You don't use your degree except on a business card or in an application, but never sign your name using the degree. If you have a PhD you can use the title of "Dr." and/or put a PhD after your name. I have a PhD and do use the title, but very seldom write the PhD after my name.
It depends on where you obtained the degree, the specific school, the specific program, and what the school indicated the degree type was. While their are common degree types, they may vary according to country and institution.
Unless you're feeling extremely pretentious, exactly the same way you always have. In some contexts it may make sense to append the abbreviation for the specific degree, but outside of a formal professional or academic setting it just makes you look like a jerk.
Unlike a doctor or lawyer, holders of a master's degree (in the U.S.) do not typically place any sort of title in their daily name. That is, there is no masters equivalent to Dr. or Esq.
Just sign it the way you always have. There is no title or special designation that needs to accompany your signature. Now if you had a doctorate.............
You just sign your name as you always have. Any honorifics are not necessary in a signature.
It is most likely M.Ed.
[your name] M. Ed.
[your name] M. Ed.
Kathleen Snow
It really depends on the countries educational system, and the specific school the degree was obtained from.
Licensed Professional Counselor, Masters of Education
No matter where you went to school, the degree is the same: your name, MA.Ed
She never new how to write and had nothing to write her signature on.
According to Michael it was watching the masters at work. "The greatest education in the world is watching the masters at work".
A masters in education runs approximately 33 to 36 credit hours.
it is only money making process with diffrent names by institutions.
I will assume it is a Masters of arts in MHC. If you are not licensed, you can certainly get away with the common MA or MS (if it were a masters of science). For example, I would use Daniel Giers, MA Once you add licenses you would usually put them after the degree. In my personal case I use Daniel Giers, MA, LCPC.
a masters diagree
Masters