How many of your high school teachers went to Ivies?

<p>I'll be more specific all the employees of my school:
Principal: ECU and UNC-CH
Data Manager: UNC-CH
Secretary: Community college
Counselor: ECU (For undergrad and master's)
Teachers: Small all girls college, ECU (3), Duke... and guess what... that's all the teachers! I don't know where are knew teachers went... but I've never even met an ivy league grad in person to my knowledge!</p>

<p>Yale, Notre Dame.. that's all i know. </p>

<p>BUT... one of the calculus teachers (now 70 somethings) got a 1610 on the old SAT. Yep. He proved a question wrong because the question did not include correct restrictions. genius.</p>

<p>A lot went to local public universities, and a fair amount went to UMich. I don't think we have any Ivies, though.</p>

<p>Our LIBRARIAN went to Princeton. I live in Middle of Nowhere USA and attend No One's Ever Heard Of Us Ever, Even People Who Went Here high school, so my mind is permanently bottled by this. And my math teacher apparently dropped out of Cornell. </p>

<p>Absolutely mind-bottling. Yes; I said bottling - Blades of Glory is one of my favorites.</p>

<p>None...
10 char</p>

<p>My Calculus teacher went to Cornell. </p>

<p>Don't know about the other teachers, though.</p>

<p>None of mine. Although many have PhD's</p>

<p>none of mine have, in fact, barely any even have masters in their subject... hence barely any APs...</p>

<p>At my old school I had a math teacher that got a degree in economics from Yale (I'm pretty sure it was Yale) and taught there.</p>

<p>Math teacher: MIT. Got his PhD in Nuclear Physics.</p>

<p>I think the physics teacher may have had something to do with Princeton. I'm not sure though.</p>

<p>not sure but one of my teachers got perfect scores on the SAT twice...went to auburn though</p>

<p>None. Sometimes, I have a hard time believing they even graduated high school.</p>

<p>Haha ^ @ LV-Lover, same. None. Hahaha.</p>

<p>Two. One is AP Biology teacher who went to Cornell. I believe she wasted her life. She has 2 PhD's but she told us she lives with her parents because she can't afford to buy a house and can't afford regular pay rent. She's also like 50 too.</p>

<p>Physics teacher graduated from MIT. Genius but he can't teach and is insane and cooky.</p>

<p>I don't think any of the teachers at my high school went to any Ivy League... Wow that just made me think...</p>

<p>none..... I had a history teacher with a PhD... that's all I know of</p>

<p>I attend a magnet (public) high school in Texas that's part of the National Consortium of whatever (forgot what it's called) but the only teacher who's an Ivy League graduate at my school was my 10th grade World History teacher (she also teaches AP Euro Hist). She did her undergrad at Brandeis (triple majored) and then got her MA in History at Harvard. She's very nice and knowledgeable. Also, the Calculus BC/Diff Eq/Discrete Math/Multivariable Calculus/Linear Algebra teacher graduated from MIT, but that's not an Ivy League school.</p>

<p>None. Almost 100% of my teachers graduated from local/area universities or state universities.</p>

<p>
[quote]
not sure but one of my teachers got perfect scores on the SAT twice...went to auburn though

[/quote]

Lol, because he retook a perfect SAT... arrrrgh, he should have been a CCer.</p>

<p>None that I know of. Most of the them went to local colleges, which really isn't a bad thing since the colleges have good education programs. ;)</p>

<p>
[quote]
I don't see why anyone would waste an education like that on being a high school teacher

[/quote]
</p>

<p>It's hardly wasting an education if teaching is what he/she wants to do.</p>