blog navigation

College of Education Announcements

blog posts

  • The Education Project - A Photo Exhibition at the Illini Union

    The Education Photo Project is a look at education and educators through photographs.

  • Education Justice Project applications due Oct. 1

    Applications to work with the Education Justice Project (EJP) at the Danville Correctional Center are being accepted through Oct. 1. Two EJP Info Nights will take place in the Education Building in September.

  • Lecture and Colloquium by Professor Emerita Nancy Folbre

    Author and Professor Emerita of Economics Nancy Folbre, of the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, will be the speaker of a Sept. 17 lecture and discussion titled "The Rise and Fall of Public Higher Education." She will also host a colloquium earlier in the day, sponsored by the College of Education and the Forum on the Future of Public Education.

  • IDEALL Grand Opening - Wednesday, September 30

    Illinois Digital Ecologies and Learning Laboratory (IDEALL) Grand Opening

    Wednesday, September 30, 2015

    3:00 – 5:00 PM

    166-170-176 Education Building

    IDEALL is a research laboratory developed for use by educational, learning sciences, and educational technology researchers both in the College of Education and from the wider campus research community. A highly configurable space, IDEALL is intended to facilitate investigations of cutting-edge, technology-enhanced learning environments in both formal and informal learning settings, and across the life-span. The Lab offers state-of-the-art 360-degree video and audio capture, a highly configurable lighting system, projectable surfaces and associated projection infrastructure in every dimension, a pull-out interview room, an observation center with one-way mirror, and more. The Lab is ideal for setting up, and capturing, learner interactions with state-of-the-art digital learning environments, including virtual and augmented realities, multi-touch surfaces for collaborative learning, and educational games, among other platforms.

    Please join us to explore the capabilities and affordances of the Lab. Demonstrations of capacity and use will be offered, with opportunities to connect with researchers who are putting the Lab to use.

     

     

  • Looking for Assistance Proctoring Elementary School Study

    My research team is currently looking for someone to help us proctor a spatial skills study we're running in a couple different local elementary schools in October and November. Duties would involve driving to and from the school and supervising the children as they participate in each study session. Prior experience working with children and/or research experience is a bonus. Depending on your past experience, a paid position is possible. Contact me at wauck2@illinois.edu if you're interested!

  • “Scaling and Clustering in Affiliation Networks: An Application to Understanding the Consumption of Political News”

    The Department of Educational Psychology
    Research Presentation Announcement

    “Scaling and Clustering in Affiliation Networks: An Application to Understanding the Consumption of Political News”

    Dr. Doug Steinley
    Professor, Psychological Science
    University of Missouri                            

    Wednesday, September 30, 2015
    11:30 – 1:00
    242 Education Building

    A novel method of cluster analysis and multidimensional scaling is presented to analyze affiliation networks.   In this particular example, individuals consumption of information from a variety of political news outlets (CNN, FOX, MSNBC, New York Times, etc.) is considered.  Individual attributes are related to outlet properties to understand consumption as a function of political ideology.

    For more information, please go to https://education.illinois.edu/docs/default-source/edpsy-documents/steinley-9-30-15-talk-announcement.pdf?status=Temp&sfvrsn=0.6855261821765453

  • Teaching in a 1:1 Computing Environment: Meshing Content, Technology, and Pedagogy Effectively

    Education alumnus Mark Emmons, Ed.M. '08 Ed.Psych., will share his experiences integrating technologies to motivate and engage students in active learning. He will also discuss the benefits and limits of technology integration into the school curriculum in order to provide a meaningful learning experience within a results-based assessment environment.

  • Canned food being accepted at Education Building through Sept. 28, 2015

    Education students, staff, and faculty members are encouraged to contribute canned food donations during the eighth annual "Cans Across the Quad" food drive. Drop off your food Sept. 21-28 at Room 110 in the Education Building.

  • Educational Technology Leadership Summit

    On December 9 at the iHotel and Conference Center, the Executive Leadership Academy will hold The Educational Technology Leadership Summit. The Summit will bring state educational leaders to the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign to participate in a unique professional learning opportunity on educational technology. The summit is designed for educational administrators and technology experts to share an experience designed to foster in-depth dialogue and provide collaborative and hands-on exposures to new technologies.

    Presented by Illinois faculty members, various leaders, and Cisco Systems, the summit will motivate thinking and discussions about exploring and taking advantage of technology to help teachers teach, students learn, and administrators manage educational environments. The interactive format will provoke discussion, both practical and theoretical, and provide a glimpse of new technology systems offered by Cisco Systems. Presentations, discussions, activities, and hands-on demonstrations will address technology integration, instructional strategies to enhance STEM learning, the role of the Internet in education, mobility solutions, and the classroom of the future. During the one-day summit participants will:

    Learn about research-based instructional strategies to enhance student learningConnect and network with school district leaders across central and southern IllinoisUnderstand strategies to manage technology integrationLearn strategies to assess organizational climate and readiness for technology transformationExplore cutting-edge educational technologies designed to enhance connectivity and student learning.

    To regrister: go.illinois.edu/ELATechSummit15

  • 2015 Student Recognition Brunch

    Dean Mary Kalantzis invites you to join us in honoring our student award recipients for the 2015-2016 academic school year.

    Saturday, November 7, 2015

    I Hotel and Conference Center, Illinois Ballroom

    1900 S. First St., Champaign, IL

    Parking is available on the east side of the building.

    9:30 a.m. registration

    10 a.m. brunch and ceremony

    Please RSVP online by October 26, 2015.

    Students are responsible for registering their guests.

    Registration fee for guests of students is $20 per person.

    Students, faculty/staff, scholarship donors,

    and children under 7 may attend at no charge.

    Questions? Please call 217-244-7228 or email advancement@education.illinois.edu.

  • “Dialogue with a Veteran Cuban Librarian: The Long View on Literacy, Literary Culture, Digitization and Revolution"

    Cuban librarian Marta Terry González visit to campus may be of interest for C&I -  Language and Literacy students. There are a couple of sections about literacy and digital age: Ex: On Wednesday, October 14, Terry will deliver a talk titled, “Dialogue with a Veteran Cuban Librarian: The Long View on Literacy, Literary Culture, Digitization and Revolution,” as part of the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies Lecture Series. The event will be held at the International Studies Building, Room 101, at 3:00 p.m.

    More information at: 

    https://www.lis.illinois.edu/articles/2015/09/cuban-librarian-marta-terry-gonzález-visit-campus

     

     

  • Homecoming 2015

    College of Education Faculty, Students, and Staff are invited to attend the Homecoming Parade Party on the North side of the College of Education on October 23, 5:00 pm.  Join Alumni of our College, students from University Primary School, and current College of Education students as we launch our float, enjoy food and games for students of all ages.  The Marching Illini will play for us! Join us in this celebration of Education and the lasting impact on Alumni.

  • Data Science Across Disciplines Seminar: Educational Technology

    Join the Data Science Disciplines Focal Point for an Oct. 20 seminar with Dr. H. Chad Lane, an associate professor in the Department of Educational Psychology.

  • Part Time Teaching Position

    The Montessori Elementary School of Champaign Urbana is looking for an energetic and creative person to run our after school program five afternoons a week. Applicants must have experience working with small groups of school age children. Applicants should have great interpersonal skills, communicate effectively with faculty and students. We are seeking an individual who is organized, assertive, fun and enjoys working with children. Applicants should be able to supervise children outdoors in all weather and help them grow in their independence and social skills.Ideally, the applicant would also have experience teaching basic art skills to school age children in order to integrate art lessons into the elementary program curriculum two afternoons a week. Applicants should be able to plan lessons for elementary students with a wide range of art skills/interest. 

    Requirements - Background check, experience working with school age children, ability to be active and outside in all types of weather, help children use conflict resolution skills, be available for evening staff meetings and training sessions, provide references regarding experience working with children, must be 18 and have a high school diploma. Pay is based on experience and qualifications.

    Helpful but not required - Experience running school-age camp or similar program, a knowledge and interest in Montessori philosophy, a BA or some college experience.

     

    Please send your resume and cover letter to rdunn@montessorischoolofcu.org

  • The Goldstick Family Lecture in the Study of Communication Disorders

    Guest scholar Dr. Brian A. Boyd will speak at the 11th annual Goldstick Family Lecture in the Study of Communication Disorders.

  • Globalization at Illinois: A Faculty Dialogue

    Illinois International Programs (formerly International Programs & Studies) invites faculty to join us in the Illini Union, Room 104, on Tuesday, November 10, at 12:00pm for a town-hall style conversation about globalization at Illinois. Students, faculty, and staff panelists from across campus will share their experiences followed by an open discussion between the panelists and audience. Faculty attending will have the opportunity to voice their input about how we can strengthen our campus as a preeminent global university.

  • New Grad Course for Spring 2016 on Learning and the Body

    Title: DIG507 BOD - Learning and the Body

    Instructor: Robb Lindgren

    Time: Wednesdays 4-6:50

    Location: Education Bldg. Room 17

    Credit: 4 hours

    CRN: #31988

    In this graduate seminar we will explore how body movement and physical engagement with the environment is connected to how people learn. We will explore embodied cognition and related ideas from philosophy and psychology and apply them to educational contexts. The course will examine the ways that body activity has been employed in curricula and other learning interventions, and students will be exposed to new technologies that can respond to gestures and other embodied actions. Students will design their own embodied learning activities around a topic of their choosing. Learn more...

  • Graduate Research Assistant Needed for Project on Science Education and Interactive Simulations

    The GRASP team (GestuRe Augmented Simulations for supporting exPlanations) is looking for students interested in assisting with research on embodiment and interactive science simulations. We are in the midst of a 4-year NSF grant looking at how middle school students use their hands/bodies to reason about critical science concepts. In this project we are conducting interviews with middle school students and working with our partners at the Concord Consortium (http://concord.org/) to create new gesture-enabled web simulations on topics such as heat transfer and why we experience seasons. 

    Depending on the student's interests and skills, duties on this project could include video transcription and data analysis, simulation testing and design, and conducting interviews with children at local schools. A background in science teaching or science education research is preferred but not required. Experience with design research and mixed methods in edcuational settings also preferred. Video coding and transcription experience would be highly valuable to us as well.

    25% Assistantships are available and we anticipate this position starting around the beginning of the Spring 2016 semester, but starting earlier than this is an option. We intend for this work to go beyond a single semester, and summer work is a possibility. 

    Please contact Dr. Robb Lindgren (robblind@illinois.edu) and Ms. Polly Kroha (pkroha@illinois.edu) with any inquiries about the position. If you would like to be considered send us an email with a brief statement of interest and a resume/CV. Describe any related or relevant work you've done previously.

  • HOLA: Listening to Latin@ Students

    The article gives recommendations for how mathematics teachers can better listen to and support their students who are Latin@.  Some of the recommendations include how to position immigrant students as experts. It draws on work Dr. Gutiérrez did as a year-long Fulbright scholar studying mathematics classrooms in Zacatecas, Mexico. READ the full article.

  • Invitation to attend a workshop on ... Complex Problem Solving and Critical Thinking: Online Tools and Computational Approaches

    Invitation to attend a workshop on ...

    Complex Problem Solving and Critical Thinking:

    Online Tools and Computational Approaches

    11.00-12.30, Monday, November 9, followed by lunch

    Education Building, Room 166

    The Challenge: Complex problem solving and critical thinking are required in today’s medical, design, and engineering professions. Knowledge in these domains must frequently be presented in the form of an argument, particularly alternative application scenarios in context-specific cases. However, much of our teaching and assessment is still focused on empirically definite facts, and procedures that produce single, apparently ‘correct’ answers.

    The Project: The general problem addressed by this project is how to teach and assess ‘complex epistemic performance’ such as critical thinking that weighs up alternatives, and problem solving that is context- and case-sensitive. Our solution uses the Scholar platform developed by U of I researchers to support multimodal knowledge representation and structured peer feedback, focusing on critical disciplinary practices and metacognitive strategies. We are also exploring computational possibilities, both around structured peer and instructor data and computational approaches that mine unstructured or semi-structured data emerging through all stages of the learning process.

    The Intervention: With the support of the Illinois Learning Science Design Initiative (ILSDI), these possibilities are now being explored in the area of critical clinical thinking. Experiments are underway in first year medical curricula on campus: the Vet Cases Scholar community is home to Clinical Correlations cases in the College of Veterinary Medicine and the Cardiovascular Physiology community houses case analyses on this subject in the College of Medicine.

    Join the project team for a presentation on this project, with a discussion of these educational challenges, as well as the emerging computational and learning-analytic approaches.

    Project Team:

    PI: Duncan C. Ferguson, V.M.D., Ph.D., Dept. of Comparative

    Biosciences, College of Veterinary Medicine

    CIs: ChengXiang Zhai, Ph.D., Dept. of Computer Sciences,

    College of Engineering

    William Cope, Ph.D., Dept. of Education Policy, Organization

    and Leadership, College of Education 

    Willem Els, Ph.D., Molecular and Integrative Physiology, College

    of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and College of Medicine

    Chase Geigle, graduate student, Dept. of Computer Sciences,

    College of Engineering

    RSVP if you plan to attend: billcope@illinois.edu

  • "How Do You Get to Carnegie Hall? Deliberate Practice Isn't Enough."

    DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY
    BROWNBAG ANNOUNCEMENT

    “How Do You Get to Carnegie Hall? Deliberate Practice Isn’t Enough.”

    Presented by Elizabeth J. Meinz, a Professor and Associate Chair in the Department of Psychology at Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville.  This Brownbag is Tuesday, November 10 from 12:30–2:00 in room 210A Education Building.  For questions about this brownbag event, please contact Professor Liz Stine-Morrow at eals@illinois.edu.  

  • School Readiness & Parental Involvement among Latina/o Children Seminar

    We'd like to extend a warm invitation to our seminar. Our seminar entitled: School Readiness & Parental Involvement among Latina/o Children will feature a presentation by Sarai Coba-R., a doctoral student in Human Development & Family Studies. She will be talking about her dissertation research. 

    In her presentation, Sarai will discuss how Latino/a parents conceptualize the meaning of school readiness and how they view their role in facilitating their child’s early care and education. Using a family resiliency framework, the goal of this presentation is to examine the meaning of school readiness, expectations for school readiness, and related parent involvement among Latino/a families. 

    The seminar will take place on Monday, Nov. 9 from 4 to 5:00 p.m. in the Studio Room in Christopher Hall. Light refreshments will be provided. This seminar is part of our Graduate College Focal Point initiative entitled: Examining the Educational Experiences of Latinos in the U.S. This event is free and open to the public, but please RSVP if possible at: https://illinois.edu/fb/sec/9638044 A copy of the presentation can be found on our website. For more information on this event and our focal point initiatives please visit: http://publish.illinois.edu/latinoeducationintheusa/ 

  • New Course: CI 482: Social Learning and Multimedia

    Instructor: Dr. Mark Dressman, mdressma@illiois.eduTime: Wednesday, 4:00-6:50Credit: 3 undergrad / 4 grad hoursLocation: TBACRN: 63210

    In Illinois and across the world, people are using an extraordinary range of social media—platforms and apps that create opportunities for communication with others—for an extraordinary range of purposes: to meet, to organize, to share information quickly, and to connect with loved ones or with strangers who may or may not share each other’s cultural, ethnic, political, linguistic, religious, or sexual orientations or preferences. In this course, we will focus on how these new media not only help to shape people’s identit(ies) but also on how these media create new opportunities for learning and for teaching, and to experiment with the creation of new platforms for connecting with others educationally.The first part of the course will focus on exploring how each of us learns and teaches through engagement in social media, with an emphasis on how language and different forms of multimedia, including music, video, images, and their design, convey information to us on a variety of levels. In the second half of the semester, we’ll work in groups to design platforms of our own that use critical features of social media to connect and learn from and with others.

    About the Instructor: Mark Dressman is a professor in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction. His current research focuses on theories of multimodality and their application in the development of curriculum for adolescents and young adults. He is a Fulbright Senior Scholar studying the ways that students in Morocco and Korea learn English via digital technology and classroom instruction. 

  • Educators Job Fair for Students

    The Educators Job Fair will take place Monday, March 7, 2016, at the Hilton Garden Inn in Champaign. For more information, please contact Brian Neighbors at 217-333-0820 or bneig2@illinois.edu.

  • Community Colleges and Actualizing Access in a Burgeoning New America

    In this Nov. 18 talk at the Bastian Foundation Diversity Lecture Series at Westminster College, Dr. Eboni Zamani-Gallaher will examine the importance of community colleges in advancing the American dream amid a changing America. She will illuminate the realities of the changing demography and the stratification of educational opportunity in the current college completion era, highlighting the necessity of community colleges in providing on-ramps that serve divergent learners and sectors.

  • New Course for Spring 2016 Semester

    Description of a new COE course in human factors, to be offered in the Spring 2016 semester.

  • 2016 CREA Conference - The Next Generation of Theory and Practice: Rethinking Equity through Culturally Responsive Evaluation and Assessment

    The 2016 Center for Culturally Responsive Evaluation and Assessment Conference will take place April 20-22 in Chicago, with pre-conference workshops happening April 19.

  • Birmingham-Illinois BRIDGE 2015-2016 Launch

    Join Interim Chancellor Barbara Wilson Dec. 3 in welcoming Dr. Adam Tickell, provost and vice principal of the University of Birmingham, to announce this year’s call for proposals for the BRIDGE collaborative seed fund, the initiation of the new Birmingham-Illinois BRIDGE Fellowships program, and the launch of the collaborative website biriminghamillinoisBRIDGE.org. More...

  • Globalization at Illinois: A Staff Dialogue

    Please join Illinois International for the final event in a three-part series of town-hall style conversatoins about globalization at Illinois on Tuesday, December 8, at 12pm in Room 104 of the Illini Union.

  • EPSY/INFO 590 Demo Day: Engaging Ed Tech

    Please join us for an open house demo session (with refreshments!) to see class projets from the fall semester of EPSY/INFO 590, Engaging and Interactive Educational Technologies (taught by Dr. H. Chad Lane).  Come and try the prototypes, talk to the inventors, and learn more about this interdisciplinary course (offered each fall).  Send questions to hclane@illinois.edu.  We hope to see you!

    Tuesday, December 15, 2015
    1:30 - 3:00 pm
    Education 176 (IDEALL Lab)

    Please view the PDF document to see details on all the wonderful projects that will be displayed!

  • University Primary School "Music & Sound" Project Culminating Event

    Please join University Primary School in our "Music & Sound" Project Culminating Event, opening Wednesday, January 20 6:00 PM through Friday, January 23 3:00 PM in the College of Education first and third floor lounges. Wednesday, January 20, University Primary families and friends will be meeting to celebrate in the lounges and College faculty, staff, and students are welcome to join. Project work features preschool-5th grade childrens' discoveries and understandings during their semester long study of this topic. Look for photos of our College of Education student teachers in action, as well as University collaborators and researchers. Instructors discussing inquiry approaches, the various roles of teachers and students, and children's social-emotional-congitive-physical development may wish to tour the event displays with their College students!

  • EDUC 102 Poster Session

    10:30-11:30AM, Thursday, December 10 (Reading Day)

    North Lobby and Room 192 Education Building

    Interact with Instructor Adam Poetzel and James Scholar Freshmen as they present research on critical issues in education including:

    Standardized Testing
    Teach for America
    Poverty and Achievement
    Common Core Standards
    Disability
    Gender Gaps in STEM Fields
    Creativity in Schools
    Charter Schools
    Children’s Literature Stereotypes

    Support James Scholars!

    Bagels, donuts, coffee and water will be provided.

    View the event flier.

  • 7th Annual COE Graduate Student Conference

    Seventh Annual

    College of Education Graduate Student Conference:

    Transformative Scholarship, Schooling & Society

    March 11, 2016
    8 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.

    From mundane daily interactions to national and international reform initiatives, in various ways people, communities, and institutions are constantly regulated. The effects of such regulations manifest in various social domains, one of the more pronounced being within P-20 schooling experiences. This has, among other things, led to limited educational attainment, curtailed curricula, and the potential loss of personal and/or professional identity. Yet it has also resulted in opportunities for dialogue, new learning approaches, and collective action.

     

    In an effort to contextualize the complexities and politics embedded in such practices, the 2016 College of Education Graduate Student Conference is calling for scholarship that investigates this phenomenon, as it’s experienced in the United States and around the world. We welcome scholarship that is both intimately and marginally connected to the theme, as we feel all conversations will enrich educational dialogues.

     

    All graduate students with education-related projects are welcome to submit in the following categories:

     

    Paper: An individual paper with 1 or 2 authors

    Submit a one-page abstract of a paper

    Panel: 2 – 3 coordinated papers organized around a single theme or topic

    Submit a one-page abstract for each paper on the panel, a description of the panel, and a panel title

    Roundtable: A paper in early formation such as, outlines and early drafts

    Submit a 50-100 word abstract.

    Alternative Presentations: A project that is more aesthetic/performative/poetic/evocative. We welcome submissions for performances, art installations, musical pieces, video showings, and similarly provocative interventions.

    Submit a one page abstract and any accompanying digital files representing your work.

     

    Send submissions & inquiries to: coegsc2016@gmail.com. Deadline: December 31, 2015

     

    This year’s conference will feature the 2nd annual Hong Kong University Graduate Student Conference Exchange Program

  • Win a trip to present your research in Hong Kong

    The Graduate Student Conference is partnering with the University of Hong Kong to present the second annual Graduate Student Conference Exchange Program.

  • MLK Jr. Community Celebration

    This event on Saturday, Jan. 23, marks the culmination of the week of events surrounding Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s legacy. Provost Ed Feser will provide opening remarks, and the program will include a presentation by Soul Premier and the Independent Media Center, a performance by Garden Hills Choir and Guitar Strummers, and a step show by Alpha Phi Alpha. The winners and honorable mention recipients of the MLK Creative Expressions Contest will also be presented.

  • Short-term education assistant wanted

    Illinois Public Media seeks a graduate student in the College of Education to create and present a digital enrichment activity to fourth grade social studies students during their classroom field trips to WILL in late March through mid-May, 2016.

    Approximately 20-30 total hours at $20/hr.  Submit resume with references and cover letter to kranich@illinois.edu by 2/1/16.  See attached job description.

  • EdCampCU

    EdCampCU is a place for teachers, pre-service teachers, administrators, community members, university students and faculty, as well as anyone else who is interested in talking and learning about education and education innovation.

  • Spring 2016 EPS 420/SOC420 "Sociology of Education" Social Foundations Course---Seats Still Available

    Spring 2016 Social Foundations Course in Educational Policy Studies & Sociology

    SOCIOLOGY   OF EDUCATION

    Educational Policy Studies: EPS 420-A  crn #33100

    Sociology of Education: SOC 420-A crn #33102

     

    Professor:   Dr.  Barnett (email: bmbarnet@illinois.edu)

    Course Credit: 2 or 4 hours Graduate, 2 or 4 Hours Undergraduate

    Days, Time, Location: Tuesday, 10:00-11:50am, Room 323 Education Building

    Maximum Enrollment Spaces: 36 students

     

    Course Description:

    This 400-level social foundations course is a combined Graduate and Advanced Undergraduate level (Juniors and Seniors) sociological examination of education and schooling in society. Concentration is on introducing, surveying, synthesizing, and evaluating theories, research, and issues in the sociology of education. Course topics include: sociological theories, research methods, and concepts in education; different eras of change and reforms in U.S. education/schooling within changing social-historical-political contexts; the expansion of education in U.S. and the world (especially to diverse groups, including poor/working classes, girls/women, racial/ethnic minorities, language minorities, disabled/special needs, immigrants); schools as social organizations; education as an institution interconnected to other societal institutions (esp., family, economy, politics, religion, etc); un/equal education opportunity and achievement; family background and school achievement; sexual harassment in schooling; school bullying/cyber bullying; school cheating scandals; college costs and student debt; education and stratification; cultural vs. structural approaches to explaining unequal educational attainment; the impact of race, gender, class (RGC), ethnicity, language, accent, residence, citizenship, immigrant status, disability and other stratifying relations in education and schooling from pre-K, elementary, middle, and high schools to community colleges, public and private 4 year colleges, and research universities, including teaching-learning, schooling experiences, opportunities/barriers, achievement; teacher training, professionalization, and expectations; student tracking, ability grouping; student & teacher activism; school funding; contest vs sponsored mobility; comparisons of U.S. to other countries’ education systems, access by RGC+, T-scores; higher education administration; debates about NCLB, Race to the Top, Common Core, Dream Act, charter schools, at-risk schools, faith based schools, Afrocentric schools, and for profit schools.

      Spotlight on The 1960s: We also examine the impact and legacies of diverse social movements on education, especially movements of the 1960s when many students, Hippies, women, disabled, special needs, White European Americans, Black African Americans, Latinos/as, Asian Americans, Native/American Indians, LGBTQ, welfare recipients, language minorities, immigrants/migrants, and others protested in/outside of classrooms, schools, colleges/universities. For questions, contact Prof. Barnett bmbarnet@illinois.edu)

     

     

  • Spring 2016 Course EPS 421 Diversity in Racial and Ethnic Families

    Spring 2016 Racial and Ethnic Diversity in Families Course

    Professor: Dr. Bernice Barnett, Email: bmbarnet@illinois.edu

    4 Hours Credit Graduate section A:

    EPS 421: #47206     SOC 421: #47210    HDFS 424: #47209   AFRO 421: #47208

    3 Hours Credit Undergraduate section B:

    EPS #33093    SOC 421 #33098    HDFS 424 #33097    AFRO 421 #33095

     Tuesday, 1-2:50pm; Room 323 Education Bldg

     

    Course Description:

    This combined Graduate and Advanced Undergraduate (Juniors, Seniors only) 400-level social foundations course is a sociological examination of diversity in racial-ethnic families, which are the foundations of education. Understanding how race, gender, class, ethnicity, disability, sexuality, language, immigrant status, and other stratifying relations in society influence diversity in families is important, especially for teacher preparation and educational policies because families generally are the first agents of education, learning, and socialization of children before they enter schools because family background is related to school achievement. In addition, relationships among students/parents/families in homes and teachers/administrators/staff in classrooms/schools/colleges/universities can impact educational achievement. Moreover, local state, regional, and global population demographic are changing racially/ethnically; therefore,  families, educators, the public, and policymakers in schools, colleges, and major societal institutions need to be prepared for the racial-ethnic demographic shifts in the US. The primary objectives of this social foundational course are: (1) to introduce, survey, and evaluate major sociological theories, approaches, concepts, research, questions, debates, issues, and data on diversity in  racial ethnic families; (2) to develop/strengthen research and analytical skills, especially by critically examining the reality vs. the images, ideals and myths about “typical” racial-ethnic minority and majority families and the social constructions of families as  “deviate” vs ”normal;” (3) to foster an awareness and understanding of dimensions/patterns of diversity both across and within  racial ethnic families in the U.S. and the basis of racial ethnic diversity globally; (4) to consider how families are interconnected to education, economy, politics, religion, and other social institutions; (5) to examine how families are agents of education and how children from diverse family backgrounds with varying home cultures, resources, compositions, and environments come of age, grow up, develop identities, experience schooling, achieve in education, react to racial-ethnic differences/similarities, and live/learn/work cooperatively and democratically in a multiracial U.S. and global society.

                    This course analyzes family diversity both across and within  these U.S. racial ethnic groups: Black African American, Latino/a American, Asian & Pacific American, Native American as well as White European American and Socio-Religious Ethnic Groups (such as Catholic, Baptist, Mormon, Amish, Jewish, Muslim). To a lesser extent, we explore the nature and basis of racial ethnic diversity, inequality, and relations in families globally in periphery, semi-periphery, and core regions of the world-economy (such as China, Mexico, Nigeria, Japan, Ghana, Russia, Israel, Kenya, Australia, India, Pakistan, S. Africa, Germany, Iraq, Britain, Cuba, France, Haiti, Jamaica, Ireland). In learning about, analyzing, and discussing diversity in racial ethnic families, class participants will consider the strengths, resiliency, and contributions of diverse families and their societal, historical, contemporary, and future opportunities and challenges.

    Course Readings:

    Diversity in Families by Maxine Baca Zinn, et al and choice selections of coming of age in diverse families books, including: President Barack Obama's Dreams From my Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance; Frank McCourt's Angela's Ashes; Amy Tan's The Joy Luck Club; Sandra Cisneros's House on Mango Street, among others.

  • 2016 Environmental Education Seasonal Jobs - Champaign County Forest Preserve District

    Champaign County Forest Preserve District

    Museum & Education Department - HLIC

    2016 Seasonal Positions

     

    Review of applications for the following positions will begin February 26, 2016. To apply, complete online application at www.ccfpd.org/About/employment.html. For more information please visit www.ccfpd.org or contact Pam Leiter, Education Department Assistant Director, at 217-896-2455 or pleiter@ccfpd.org.

     

    Seasonal Naturalist:                                                                            

    Main Duties:

    Teach natural history programs for children grades pre-k to 12 at Forest Preserve sites and in local schools Assist with special events and public programs Complete short term assignments for the growth of the District Education programs Assist with daily operation of the Interpretive Center Assist with maintenance of education reptiles and fish Must be available to work occasional weekends and evenings

     

    Hours:

    This is a part-time seasonal position (approx. 15-30 hours/week) available from April 18 to Nov. 8. The primary work location is Homer Lake Forest Preserve, with some work at Lake of the Woods. Pay: $9.50-$11.00/hr.

     

    Nature Day Camp Educators                                                                                                                              

    Main Duties:

    Teach Eco-Adventures summer day campsConduct other educational programs for youth and adultsAssist with daily operation of the Interpretive CenterAssist with special programs and eventsMust be available to work occasional weekends and evenings

     

    This is a part-time seasonal position (approx. 30 hours/week) available from June 1 through August 5. Several positions available. The primary work location is Homer Lake Forest Preserve, with some work at Lake of the Woods. Pay: $9.50-$11.00/hr.

     

    Campground Naturalist                                                                                                                                       

    Main Duties:

    Develop and conduct naturalist programs at the Middle Fork River Forest Preserve campground Must be available to work weekends

     

    This is a part-time seasonal position (approx. 26 hours/week), mid-May through early September. The primary work location is Middle Fork River Forest Preserve. Pay: $12.50-$13.50/hr.

  • “Gaze-Informed Information Foraging Models for Imagery Analysis ”

    Gaze-Informed Information Foraging Models for Imagery Analysis 

    Laura A. McNamara
    Sandia National Laboratories Albuquerque, NM

    Tuesday, January 26
    12:30 – 2:00
    210A Education Building

     In this talk, I will discuss how and why Sandia National Laboratories employs cognitive neuroscientists, human factors psychologists, and even an anthropologist (me!) to study visual cognition, visual inspection, and information foraging problems in the RF-heavy world of Synthetic Aperture Radar.  Using observations from interdisciplinary studies with intelligence groups, I’ll provide an introduction to the world of imagery analysis. These workflows are complicated amalgamations of visual inspection and information foraging behaviors, supported by a wide range of image products, viewing platforms, and tools. Of particular importance is the shift over the past couple of decades from so-called “hardcopy” to “softcopy” image analysis workflows: not only have the tools and techniques of image analysis changed, but analysts can access an increasingly diverse set of highly specialized image types.   As any of our team members can attest, expert imagery analysts are extremely good – and very fast – in detecting, evaluating, and extracting meaningful signatures from very large, diverse sets of imagery

    Over the past few years, we’ve come to appreciate the potential for eye tracking data to help us understand the chains of micro-decisions that describe an imagery analyst’s path through a geospatial information space.  The ability to associate gaze events with image features in dynamic, user-driven workflows could reveal how imagery analysts acquire the skills necessary to extract information efficiently and accurately from geospatial datasets.  In practice, however, it is extremely difficult to study gaze-contingent decision-making in realistic, user-driven workflows.  Therefore, we’ve recently embarked on a methodological/software development project to create tools that will enable us to integrate gaze data with complementary behavioral indicators of analytic decision-making. Ultimately, we’d like to enable researchers to establish a theoretically sound, well-characterized empirical foundation for the design of visual analytic systems, workflows, and training protocols. 

    For questions about this brownbag, please contact Professor Liz Stine-Morrow at eals@illinois.edu­

  • Be a Mentor: CU One-to-One Mentoring

    The One-to-One mentoring program matches willing adults with students in 3rd -7th grade.  The mentors receive an initial training and then come to the schools, during the school year, once a week to meet with their mentee.  The pairs play games, visit, eat lunch, and share together.  It is a hugely rewarding program that provides encouragement and support to kids who need it! Here is the link to our website: http://cu1to1.org/

     There is great information here for anyone who may be interested.  We are currently recruiting and training our next group of mentors, so if you know anyone who may be interested, please let us know!  The winter Mentor Trainings are Tuesday, January 26, 6:30-8:30 p.m. at the Urbana Free Library and Tuesday, February 9, 11:30-1:30 at the Mellon Administration Building (703 New St in Champaign). There are students on our waiting list at every school…won’t you consider being a part of the life of a child?

  • Should Testing be Abolished?

    In the first of four panel discussions this spring, experts from the Department of Curriculum and Instruction will discuss pressing issues of education today and into the future.  The first panel will discuss: current uses and abuses of standardized testing in the U.S.; effects of testing on diverse populations; teacher accountability and the new NCLB legislation; and international and national comparisons.  The panel of experts will include Sarah Lubienski, Sarah McCarthey, and Patrick Smith.  A discussion moderated by William Trent will follow the panelists’ presentations.  Please join us for this panel discussion on Friday, January 29, from 12:00 to 1:00 in room 22 Education.  Light lunch will be provided.    

  • Over 200 entries received for MLK Creative Expressions Competition

    The Center for Education in Small Urban Communities received more than 200 entries for this year’s Creative Expressions Competition. The winners and honorable mention recipients were announced at the Jan. 23 MLK Jr. Community Celebration at Krannert Center for the Performing Arts. Essays, poems, songs, short stories, drawings, paintings, mixed media, multimedia, and sculptures were all accepted art forms for the contest.

  • EPOL doctoral alumnus honored for dissertation

    Joel Malin, Ph.D. ’15 EPOL, was honored with the 2015 Outstanding Dissertation Award by the National Education Finance Conference for his dissertation, “Social Makeup and Public School Funding Effort and Distribution.”

  • Dr. Kern Alexander named Distinguished Educational Research Lecturer

    Excellence Professor Dr. Kern Alexander, a faculty member in the Department of Education Policy, Organization & Leadership, will be the 2016 Distinguished Educational Research Lecturer at the College of Education at Kansas State University.

  • Call for Proposals II: Illinois Learning Sciences Design Initiative (ILSDI)

    Phase II of the ILSDI seed-funding program is accepting proposals for projects that address research and development related to teaching and learning. Type I Projects (up to $15,000) will plan, develop and submit for large-scale external funding; Type II Projects (up to $40,000) will develop and/or pilot research, followed by submission for large-scale external funding. Deadline is Feb. 29, 2016.

     

    Contact: Elizabeth C. Niswander, Bureau of Educational Research

  • First-Friday Grad Write-A-Thons

    Want to meet your writing goals in a distraction-free setting? Whether you're working on a seminar paper, an article manuscript, or your thesis or dissertation, join us for a few hours of sustained writing in the company of your colleagues across the disciplines. Offered on the first Friday of each month in the English Building, room 156 & the Atrium, from 10am-3pm. We'll provide coffee and snacks; lunch is on your own. We hope to see you at the first Write-A-Thon on Feb. 5th! 

    View the semester schedule at http://www.cws.illinois.edu/workshop/

  • Univeristy Primary School Accepting Applications

    University Primary School is the University of Illinois, College of Education lab school, serving children preschool through fifth grade in a Reggio Emilia, project-based curriculum. Enrollment applications may be downloaded from the website https://education.illinois.edu/ups or picked up at the school office. Applications submitted by March 14, 2016 will be given first consideration for enrollment.

  • Critical Conversations Forum, Education Across Collegiate Borders: Developing New Perspectives

    An interdisciplinary forum, bringing together undergraduate and graduate students from across campus, who have an interest in education. This forum will include poster presentations as well as discussion sessions that bring together varying perspectives about educational research and practice. The forum will be held April 2, 2016 from 8:30 to 12:30 at the College of Education room 22.