, but I'm sure that there were more.</p>
<p>One of them traveled alot and went to like Oxford, Cambridge, and finally Harvard! :o</p>
<p>One Stanford grad o.O</p>
<p>One of our HS math teachers has his undergrad from Harvard and then went on to complete his JD elsewhere. He now is a math teacher and soccer coach with 2 state titles and 4 final 4 appearances. He said he hated lawyering but loved math. Go figure...</p>
<p>My freshmen english tacher (who may be my AP english teacher next year) went undergrad Brown and grad UVA. Very intelligent lady.</p>
<p>None went for undergrad but 2 went for grad: 1 received a M.A. at Cornell, the other received a M.Ed at UPENN</p>
<p>In addition to that there are 3 teachers who have Ph.D's and 3 teachers who were Ph.D. candidates</p>
<p>Two went to Yale (a former English teacher, who left to get a doctorate in school administration, and a music teacher), and my calculus teacher graduated from MIT.</p>