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College of Education Announcements

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  • Scholar to share technology research, expertise during autism-related webinar

    Maya Israel, an assistant professor in the Department of Special Education, will be among a panel of webinar presenters who will share their leading-edge research and experience in developing technology supports to give students with autism access to STEM curricula and activities. The webinar will take place on Sept. 15 and is sponsored by the Office of Special Education Programs and STEM Initiatives in the U.S. Department of Education. 

  • Global Cafe - Uruguay, Costa Rica, Ecuador

    Join us Friday, September 16, from 1-2 p.m. in Room 42A for coffee, food and to learn more about our study abroad trips to Uruguay, Costa Rica, and Ecuador! Education students as well as international students will be sharing their personal experiences in these countries. OIP staff will be on hand to answer questions about all of the internatioal trips we are offering this year. 

  • Special Education scholars receive Zelinger Research Award

    Dr. Meghan Burke and doctoral student Cheug eun Lee are the recipients of the annual 2016-2017 Marissa Zelinger Research Award. The award is generously funded by Phillip C. and Beverly Goldstick in honor of their granddaughter, Marissa Zelinger, who was diagnosed with Rett syndrome, a disorder that affects communication.

  • Discover Studying Abroad Adventures via Global Café

    Enjoy a cup of coffee and learn about adventures in education from students who have studied abroad and international students on campus. Upcoming trips overseas include Indonesia, France, Australia, and South Africa.

  • "I Feel, Therefore I Am: A Look at Social-Emotional Development in Tajikistan" presented by Associate Professor Kristen Bub

    ­Department of Educational Psychology Brownbag Seminar Series
    Taking Educational Psychology Abroad

    "I Feel, Therefore I Am: A Look at Social-Emotional Development in Tajikistan"

    Thursday, November 17, 2016
    12:00 – 12:50
    22 Education Building

    In this presentation I will discuss recent research I have been doing in Tajikistan in collaboration with the Aga Kahn Foundation. In particular, I will describe the process we used to determine the cultural and contextual relevance of existing social-emotional measures and discuss the development of a new measure for use in rural Tajik communities. Additionally, I will summarize findings from a preliminary study of the impacts of Early Childhood Education on children’s language, mathematics and social skill development and highlight how these findings informed an ongoing longitudinal impact study in Tajikistan. Finally, I will illustrate how we have taken this research and are using it to create sustainable practice in Tajik schools in an attempt to improve classroom quality across early childhood.

  • Special Education scholar receives IES grant

    Hedda Meadan-Kaplansky, an associate professor in the Department of Special Education, is a principal investigator in a new federally funded research project that will involve developing and testing an app designed for parents with young children with disabilities and challenging behaviors, which can place stressful demands on families.

  • Global Café - Indonesia and Singapore!

    Join the Office of International Programs this Friday at 1:00 p.m. in Room 42A for our Global Café featuring Indonesia and Singapore! Students will share their experiences and photos from previous trips as well as first hand information given from international students. Don't miss out on free coffee and food! 

  • Passport Workshop with FREE passport photos!

    The Office of International Programs is offering a series of Passport Workshops during the Fall semester. The first workshop will be THIS Wednesday, September 21 from 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. in Illini Hall Room 23. Students will have the opportunity to complete their passport application as well as get a FREE passport photo made! Registration for these workshops is required. 

  • Betty Trummel to Continue Alumni Speaker Series

    BETTY TRUMMEL is scheduled to speak at the second session of the Office of Advancement's Alumni Speaker Series on Friday, October 28 from 12:00-1:00 p.m. in the Education Building, Room 22. Snakcs will be provided!

    Betty Trummel has 35 years of elementary classroom experience. She earned her BS in elementary education, and a master's degree in science, outdoor education. She is a recipient of the Presidential Award for Excellence in Science Teaching. Three Antarctic deployments provided Betty the opportunity to work alongside outstanding science researchers. Additionally, Betty has coordinated teacher exchange programs in Sweden and has traveled to Zambia to model literacy instruction to teachers and students.

  • C&I professors to collaborate on NSF-funded grant

    Emma Mercier and Luc Paquette, both assistant professors in the Department of Curriculum & Instruction, have received a $1.35 million National Science Foundation Cyberlearning and Future Learning Technologies grant for a study that will explore how tools to manage the teaching of collaborative activities can be developed and used to support collaborative problem-solving in core engineering courses.

  • Professor researching Hispanic students in STEM via NSF grant

    Eboni Zamani-Gallaher, a professor in the Department of Education Policy, Organization & Leadership, will be the principal investigator in a study that seeks to advance knowledge beyond what is already known about underrepresented students studying in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math). The nearly two-year research project, funded in the amount of nearly $300,000 by the National Science Foundation, will begin early next year.

  • Campus awarding social justice scholarships

    The Campus Faculty Association will award up to five $1,000 scholarships to undergraduate students at the University of Illinois’ Urbana campus who demonstrate a commitment to social justice in the community. Applicants’ social justice work may take many forms, including volunteer or paid work performed through nonprofit organizations, but can include less formally structured activities.

  • Copyright and Author’s Rights Workshop

    Copyright Librarian Sara Benson, LLM, JD, is hosting a workshop about Copyright and Author’s Rights on Thursday, October 6 from 2 to 3 p.m. in Room 314 of the Main Library.  You can register for the session at this link, but you may also attend without prior registration:  http://illinois.edu/calendar/list/4068. This informal session will cover what rights you own in your own academic work and how to protect those rights when negotiating with publishers.  If you cannot attend the session, but would like to chat, contact Sara at srbenson@illinois.edu

  • University Primary School to hold open house Oct. 19

    University Primary School, the laboratory school of the College of Education, will host an open house for the community on Wednesday, Oct. 19, at Children’s Research Center, 51 Gerty Drive, Champaign.

  • College of Education names new associate dean

    Dr. Gabrielle Allen began her tenure Oct. 3 as associate dean of research and research education and director of the Bureau of Educational Research at the College of Education at Illinois.

  • Global Cafe: South Africa!

    Join the Office of International Programs Friday, October 7 at 1PM for our Global Cafe highlighting South Africa! This event will provide first hand information regarding the trip from students that participated in previous years as well as international students. FREE food and drink will be provided. See you there!  

  • Annual Goldstick Family Lecture in the Study of Communication Disorders

     

    Enlisting Parents as Therapists: A Distance-Delivered, Parent-Implemented Language Intervention for Individuals with Developmental and Intellectual Disabilities

    Thursday, October 27, 2016

    4:00-5:30 p.m.

    Beckman Institute, 405 N. Mathews Ave., Urbana, IL 61801

    Guest Scholar and Speaker: Dr. Leonard Abbeduto, University of California, DavisDirector, UC Davis MIND Institute and Tsakopoulos-Vismara Endowed Chair, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, School of Medicine

    Dr. Abbeduto's research focuses on the development of language across the lifespan in individuals with neurodevelopmental disorders. His current projects focus on the factors accounting for variation in the course of language in children, adolescents, and young adults with fragile X syndrome, autism, and Down syndrome.

  • EPOL Online EdD Information Session

    College of Education Faculty & Staff are invited to attend this session to get information on this new degree program and engage in Q & A.

    Wednesday November 2, 2016

    12:00 – 1:00

    Room 22 Education

    A light lunch will be served. Feel free to brown bag. 

  • Celebrating the life of Dick Williams (1914-2016)

    The Illinois School of Architecture will hold a gathering in Chicago to celebrate the life of former architecture professor A. Richard "Dick" Williams, who passed away on May 27 in Tucson, Ariz.

     

  • Cope, Kalantzis collaborating on NSF-funded study

    Professor Bill Cope of the Department of Education Policy, Organization & Leadership (EPOL) will be the principal investigator of a two-year study funded by the National Science Foundation in the amount of $550,000. EPOL professor and former Education at Illinois dean Mary Kalantzis is one of five scholars who will also participate in the interdisciplinary study—“Assessing Complex Epistemic Performance in Online Learning Environments”—which will develop online software tools to assess and offer feedback to learners in the medical field, individuals who must communicate complex scientific and technical information.

  • Global Café - Spain & Morocco

    Join the Office of International Programs for our Global Café showcasing our trips to Spain and Morocco! The event will take place Friday, October 14 at 1:00 p.m. in Room 42A. Students that attended previously as well as international students will present information about the trips. FREE food and drink will be provided. 

  • Youth Literature Festival Booth: "Everyone Can Be Part of the Story: Accessing the Literacy Tree" - (Adapted Activities and Resources for Children With and Without Disabilities, Parents, & Professions)

    Please plan to attend the Youth Literature Festival on October 22.  You are welcome to visit the booth created by Dr. Cheryl Light Shriner of the  Department of Special Education and several college students.  They will offer adapted story materials, props, and a hands-on interactive activity area for children with and without disabilities and a resource table for educators and parents.  Teachers, parents, and children are all encouraged to come and try out the materials and activities.  This booth area provides college students the opportunity to expand their skills in adapting literature and literacy materials for a wide range of abilities that children have and also the opportunity to interact with children, parents, and professionals.  Children enjoy the activities. Parents and teachers have mentioned in the past that the resources provided give them new ideas and materials that can be implemented in their homes or classrooms immediately.

  • Global Café - South Africa and England!

    Join the Office of International Programs for our Global Café showcasing our trips to South Africa and England! The event will take place Friday, October 21 at 1:00 p.m. in Room 42A. Students that attended previously as well as international students will present information about the trips. FREE food and drink will be provided. 

  • Multiple tenure-track positions – hiring for Fall 2017

    The College of Education at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign is hiring!  A nationally ranked top-25 college, we are searching for collaborative and dedicated new tenure-track faculty members.  We provide competitive salaries and full benefits, exceptionally strong support for research, and multiple opportunities for collaboration within the College as well as with departments across campus. We are known for our groundbreaking research, innovative approaches to teaching, and service to the global community. The College is comprised of four academic departments: Curriculum & Instruction; Educational Psychology; Education Policy, Organization & Leadership; and Special Education; with approximately 600 undergraduates and 600 graduate students enrolled annually.

    Please click on the position title for full position announcements and application information. We are seeking colleagues for the following positions:

    Department of Curriculum & Instruction

    Assistant/Associate Professor of Science Education–Deadline November 15

    Department of Educational Psychology

    Assistant/Associate Professor of Social-Emotional Development – Deadline December 1
    Open Rank Professor of Statistics and Quantitative Methods (2 positions) – Deadline December 15

    Department of Education Policy, Organization & Leadership

    Assistant/Associate Professor of Economics of Education – Deadline December 5
    Assistant/Associate Professor of Educational Administration – Deadline December 1

    Department of Special Education

    Open Rank Professor in Autism and Developmental Disabilities – Deadline November 15
    Open Rank Professor of Early Intervention/Early Childhood Special Education (ECSE) – Deadline November 15

    The University of Illinois is an Affirmative Action-Equal Opportunity Employer www.inclusiveillinois.illinois.edu. The University of Illinois conducts criminal background checks on all job candidates upon acceptance of a contingent offer.

    The U of I is an EEO Employer/Vet/Disabled www.inclusiveillinois.illinois.edu

  • Moore, Perez honored by Illinois State Board of Education

    Lila Moore and Victor Perez have received Those Who Excel awards from the Illinois State Board of Education for their work with SOAR (Student Opportunities for After-School Resources), an afterschool volunteer tutoring program that provides literacy support and homework help to emergent Latina/o bilingual/biliterate students in grades 2-5. The two will be honored with awards of merit Oct. 22 at the Bloomington-Normal Marriott Hotel, with Perez traveling to the event to accept the award on behalf of SOAR.

  • "Stability and Change in Chinese Education" presented by Professor Emeritus Richard C. Anderson

    Stability and Change in Chinese Education

    presented by Professor Emeritus Richard C. Anderson

    Thursday, October 27, 2016
    12:00 – 12:50
    22 Education Building

    Economic and social change have proceeded at breathtaking pace in China since the end of the Cultural Revolution in the late 1970s. Education has been changing, too, but I think at a much slower pace. I will offer my impressions of Chinese education and show two video clips of Chinese children responding to a new learner-centered pedagogy far different from standard Chinese instruction.

  • A question for College's 'Those Who Excel' honoree

    Prior to the Oct. 22 Those Who Excel/Teacher of the year banquet in Normal, Ill., The News-Gazette asked some of the honorees: What does it mean to excel as an educator in today’s climate? Victor Perez, who coordinates the SOAR program, said that educators must continue to identify the most pressing needs in schools and communities, and that collaborations and partnerships are keys to success.

  • 2016 Graduate Student Wellness Fair

    It’s halfway through the semester…and grad school just got real.

    It can be easy to forget to take care of yourself as the semester moves full speed ahead, but there are many campus resources to help you do just that.

    Do you have questions about McKinley Health Center, Student Insurance, the Counseling Center, work-life balance, self-care, campus safety, managing stress, or financial planning?

    Stop by the Graduate Student Wellness Fair to find answers!

    Wednesday, November 9
    Noon – 2 p.m.
    Illini Union, room 104

     

  • Business Leadership Conference

    Want to build leadership skills while on campus that will prepare you to be successful in your career? Today’s workforce is more diverse than ever due to globalization and changes in employee demographics. Those who lead inclusively will be the most innovative, impactful, and successful. Learn how to listen, talk, and manage at the Business Leadership Conference: Leading in a Diverse Workplace.

  • Global Cafe: France!

    Join the Office of International Programs for our Global Café showcasing our trip to France! The event will take place Friday, November 4, at 1:00 p.m. in Room 42A. Students that attended previously as well as international students will present information about the trips. FREE food and drink will be provided. 

  • Final Passport Workshop!

    Join the Office of International Programs for our last Passport Workshop of the semester tomorrow Tuesday, November 1, at 3:00 p.m. in Wohlers Hall 70A/B. Students will have the opportunity to complete their passport application as well as get a FREE passport photo made! Registration for these workshops is required. 

  • Submissions for Undergraduate Research Symposium Now Being Accepted

    The Office of Undergraduate Research is now accepting submissions for the April 27, 2017, Undergraduate Research Symposium. The symposium is the signature event of the campus's Undergraduate Research Week, which takes place April 23-29 and brings together students, faculty, and staff from all disciplines.

  • Annual free book jackets & posters giveaway

    It is time once again for the SSHEL book jacket and poster giveaway!

    This year the festivities take place the week of November 7th through the 11th in the Social Sciences, Health, and Education Library (100 Main Library). The giveaway will be going on during all hours that SSHEL is open.

    The fun begins in the School Collection Room (Room 112) at 9:00 a.m. on Monday, November 7th. Come and pick up free posters, book jackets, and more!  Posters and book jackets are a great resource for:

    - decorating your classroom or office

    - book talk visual aids

    - art projects

    - library displays

    - creative writing (have students predict or create a story from the picture/title and write about it)

    Please share this information with anyone who might be interested. We will be giving the posters and book jackets away until they are all gone.

    If you have any questions about this event, please call the Social Sciences, Health, and Education Library (217-244-1864) or email Nancy O'Brien (npobrien@illinois.edu).

  • The role of input in bilingual development

    The role of input in bilingual development

    Drawing on two studies, conducted at an international school in France, which explore the role of input in the development of dual language proficiency (French & English), numerous factors are considered for children’s balanced dual language acquisition. These include the quantity and quality of current and cumulative input and output, as well as factors related to social contexts, such as SES, language choice with peers, language used for school instruction, language attitudes and cultural identity.

    Dr. Cathy Cohen (Lyons, France), Monday, Nov. 7th 12:00pm- 1:30pm- Room 22, (Lower Level), Education Bldg. [1310 South Sixth Street, Champaign, IL 61820]

  • Final Global Café: Australia, Indonesia and Argentina

    Join the Office of International Programs for our final Global Café of the semester Friday, November 11 at 1:00 p.m. in room 42A! This week we are featuring Australia, Indonesia and Argentina. We will have student speakers sharing what they learned on the trips as well as international students giving first hand tips. FREE food and drinks will be provided.

  • Local Girls Scouts Seeking Intern for STEM Program

    Girl Scouts of Central Illinois is accepting applications for a STEM program assistant intern for Champaign and Mahomet. The part-time volunteer position will run from late January to May of 2017.

  • NILOA Visiting Communications Coordinator Position Open

    The Department of Education Policy, Organization and Leadership (EPOL) seeks a Visiting Communications Coordinator.  This position will assist with the development and implementation of a dissemination plan of communications media and materials as needed under the Lumina Foundation for Education grant (National Institute for Learning Outcomes Assessment [NILOA]). The Communications Coordinator will manage day-to-day communications responsibilities which include, but are not limited to managing multiple websites and social networks, creating digital communication strategies, and assisting the Director and Assistant Director in developing communication initiatives for NILOA.

    Please click on the position title (Visiting Communications Coordinator) for full position announcement and application information.

  • Spring 2017 Course Offerings from Human Resource Development

    The Human Resource Development (HRD) program at Department of Educational Policy and Organizational Leadership is offering the following courses in Spring 2017. All courses are open for registration. For further inquiries please contact Dr. W. David Huang at wdhuang@illinois.edu.

    - HRD 414 Facilitation Skills (Wednesday, 9-11:50 am)

    - HRD 415 Diversity in the Workplace (Monday, 1-3:50 pm)

    - HRD 440 Work Analysis (Wednesday, 2nd 8 weeks, 7-9 pm online)

    - HRD 470 Design of Learning Systems (Monday, 1-3:50 pm)

    - HRD 480 Foundations Online Teaching and Learning (Tuesday, 1-3:50 pm)

    - HRD 509 Advanced Theories in HRD (Wednesday, 9-11:50 am)

    - HRD 535 Consulting in HRD (Thursday, 1-3:50 pm)

    - HRD 536 International HRD (Tuesday, 9-11:50 am)

    - HRD 585 Program Evaluations (Wednesday, 1st 8 weeks, 7-9 pm online)

  • OCCRL director selected as ACPA Diamond Honoree

    Eboni Zamani-Gallaher was selected as an American College Personnel Association Diamond Honoree, which recognizes individuals who have made sustained contributions to higher education and to students affairs, ultimately enhancing students’ experiences. Zamani-Gallaher is the director of the Office of Community College Research and Leadership and a professor of higher education in the Department of Education Policy, Organization & Leadership.

  • Special Education grad student selected as Research Live! finalist

    Jamie Pearson, a graduate student in the Department of Special Education, was selected as a finalist at the 2016 Research Live! competition at the Krannert Center for the Performing Arts. The event is sponsored by the Graduate College at Illinois.

  • Founding director of OCCRL receives award

    Gutgsell Professor Emerita Debra Bragg received the Howard R. Bowen Distinguished Career Award Nov. 11 at the annual Association for the Study of Higher Education conference. The award is given to those who have played major roles in advancing higher education through distinguished scholarship, leadership, and service.

     

  • Spring Class (Dual Mode) EPS 411

    EPS 411   School and Society (Nicholas C. Burbules`)

    Spring 2017 (Tuesdays 4-6)

    This course will be taught in “dual mode,” and is available for both on campus and online registration. All students will participate in the live Tuesday sessions, plus additional online (asynchronous) sessions. It is taught on an 8 week timetable.

    Theme: Educating for Social Justice

    What is “social justice” education? Why do some people think it is an important educational aim? Why are other people skeptical about it?

    What does a social justice orientation mean for teaching and learning, and what special challenges does it pose to teachers and students?

  • DELTA faculty seeking students interested in tech in learning environments

    Faculty members of the Digital Environments for Learning, Teaching & Agency (DELTA) are encouraging undergraduate and graduate students who are interested in studying digital learning environments to apply for the DELTA program by Dec. 1.

     

  • SPRING, 2017 EPS 590/MEDIA 570 Pro-seminar in Postcolonial Theory and Methodology

    Within the past decade and a half or so, there has been a steady expansion of scholarship calling attention to the rethinking of center-periphery relations between the third world and the first world. This body of scholarship—most often identified with literature studies, but which has expanded well beyond to other disciplines in the humanities and social sciences—has come to be known as postcolonial theory. Proponents of postcolonial theory have sought to address a wide range of topics related to the historical and contemporary relationship between metropolitan and periphery countries as well as the spatio-temporal impact of colonial and neo-colonial relations on dominant and subordinated groups in the metropolitan countries themselves. These topics include the historical and geographical evolution of colonial relations and post-independence developments in countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean; patterns of identity formation, cultural representation, translation and cross-cultural connection between the metropole and the periphery in disciplinary areas such as literature, popular culture, music and art; and, concerns bearing upon the redefinition of the nation state in the light of globalization or the intensification and rapid movement of cultural and economic capital across national borders. Postcolonial scholars have also foraged into the area of research methods insisting on a critique of methodological nationalism, the foregrounding of interdisciplinarity and the critical integration of scholarly methods across social science and humanities paradigms.

    This course is intended as an overview of the major currents of thought in this emergent body of scholarly work.  After considering some preliminary issues of the history, definition and terms of reference of postcolonial theory, we will explore the major themes and substantive theoretical and methodological claims and interventions of postcolonial theorists.  This course should have broad appeal to students pursuing critical studies in the humanities, social sciences, education, the communications fields and in the emerging field of globalization theory.  Every effort will be made in the course to explore interdisciplinary connections between postcolonial theory and other related bodies of thought such as cultural studies, postmodernism, globalization studies, feminist theory, and research in the areas of development and dependency theory and modernization studies.

  • Postcolonial Theory for All Scholars

    This seminar is intended as an overview of the major currents of thought in this emergent body of scholarly work. It should have broad appeal to students pursuing critical studies in the humanities, social sciences, education, the communications fields and in the emerging field of globalization theory.

  • Winter break Library hours

    The Library will have significantly reduced hours during winter break. All libraries on campus will be closed December 23-January 2.

    The Social Sciences, Health, and Education Library (SSHEL) will be open regular Fall semester hours through the end of finals, closing on Friday December 16 at 6:00pm. We will be closed December 23 through January 2.  On December 19-22, January 3-6, and January 9-12, SSHEL will be open 8:30am-5pm.  On Friday, January 13, the Library opens at 1pm.  The Library is closed on weekends during winter break. Spring semester hours resume on Tuesday, January 17. 

    If you need Library materials or services for your research or studies, please plan ahead.

    For a complete list of library hours during winter break, see: http://www.library.illinois.edu/#hoursloc

    Enjoy the winter break!

  • Spring 2017 EPS 420 'Sociology of Education' & SOC 420 'Sociology of Education'

    Spring 2017 

    EPS 420"Sociology of Education" Graduate 4 hrs Section A: crn# 33100 
    Undergraduate 3 hrs Section B: crn#64898

    SOC 420 "Sociology of Education" Graduate 4 hrs Section A: crn# 33102     
    Undergraduate 3 hrs Section B: crn#64900

    Course Credit: 3 or 4 Hours Credit

    Days, Time, Location: Tue, 10:00-11:50 a.m.; 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 2017 EPS 421/SOC 421 'Racial and Ethnic Diversity in Families' course

    Spring 2017 EPS 421: Racial and Ethnic Diversity in Families Course

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

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

    4 Hours Credit Graduate section A:

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

    3 Hours Undergraduate section B:

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

    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). We also examine what sociologist Gerhard Lenski termed "the religious factor," which creates diversity in families in the U.S. and around the world.

    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.  We also examine what sociologist Gerhard Lenski termed "the religious factor," which creates diversity in families in the U.S. and around the world.

  • EPS 199: Qualitative Research & Leadership in Global Engagement Course SP '17

    There are a limited number of seats left in EPS 199: Qualitative Research & Leadership in Global Engagement!  EPS 199 can be taken for 2 or 3 credits by UIUC students in Spring 2017.  UIUC students will be paired with students from the Honours College of the University of Macau, who will be studying abroad at UIUC for the semester. Teams of students will work together to design and implement a qualitative research project, which they will present at the Undergraduate Research Symposium at the end of the semester.  The course will also explore issues related to global leadership.  This course meets Tuesdays and Thursdays from 4-4:50. Feel free to email Jenn at raskaus2@illinois.edu with any questions.  

  • Call for submissions for fourth annual CREA Conference

    Hosted by the College of Education, the Center for Culturally Responsive Evaluation and Assessment (CREA) will hold its fourth international conference Sept. 27-29, 2017, in Chicago. CREA is accepting proposals, papers, and roundtable suggestions through Feb. 20, 2017. Learn more about the conference and about the call for submissions.