District of ColumbiaTennessee

Transferring your teaching license from District of Columbia to Tennessee

Both District of Columbia and Tennessee participate in the NASDTEC interstate agreement, which standardizes how states evaluate out-of-state teaching credentials. Educators relocating from District of Columbia can generally expect a streamlined review process, though state-specific content exams or coursework may still be required.

See 1,356 open teaching jobs in Tennessee →

Your current credential (District of Columbia)

Issuing authority
Office of the State Superintendent of Education (OSSE)
License type
Initial Teaching License (4 years)
Reciprocity policy
DC evaluates out-of-state teaching credentials individually. OSSE generally honors valid licenses from NASDTEC-participating states; additional Praxis content-area exams may be required to upgrade from an Initial to a Standard license.

Tennessee certification

Issuing authority
Tennessee Department of Education
License you'll earn
Apprentice License (3 years)
Typical timeline
12–18 months traditional; TNALP allows immediate classroom entry with completion over 3 years
Tennessee reciprocity policy
Tennessee participates in the NASDTEC compact. Out-of-state educators with valid certificates may receive a Tennessee license; content exams may be required.

Exams typically required in Tennessee

Out-of-state applicants are usually asked to demonstrate content-area knowledge on Tennessee's preferred exams, even when basic-skills testing is waived through reciprocity. Plan for one or more of the following:

  • Praxis Core Academic Skills (or qualifying ACT/SAT/GRE scores)Basic reading, writing, and mathematics
  • Praxis Subject AssessmentsContent knowledge for your licensure area
  • edTPAPerformance assessment during student teaching

Steps to transfer your license

  1. Verify your District of Columbia credential is current. Tennessee will request a verification of your active Initial Teaching License from Office of the State Superintendent of Education (OSSE).
  2. Apply through Tennessee Department of Education. The application packet typically includes official transcripts, prior teaching service verification, and a fingerprint-based background check.
  3. Sit for any Tennessee-specific exams. Most states honor out-of-state content-area exams when scores meet their cutoff, but Tennessee may require an additional jurisprudence or state-specific assessment.
  4. Apply to Tennessee districts that match your endorsement. We're currently tracking 1,356 active openings — browse Tennessee teaching jobs to start identifying districts.
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