District of Columbia · Career guide

How to become a Math Teacher in District of Columbia

Math teachers design and deliver instruction in numeracy, algebra, geometry, statistics, and (at the high-school level) calculus. The role is consistently in shortage nationwide — states almost universally cite secondary math as a high-need certification area, which means signing bonuses, loan-forgiveness eligibility, and faster hiring decisions for credentialed candidates.

No math teaching positions are open in District of Columbia right now — set up an alert and we'll notify you when new postings are scraped.

Certification path in District of Columbia

  1. Earn a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution. Most candidates complete a teacher-preparation program either as part of their undergraduate studies or as a post-baccalaureate add-on.
  2. Pass the required exams. District of Columbia typically requires:
    • Praxis Core Academic Skills (or qualifying SAT/ACT/GRE scores) — Basic reading, writing, and mathematics
    • Praxis Subject Assessments — Content knowledge for your certification area
    • Praxis Principles of Learning and Teaching (PLT) — Pedagogy and professional knowledge

    Most states issue a content-area endorsement on the teaching license; you'll need to pass a content-knowledge exam (Praxis Math, state-specific equivalent, or accepted alternative) to add the endorsement.

  3. Apply for your initial license through Office of the State Superintendent of Education (OSSE). The packet typically includes official transcripts, exam scores, a background check, and (depending on the state) a recommendation from the teacher-prep program. Visit Office of the State Superintendent of Education (OSSE) →
  4. Job-search in District of Columbia. We'll track math teaching openings as districts post them; set up an alert to be notified immediately when new positions go live.

Alternative pathways in District of Columbia

If you didn't follow the traditional university-route, District of Columbia offers these alternate paths that may apply to your situation:

  • DC Teaching Fellows: Two-year residency program for career changers, especially in math, science, and special education
  • Teach For America (DC region, active in DCPS and charter network placements)
  • Capital Teaching Residency (Center City PCS / KIPP DC): Year-long residency leading to a charter teaching position
  • Provisional Teaching License (Type I): Issued to candidates hired by a DC school while completing certification requirements in parallel

District of Columbia salary context

Average teacher salary in District of Columbia: $81,030/year (rank #5 nationally). Entry-level pay with a bachelor's typically starts at $56,313/year.

Role-specific premiums vary by district — special education, STEM, and bilingual roles frequently command signing bonuses or stipends. See the full District of Columbia salary guide for the breakdown.

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