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No best answer has yet been selected by billio. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I would strongly reccommend doing a (3-year) Art degree at university, then doing a PostGraduate Certificate in Education (PGCE) which last a year full-time.
If you look look here, you can see that many universities offer a PGCE in Art (often with Design, too). They would usually require that you've done a university degree in your chosen field (Art & Design in your case).
The site with all the information is the Graduate Teacher Training Registry (GTTR).
You dont actually need an art degree to teach art, when you do a PGCE you are qualified to teach anything -this has happened to a number of newly qualified teacher friends of mine - they have been instructed to teach art, music etc which they knew little about!
The curriculum these days is so detailed that they just followed it
I am a qualified art teacher. If you want to teach at secondary level, you need an art degree and a PGCE specialising in secondary teaching. If you want to teach junior age, then you don't necessarily have to have a degree in art, as you WILL be expected to teach a mixture of other subjects. But they will expect you to have A degree, or a BEd- a 4 year teaching degree.
If you want to teach at College level, then you need a degree, and possibly just a Certificate of Adult Education. This is a less lengthy qualification, but only allows you to teach adults.
I went for secondary, as that seems to cover most things, and ironically have ended up teaching Music at College level (alongside a lot of other musicians who have no formal qualifications!!) and peripatetic singing!!