Math, asked by jaanijaani42, 9 months ago

diffrence between head teacher and principal​

Answers

Answered by Kajalchavan786
1

Answer :

They are the same thing: the head of a school. The terms are used differently in different countries, and sometimes even interchangably.

They are the same thing: the head of a school. The terms are used differently in different countries, and sometimes even interchangably.In the U.S., a "principal" tends to be the chief administrator of a public (that is, state-supported) school, while a "headmaster" or "headmistress" has the same function at a private school. There are exceptions to this, though.

They are the same thing: the head of a school. The terms are used differently in different countries, and sometimes even interchangably.In the U.S., a "principal" tends to be the chief administrator of a public (that is, state-supported) school, while a "headmaster" or "headmistress" has the same function at a private school. There are exceptions to this, though.American private schools borrowed the term "headmaster" from British models for elite fee-paying schools, in which a "headmaster" is sometimes a school's senior teacher.

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