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  • Spring 2019 | EPS 420 Sociology of Education—Space Available!

    EPOL Social Foundations in Education Course for Masters and LES Students

    EPS 420 Sociology of Education, Tuesday, 1-2:50pm, Room 323 Educ Bldg

    4-Hours Credit EPS 420 section A Graduate Students: crn #33100

    3-Hours Credit EPS 420 section B Undergraduate Students: crn #64898

    Description:

    EPS 420 Sociology of Education can be used to fulfill the EPOL social foundations requirement for Master’s students and advanced hours requirements for Learning and Education Studies (LES) Undergraduate students. EPS 420 is a sociological examination of education and schooling in society, including major sociological theories, concepts, assumptions, questions, research, and on-going and current issues/debates related to education/schooling and race/gender/class diversity in educational achievement. One of the highlights is an examination of the impact of high school and college student-led protests on campuses (such as the Mexican American high school walk-outs and the free speech movement at University of California at Berkeley) and the impact and legacy of major 1960s social movements (such as African American, Mexican American, Asian American, Native American civil rights, women/feminist, student anti-war/Vietnam protests, special education, disability rights, LGBTQ, language minority rights, immigrant and migrant farm worker rights, anti-poverty) on American education/schooling today.

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • 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 420/SOC 420 Sociology of Education —Seats are Available!

    Spring 2017     EPS/SOC Social Foundations Course—Seats are Available!

    EPS 420-SOC 420   Sociology of Education, Tue 10-11:50am, Rm 323 Educ, 3 or 4 Hours

    Professor: Bernice McNair Barnett, Ph.D. (Sociology)    Email: bmbarnet@illinois.edu

    EPS 420-Section A (4 Hours): crn# 33100  & Section B (3 Hours): crn#64898

    SOC 420-Section A (4 Hours): crn# 33102  & Section B (3 Hours): crn#64900

    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. Topics include: (1) major sociological theories, concepts, questions, issues, research methods and studies related to education/schooling; (2) significant eras of changes/reforms in U.S. education/schooling within changing social, historical, political, national, and international contexts; (3) the expansion of education in U.S. and the world, especially to diverse  groups based upon race, ethnicity, gender,  socio-economic class, residence, language, disability, special needs, religion, citizenship, nationality,  immigrant statuses; (4) schools as social organizations  in which teachers and students have roles/expectations/interactions and education as an institution interconnected to other societal institutions (esp., family, economy, politics, religion, etc); (5) family background/cultures/resources, school climates/cultures/resources,  and cultural vs. structural approaches to understanding educational stratification and attainment; (6) the impact of race, gender, class + (RGC+), ethnicity, language, residence,  disability, special needs, sexual orientation, citizenship,  nationality, immigrant status,  and other stratifying relations in society and in teaching/ learning experiences  from pre-K to higher education; (7) teacher training, professionaliz-ation,  expectations and  student tracking, ability grouping, expectations; (8) contest vs sponsored mobility in comparisons of education in the U.S. and other countries of the world; (9)  on-going/current debates about NCLB, Race to the Top, Common Core, Every Student Succeeds Act, Dream Act, charter schools, faith based schools, for profit schools, etc; and (10) teacher and student activism in society and education,  especially our “Spotlight on The 1960s!”  section in which we examine the education impact and legacies of diverse 1960s movements led by teachers (such as literacy pioneer Septima Poinsette Clark),  students (such as Mario Savio at Berkeley),   Hippies, Vietnam anti-war activists, women, people with disabilities and special needs, White European Americans, Black African Americans, Latinos/as, Asian Americans, Native/American Indians, LGBTQ, welfare recipients, language minorities, migrants, immigrants, and others who protested in/outside of classrooms, schools, and colleges/universities.

    About the Professor

    Professor Barnett earned her Ph.D. in Sociology. She is an historical sociologist and Associate Professor in the Departments of Educational Policy, Organization, & Leadership (EPOL), Sociology, and Gender and Women's Studies at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She has presented research on the 1960s and social movements at international forums in the U. S., Canada, and Germany and has received various awards, including the Faculty Award for Excellence i n Teaching, Advising, and Research by the Council of Graduate Student in Education and Incomplete List of Teachers Ranked Excellent by Students at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. For questions, contact Professor Barnett (bmbarnet@illinois.edu).

  • 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)

  • Spring 2016 Faculty Development Panel Discussion Managing Your Digital Footprint as a Researcher

    Spring 2016 Faculty Development Panel Discussion

    Managing Your Digital Footprint as a Researcher

    "Getting Your Stuff Out There"

    Dr. Michael Twidale is a Professor of the Graduate School of Library and Information Science.

    "Options for Online Profiling"

    Dr. Rebecca Bryant currently leads the implementation of the Illinois Research Connections researcher information system on the Illinois campus.

    "Strategy / Don’t Get Overwhelmed"

    Dr. Lisa Hinchliffe is a Professor/Coordinator for Information Literacy Services and Instruction in the University Library.

    Friday, April 1, 2016 | 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM | College of Education, Room 242

    ~ A light lunch will be provided ~

    RSVP:  https://illinois.edu/fb/sec/6313810

     

  • 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.

  • Spring 2015 Course Offering: HRD 585 Program Evaluation

    Course Title: HRD 585 Program Evaluation

    Meeting Time: Thursdays from 1 pm to 4 pm, Spring 2015

    Course Instructor: Dr. Wenhao David Huang (wdhuang@illinois.edu)

    Course Description:

    This course prepares students to conceptualize and develop a comprehensive evaluation plan for various educational programming across disciplines and organizations. Upon completing the course, students will be able to:

    • Articulate the difference between research and evaluation
    • Develop concise evaluation purposes based on the need of the clients/stakeholders
    • Align evaluation questions according to the evaluation purposes
    • Design data collection instruments to answer the evaluation questions
    • Select data analysis approaches that are appropriate for the scope and intention of the evaluation
    • Develop evaluation budget and project management plan
    • Build reciprocal and productive relationships with stakeholders of the intended evaluation

    This course is open to all graduate students. For more information, feel free to contact Dr. Huang at wdhuang@illinois.edu.

     

     

  • Spring 2015 Course Announcement: CI 552 Qualitative Analysis and Writing

    Spring 2015

     

    CI 552 Qualitative (Analysis and) Writing

     

    CRN: 57745

    Mark Dressman, Instructor

    Wednesdays, 4:00-6:50 pm, Education 22

     

    Overview

    This course will focus on the analysis and “writing up” of qualitative research data from a wide variety of social science areas (social work; communications; writing studies; library information science, and other fields) and from multiple theoretical, methodological, and rhetorical perspectives. Topics will include:

     

    • the history and development of multiple approaches to qualitative writing over the last century;
    • four approaches to the analysis and interpretation of multiple forms of data (semiotic/structural/poststructural analysis; coding; conversation analysis; text and document analysis);
    • different styles of qualitative narrative (realist, autoethnographic [including action research], confessional, impressionist) and their rhetorical implications;
    • the use of social theory as a framing device;
    • the process of writing for publication in peer-reviewed journals

     

    The course is designed for advanced masters and mid-stage doctoral students in education and a range of applied social sciences interested in writing qualitatively for academic publication across a range of research and practitioner journals. Assignments will include weekly readings, an analytical project, three short writing assignments, and a more substantial writing project.

     

    Texts

    Rapley, T. (2008). Doing conversation, discourse, and document analysis. London: Sage.

    Dressman, M. (2008). Using social theory in educational research: A practical guide. London: Routledge.

    Selected book chapters and journal articles, to be announced.

     

    The Instructor

    Mark Dressman is a Professor in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction. He is a qualitative ethnographic researcher of school literacy, former co-editor of Research in the Teaching of English, and the author of multiple books, chapters, and journal articles on the theory and practice of qualitative and ethnographic research, including Using Social Theory in Educational Research (Routledge, 2008).

     

    For a copy of the preliminary syllabus, contact Mark Dressman at mdressma@illinois.edu

  • Spring 2015 Course Announcement: CI 501 Fundamentals of Curriculum Development

    Spring 2015 Course

     

    CI 501 Fundamentals of Curriculum Development

    Mark Dressman, Instructor

    Tuesdays, 4:00-6:50, 323 Education

     

    Catalog Description.

    Examines a variety of definitions of curriculum development; readings reflect current theories and research related to substantive issues in the field: how learning is influenced by stated goals of education, cultural background of the learners, structure of the school setting, competencies of teachers, psychological characteristics of the learners, and means of measuring student achievement.

     

    Course Overview

    The central goal of this course is to provide an introduction to past and current theories of curriculum as these are applied to the development of curriculum for specific students, subject areas, and age/grade levels. In the first section of the course, we will review a wide range of approaches to curriculum development, past and present, with an eye to developing a critical view of the implications, advantages, and challenges of each and extrapolating from them some basic principles of curriculum development and design. These approaches will include but are not limited to Critical Pedagogy; Community-Based/Service Learning; Standards-Based designs; Understanding by Design; multiple Constructivist approaches, including workshops; Project-Based Learning; Didaktik; Discipline-Based Arts Education; online and web-based approaches; and any other specific approaches that course participants might suggest.

     

    In the second section of the course, students will apply the critical framework extrapolated from our analysis of general curricular approaches to the analysis of a specific curriculum with which they are familiar, such as the literacy workshop, foreign language education, specific approaches to science or mathematics, or approaches to social education, and write a critical “interrogation” of the implications, advantages, and challenges posed by a particular curriculum.

     

    The third section of the course will become a workshop, in which students will take principles and ideas acquired in the first two sections of the course to rewrite and redesign a curricular approach to a particular area of interest to them professionally. The culminating activity of the course will be a curriculum fair, in which students will present their redesigned curriculum, along with an argument for why and how it improves on existing curricular approaches, to the class.

     

    Readings:

     

    Schiro, M.S. (2012). Curriculum theory: Conflicing vision and enduring concerns (2nd Ed.). Thousand Oakes, CA: Sage.

     

    Elmore, R. F. (2004). School reform from the inside out: Policy, practice, and performance. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Education Press.

     

  • Spring 2014 EPSY 590ESM Adult Literacy

    New Course: EPSY 590 ESM Advanced Seminar in Educational Psychology:

    Literacy is an important contributor to shaping adult development. At the same time, age-related changes in cognition engender certain changes in the nature of language processing and reading. This course will explore adult literacy as both a cause and an effect of adult development. Click headline to read more...

  • Spring 2014 Courses in Instructional Technology

    Click to read more about the Spring 2014 Courses in Instructional Technology...

  • Spring 2014 C&I courses in Teaching, Learning & Technology

    Learn more about Spring 2014 Courses offered in Teaching, Learning and Technology:

    • CI507 ATTENTION, LEARNING AND TECHNOLOGY 
    • CI499 CRITIQUES OF EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY
    • CI507 DESIGNING SIMULATIONS FOR TEACHING AND LEARNING
    • CI507 NEUROEDUCATION:  MIND, BRAIN, TEACHING AND LEARNING IN THE CLASSROOM
    • CI590 EQUITY & EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY
    • CI435 COMPUTER ASSISTED INSTRUCTION 

    Click post title for more information.

     

  • Spots Still Available for TEACH Academy, July 19-21

    This three-day interactive experience, presented by the Campus-Community Compact to Accelerate Social Justice, is designed to strengthen instructional practices using a lens that focuses on educational justice, equity, and inclusion.  

  • SPED's Stacy Dymond Awarded ISBE Funding for Illinois Center for Transition and Work

    Professors Stacy Dymond (Special Education) and David Strauser (College of AHS: Community Health Program) will create a state-wide training and technical assistance center that specifically focuses on transition from school to work for students with significant disabilities (e.g., intellectual disability, multiple disabilities, autism).

  • Meghan Burke

    SPED's Meghan Burke Appointed to The Arc Board of Directors

    The Department of Special Education's associate professor Meghan Burke has been selected to serve as a board member for The Arc, a non-profit organization that promotes and protects the human rights of people with intellectual and developmental disabilities and actively supports their full inclusion and participation in the community throughout their lifetimes.

  • SPED's Catherine Corr Awarded OpEd Project Public Voices Fellowship

    Congratulations to Catherine Corr, associate professor of Special Education, who has been awarded a 2022-23 OpEd Project Public Voices Fellowship.

  • SPED Professor Amber Ray Recipient of CEC's Early Career Publication Award

    Congratulations to Special Education assistant professor Amber Ray, who has been named the 2022 recipient of the Early Career Publication Award from Council for Exceptional Children Division for Research.

  • Alexandra Richmond

    SPED Graduate Student to Present at Research Live! Competiton.

    Special Education Ph.D. candidate Alexandra Richmond is among the 12 presenters for the Graduate College's annual celebration of research.

  • Shana Calhoun

    SPED Graduate Featured for Supporting Students in Need

    Shana Calhoun, '21 SPED, teaches Special Education at Rantoul Township High School.

  • Jessica Hardy and Catherine Corr

    SPED Faculty Awarded New $1.2M OSEP Grant

    Assistant professors Catherine Corr and Jessica Hardy are leading a project that has received significant funding from the Office of Special Education Programs.

  • SPED Doctoral Student James Lee Wins Research Award from CEC

    Congratulations to Special Education doctoral student James Lee, who is the recipient of the 2020 John Umbreit Doctoral Research Award (JUDRA) from the Council for Children with Behavioral Disorders (CCBD) division of the Council for Exceptional Children (CEC).

  • SPED Alumni Receive Prestigious CEC Awards

    Stacy McGuire and Courtney O'Grady recently received awards from the Division for Research of the Council for Exceptional Children.

  • Adele Miller

    Special Education Student Named IHSI Community Academic Scholar

    The Interdisciplinary Health Sciences Institute, with support from the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion has named 17 scholars to the cohort to work on projects that will address diverse community needs.

  • Special Education's Todd Lash Awarded Equity Fellowship from Computer Science Teacher's Association

    Special Education doctoral student Todd Lash has been named one of ten fellows in the CSTA's inaugural Equity Fellowship program, made possible in partnership with Microsoft and Pluralsight One.

  • Special Education's Nikki Adams Named to ECPC/DEC Leadership Cohort

    Nikki Adams, doctoral student in the Department of Special Education, has been accepted to the Early Childhood Personnel Center and Division for Early Childhood 2020 Early Childhood Intervention Leadership Cohort.

  • Associate professor Meghan Burke

    Special Education's Meghan Burke Named University Scholar

    Join us in congratulating Associate Professor Meghan Burke on being selected by the University of Illinois System as a 2020-21 University Scholar.

  • Special Education's Magen Rooney-Kron Wins 2019 AAIDD Research Interest Network Scholarship

    Magen Rooney-Kron, doctoral student in the Department of Special Education, has won a 2019 Research Interest Network Scholarship from the American Association on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (AAIDD).

  • Special Education seeking full-time lecturer

    The Department of Special Education is seeking a full-time (nine-month) lecturer to function as a University Practicum Supervisor in the Learning and Behavior Specialist I (LBSI) Initial Special Education Teacher Preparation Program. The successful applicant will work closely with LBSI teacher candidates and cooperating teachers in practicum placements.

    Learn more at https://careers.insidehighered.com/job/1336773/college-of-education-lecturer-special-education-f1700015-/.

  • 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.

  • Special Education scholar receives NSF funding

    Maya Israel, an assistant professor in the Department of Special Education, is the principal investigator of a research project funded by a grant from the National Science Foundation for $599,829. Cinda Heeren, a senior lecturer at the Department of Computer Science, and George Reese, director of the Office for Mathematics, Science, and Technology Education, will be co-principal investigators on the project.

  • 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.

  • Special Education's Amy Santos Named to the Illinois Interagency Council on Early Intervention

    Governor J.B. Pritzker has appointed professor Rosa Milagros (Amy) Santos to the statewide Illinois Interagency Council on Early Intervention. Congratulations to Dr. Santos on this honor.

  • Special Education Professor Emeritus Bob Henderson Passes Away

    It is with much sadness that we report the recent passing of our dear friend and colleague, Dr. Bob Henderson. He died peacefully in his sleep at age 94. As one of the true pioneers in the field of Special Education, he will be missed greatly. More information to come in the near future as plans are made to honor and remember Dr. Henderson.

  • Special Education head, student receive DEC awards

    Micki Ostrosky, head of the Department of Special Education, received the Division for Early Childhood Award for Mentoring. Jenna Weglarz-Ward, a Special Education doctoral student, joined Ostrosky as a DEC honoree, earning the J. David Sexton Student Award.

  • Special Education Graduate Student Association Hosts Spring 2022 Disability Film Festival

    The College of Education's Special Education Graduate Student Association invites you to celebrate March as Disability Awareness Month. Please join us for the Spring 2022 Disability Film Festival. This event will feature two movies and discussions with the filmmakers on two subsequent nights. Register today to be sent links to view the films, free of charge.

  • 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.

  • Special Education Department Seeking PhD Students for Five Programs

    Four new awards this fall from the Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP) make for five projects that the Special Education department is currently recruiting doctoral students to particpate in starting Fall 2020.

  • Hedda Meadan-Kaplansky

    Special Education Department Head Transition

    Our sincere gratitude and appreciation go out to Professor Micki Ostrosky for her many years of service as head of the Department of Special Education. While Dr. Ostrosky is stepping down from this role, she will remain committed to her outstanding scholarship within the department.

    Following an internal search, and with the recommendation of the Special Education faculty, Dean Jim Anderson has announced that Dr. Hedda Meadan-Kaplansky has accepted the offer to serve as Head of the Department of Special Education beginning July 16, 2021.

  • Special Education alumna named dean at Cal State Long Beach

    Shireen Pavri, Ph.D. ’99 Spec.Ed., has been named dean of the college of education at Cal State Long Beach.

  • Michelle Sands

    Special Education Alumna Michelle Sands Wins 2022 CEC-DR Student Research Award

    Congratulations to Department of Special Education alumna Michelle Sands for her Council for Exceptional Children Student Research Award in Mixed Methods Design.

  • Christopher Span

    Span Named Dean of Graduate School of Education at Rutgers

    Span received his Ph.D. from Illinois in 2001 and was a member of the faculty since 2003. He will begin his role as dean on July 1, 2024.

  • Spanish learners and Spanish heritage/native speakers needed for language study

    Noelia Sánchez-Walker is a graduate student in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at Illinois and works under the supervision of Professor Silvina Montrul. As part of his doctoral dissertation, he is investigating comprehension of Spanish sentences by Spanish speakers. For this purpose, he is recruiting second language learners of Spanish, native Speakers of Spanish who grew up in the U.S., and native speakers of Spanish from Spanish speaking countries to participate in research.

    The experiment lasts approximately 60 to 90 minutes. In exchange for research participants' time they will receive $10 per hour. Participation in his research will allow Sánchez-Walker to gain further understanding of factors that influence native and non-native Spanish speakers when they read or hear Spanish sentences, which in turn may help Spanish instructors develop more effective teaching methods.

    Those who are interested in participating can email Sánchez-Walker at sanche21@illinois.edu, and he will be in touch to set a time and date to meet in the Second Language Acquisition and Bilingualism Lab (SLAB) at the Foreign Language Building (FLB).

  • SOPS 5th Annual Postdoctoral Research Symposium

    We are the board of the Society of Postdoctoral Scholars (SOPS).  Currently, we are organizing our 5th Annual Postdoctoral Symposium, which will take place on February 6th, 2015.  We came by the College of Education office earlier this week to drop off a couple of flyers for the bulletin boards, and we were told to contact individual departments for distributing the symposium information through the listserv.  Could you please help us forward the announcement below to postdocs, graduate students, and faculty through the departmental mailing list?  Please feel free to contact us should you have additional comments or questions!  Thank you very much in advance!

    The registration for the 5th Annual Postdoctoral Research Symposium is now open!  The event will be held at the Beckman Institute on February 6th, 2015, and is open to all disciplines. The deadline for abstract submission and registration is January 16th, 2015. Audience will get to vote for outstanding presentations, and the chosen talk and poster finalists will be awarded cash prizes.  Several travel awards will also be provided for out-of-town presenters. Graduate student posters are also welcome!

    January 16th, 2015. Audience will get to vote for outstanding presentations, and the chosen talk and poster finalists will be awarded cash prizes.  Several travel awards will also be provided for out-of-town presenters. Graduate student posters are also welcome!

    Please help us spread the word about this symposium not only to the fellow researchers on campus, but also to the scholars beyond its boundaries! For more information and to register, please visit our website.

     

    SOPS Organizing Committee

    http://sops.beckman.illinois.edu

  • Social Sciences Symposium and Workshop

    Dear Educators,

    Please see these two events shared with us by Illinois Humanities, the state affiliate for the National Endowment for the Humanities. 

    Regards, 

    The EU Center at Illinois

  • Social Sciences, Health, and Education Library Winter Break Hours

    The Library will have significantly reduced hours during winter break. The Social Sciences, Health, and Education Library (SSHEL) will be open regular Fall semester hours through the end of finals, closing on Friday December 20 at 6:00pm. We will be closed December 21 through January 1. On January 2 & 3, and January 6 through January 17, SSHEL will be open 8:30am-5pm Monday through Friday. The Library is closed on weekends during winter break. Spring semester hours resume on Tuesday, January 21. If you need Library materials or services for your research or studies, please plan ahead.

  • Social Sciences, Health, and Education Library Survey

    We want to know what you think!

    Help us understand how you are using Social Sciences, Health, and Education Library (SSHEL) so we can assist you better!

    Below is a link to a survey about SSHEL.  The link is active from April 6th to April 17th.

    https://uiuc.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_cUYm4W6l1AI2IUl

    If you have any questions, please contact JJ Pionke at pionke@illinois.edu or Nancy O’Brien at npobrien@illinois.edu

    Thank you for taking the time to fill this out!

    SSHEL Library

  • Social Sciences, Health, and Education Library Survey

    Have your voice heard!

    Help us understand how you are using Social Sciences, Health, and Education Library (SSHEL) so we can assist you better!

    Below is a link to a survey about SSHEL.  The link is active until April 17th.  The survey will take no more than 10 minutes to complete.

    https://uiuc.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_cUYm4W6l1AI2IUl

    If you have any questions, please contact JJ Pionke at pionke@illinois.edu or Nancy O’Brien at npobrien@illinois.edu

    Thank you for taking the time to fill this out!

    SSHEL Library