Why Earn Your Education Minor at Saint Leo University?
Bolster a liberal arts degree with training in secondary education, and multiply your career opportunities.
In 2011, Saint Leo’s Education department was named a national finalist for the Distinguished Program in Teacher Education Award.
Saint Leo University offers a minor in education for students in other majors who are considering teaching at the secondary level, but for whom teaching is not their first career choice. The minor is not recommended for students who plan to become certified teachers in K-12 classrooms, because it does not offer the same marketability or extensive preparation as the major. . It is a 20–23-hour* minor with an optional second practicum and an optional extra semester for a full-time internship teaching experience.
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Undergraduate Education Program Details
As an Education minor, you'll learn effective strategies—including the use of emerging technologies—for teaching a wide variety of subjects to adolescents, including ESOL, special education, multicultural and at-risk populations.
Learn Your Way:
Online, On Campus, or Near You
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What are the on-campus facilities like?
Students who pursue their degrees at Saint Leo’s main campus near sunny Tampa Bay, Florida, join a community of enthusiastic learners just like them.
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What are the benefits of earning your degree online?
Saint Leo University’s online learning experience provides a well-rounded education with the flexibility to tailor your course of study to meet your individual needs. We know our students have lives outside school, and we seek to meet them where they are. Online students can count on receiving excellent academics as well as opportunities for hands-on learning.
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It will help me be responsive to the latest needs and issues such as gender identity, issues of technology, abuse, and the concerns of the smartphone generation. What I like is that it will teach me how to use applied theology to discuss these issues.
Fr. Rojas
Are education centers near you offering education degree programs?
You may also choose to pursue your degree through one of our education centers, which merge a traditional in-person education with the flexibility to match your lifestyle. Education centers offer eight-week academic terms as well as evening and weekend classes.
Career Outlook
No matter which learning experience you choose, you will receive plenty of professional development opportunities, industry knowledge from expert professors, and support from the Saint Leo community. All this together means that you will be ready for a successful career or continued studies upon graduation.
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How will you gain real experience?
Student teaching
Gain experience writing lesson plans and teaching in a real-world classroom. The Education minor includes one practicum, with an optional second practicum and an optional extra semester for a full-time teaching experience.
21st century classroom
Discover how to enhance learning with technologies such as iPads, the Mimio Teach and MimioVote™ assessment system and interactive SMART boards.
Co-curricular activities
Participate in the Future Teachers Association, or become an active member of Kappa Delta Pi, the International Honor Society for Educators.
Student Stories
The English minor strengthened my writing acumen while also supporting my Theatre major. In my senior year at Saint Leo, I wrote and directed an original play for my senior project, an experience directly shaped by my course work in the minor: Introduction to Dramatic Writing, Graphic Novels to Film, and Shakespeare. These courses strengthened my ability to read closely, write analytically, and develop character-driven interpretation and analysis, while also preparing me for graduate study abroad by building independence and discipline in my academic work.
My English minor played an important role in my acceptance to Politecnico di Milano (PoliMi), the #1 university in Italy, and my admission to Accademia Teatro alla Scala. The writing I completed for my minor prepared me very well for both application processes and scholarship materials.
Paul Vitaliti, Class of 2025, English Minor, Theatre Major.
In the English major, we are tight knit. It has been much easier to befriend my classmates within my major than those in my general education classes. I am grateful for the time we have spent together in and outside of the classroom. The classes are not only engaging but thought-provoking. The major isn't simply about learning certain subjects, but to build our critical thinking and argumentative skills. We are taught to analyze every topic and form our own ideas for a nuanced debate or report. The English major has offered me the chance to build both my creative and academic writing skills through the classes offered at Saint Leo.
Emma Garrett: Class of 2027
The versatile English degree provides the foundation for many career paths, just as stories and narratives have provided the foundations of civilizations since humans started communicating. At Saint Leo, you explore the historical context behind why those stories exist in the first place. You’ll explore narratives from across cultures through many lenses and learn how to effectively participate in dialogue through research and analysis. The benefits are wide-reaching. I graduated with an English degree and then pursued an M.B.A. at Saint Leo. This combination has helped me navigate many roles in which effective communication, analysis, creative solutions and strategies dominate: Quality Assurance, Project Management, Paid Ads, and Search Engine Optimization. My English degree has also been instrumental in teaching me the necessary skills to publish my creative work in Dancing Girl Press and Frogpond and publish an article about data storytelling with Search Engine Land. I highly recommend the English degree at Saint Leo!
Amanda Beil: Class of 2013, Published Author, Project Manager
As an English major, I learned the power of writing and communication to motivate, change, obscure, and apologize. The program cultivated my deep curiosity about the stories we live with and who gets to tell them. I graduated from the English major with an uncanny comfort engaging in ideas, artifacts, and practices that were outside of my comfort zone. Classes created meaningful, challenging, fun, and productive discussions, moments where I was forced to commit my ideas to paper and review them with peers—the unsung moments of professional development that the English Major provides. Literature is a playground for conflict, strife, and love: The complexities of life.
Wesley Johnson, Class of 2010—Assistant Professor
The English major continues to shape my life today. The program fostered intellectual curiosity, critical thinking, and a deep appreciation for the power of clear communication. Through meaningful discussions, constructive feedback, and self-reflection, I learned how to listen, adapt, and grow. Moreover, those lessons became the foundation of a rewarding career in medical writing. For nearly two decades, I have helped communicate complex scientific research through clinical study reports, protocols, and regulatory submissions that contribute to bringing new treatments to patients.
Mary Goodwin (Stevens), Class of 2007—Medical Writer
My Saint Leo English degree laid the foundation for my career as an attorney (J.D.) and Army Public Affairs Officer. I sharpened my ability to write persuasively, learned to view an issue from multiple angles and write about it objectively, and developed my research skills. All of these are critical to my law practice today. Additionally, as a Public Affairs Officer, I supervised Army writers, editors, photographers, and videographers in the United States and abroad. This work has taken me to various locations in the U.S., Europe, South America, and Africa. Though I’ve moved over to a position in Intelligence now, the communication skills started at Saint Leo continue to benefit me today. Your English degree can take you far.
Grant Schrantz, Class of 2015 - Attorney
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Accreditation
Saint Leo University is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges to award associate, bachelor’s, master’s, specialist, and doctoral degrees.