A title of respect for a teacher.
Special names for ancient foreign teachers.
The doctor's Confucian classics teacher is called "doctor" In the Tang Dynasty, professional schools were divided into doctors in law, arithmetic and calligraphy.
Professors used to be called academic officials. Since the Song Dynasty, there have been "professors" in Song studies, law, medicine, martial arts and other disciplines who passed on their knowledge to future generations.
A teacher who teaches martial arts or explains classics is called a lecturer.
Name of the ancient academic officer of the teaching assistant. Emperor Wu of the Western Jin Dynasty set up a teacher in Xianning for four years to assist and teach his disciples with doctors. The Southern and Northern Dynasties and the Sui Dynasty were established along the same border. In the Tang Dynasty, Guo Zi School, imperial academy, Wenguang Museum and four schools all had teaching assistants. Imperial academy was the only teaching assistant in Ming and Qing Dynasties. He was a teacher at Guo Zi School (later "imperial academy").
The titles of primary school and martial arts school teachers set in the capital of Song Dynasty were still set in county schools in Yuan, Ming and Qing Dynasties.
Teachers elected to Forestry College in Ming Dynasty are called teachers, teachers, teachers, teachers and teachers.
After the Han Dynasty, teachers who taught Confucian classics in "learning" or "learning" were called "Confucian classics".
During the Ming and Qing Dynasties, the government set up professors, the state set up schools and the county set up schools to educate students. Their deputies are called "discipline".
In ancient times, Mr. Wang was a respectful name for middle-aged and old-aged teachers in "door hall" and "private school"
Teachers were originally called "primary school" teachers in the Song and Yuan Dynasties.