GED Teacher Jobs 2026 June — How to Become an Adult Education GED Instructor

Free GED Teacher Jobs 2026 June practice test with questions and answer explanations. Prepare for the 2026 June exam with instant scoring.

GED Teacher Jobs 2026 June — How to Become an Adult Education GED Instructor

What GED Teachers Do

GED teachers — officially adult education instructors or adult basic education (ABE) teachers — prepare adult students to pass the GED, HiSET, or TASC high school equivalency exams. The role involves more than delivering content: effective adult education teachers understand the social and emotional challenges their students face and adapt instruction accordingly.

Primary responsibilities include:

  • Assessing students' current skill levels using diagnostic tests in reading, writing, math, and science
  • Developing individualized or group-based lesson plans aligned with GED subject area standards
  • Delivering instruction across all four GED subjects or one specialized area (math, reading/writing, or science/social studies)
  • Tracking student progress and adjusting instruction based on practice test results
  • Motivating adult learners who may have had negative experiences with formal education
  • Coordinating with case managers, workforce staff, or social services as needed
  • Preparing students for the official GED test scheduling process at Pearson VUE centers

For teachers helping students practice, our free ged ready practice test and free ged practice test resources are useful classroom tools.

Required Credentials for GED Teacher Jobs

Requirements vary significantly by employer type, but most GED teacher positions share common baseline expectations.

Education Requirements: A bachelor's degree is required by most employers — typically in education, English, math, social work, or a related field. Some community college programs require a master's degree for full-time positions. Nonprofit and library-based programs may accept candidates with associate's degrees and strong subject matter expertise for certain part-time roles.

Teaching License: Public school adult education programs in most states require a valid state teaching license, often with an adult education endorsement. Requirements vary by state — contact your state's department of education for specific licensure rules. Some states offer a specific Adult Education certification pathway separate from K-12 licensure.

Adult Education Certifications: While not universally required, certifications that strengthen GED teacher applications include:

  • COABE (Coalition on Adult Basic Education) professional development credentials
  • TESOL or ESL certification (especially for programs with high immigrant enrollment)
  • State-issued adult education endorsements or certificates
  • Subject-specific credentials (math endorsement, reading specialist) for subject-specific roles

For a structured understanding of GED content to prepare for teaching it, see our ged study guide.

Adult education GED teacher leading classroom instruction at community college with adult learners preparing for high school equivalency exam

How to Get a GED Teacher Job

  • Confirm you hold a bachelor's degree (required by most employers) or are enrolled in one
  • Check your state's adult education teacher certification requirements at your state Department of Education website
  • Apply for an adult education teaching license or endorsement if your target employer requires it
  • Build familiarity with all four GED subject areas — review GED.com content and take practice tests yourself
  • Search for GED teacher jobs on Indeed, Idealist, your state's job board, and local community college career pages
  • Consider starting with a part-time or volunteer tutoring role to build adult education experience
  • Pursue COABE professional development or an adult education certificate to strengthen your application
  • Highlight any tutoring, mentoring, or community education experience in your application materials
GED instructor reviewing student practice test results and providing individualized feedback for adult education program at library
Pros
  • +Validates your knowledge and skills objectively
  • +Increases job market competitiveness
  • +Provides structured learning goals
  • +Networking opportunities with other certified professionals
Cons
  • Study materials can be expensive
  • Exam anxiety can affect performance
  • Requires dedicated preparation time
  • Retake fees apply if you don't pass

GED Teacher Jobs Questions and Answers

More GED Resources

About the Author

Dr. Sarah MitchellRN, MSN, PhD

Registered Nurse & Healthcare Educator

Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing

Dr. Sarah Mitchell is a board-certified registered nurse with over 15 years of clinical and academic experience. She completed her PhD in Nursing Science at Johns Hopkins University and has taught NCLEX preparation and clinical skills courses for nursing students across the United States. Her research focuses on evidence-based exam preparation strategies for healthcare certification candidates.