Transferring your teaching license from Minnesota to Alaska
Alaska evaluates out-of-state teaching credentials on a case-by-case basis. Expect a credential review by Alaska Department of Education and Early Development (DEED) and additional Alaska-specific exam or coursework requirements before a full license is issued.
See 518 open teaching jobs in Alaska →Your current credential (Minnesota)
- Issuing authority
- Professional Educator Licensing and Standards Board (PELSB)
- License type
- Tier 1 License (non-traditional) or Tier 2 License (traditional) (1 year (Tier 1) or renewable (Tier 2))
- Reciprocity policy
- Minnesota evaluates out-of-state licenses individually. Tier 2 may be issued to teachers with at least 2 years of out-of-state teaching experience.
Alaska certification
- Issuing authority
- Alaska Department of Education and Early Development (DEED)
- License you'll earn
- Initial Teacher Certificate (3 years)
- Typical timeline
- 12–18 months traditional; Type M and ARTC pathways can place candidates in classrooms within months while coursework is completed in parallel
- Alaska reciprocity policy
- Alaska participates in the NASDTEC Interstate Agreement. Out-of-state applicants with valid certificates typically receive an Alaska Initial Teacher Certificate after credential review; the state-specific Alaska Studies + Multicultural Education coursework must still be completed within the first three years.
Exams typically required in Alaska
Out-of-state applicants are usually asked to demonstrate content-area knowledge on Alaska'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 SAT/ACT/GRE scores)Basic reading, writing, and mathematics
- Praxis Subject AssessmentsContent knowledge for your certification area
- Alaska Studies and Multicultural Education coursesRequired state-specific coursework (3 semester credits each) for all initial certificates
Steps to transfer your license
- Verify your Minnesota credential is current. Alaska will request a verification of your active Tier 1 License (non-traditional) or Tier 2 License (traditional) from Professional Educator Licensing and Standards Board (PELSB).
- Apply through Alaska Department of Education and Early Development (DEED). The application packet typically includes official transcripts, prior teaching service verification, and a fingerprint-based background check.
- Sit for any Alaska-specific exams. Most states honor out-of-state content-area exams when scores meet their cutoff, but Alaska may require an additional jurisprudence or state-specific assessment.
- Apply to Alaska districts that match your endorsement. We're currently tracking 518 active openings — browse Alaska teaching jobs to start identifying districts.