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  • Prudential Financial Commits $10M to Rutgers University-Newark Program, Headed by Alum Timothy Eaton

    Newark, NJ (May 7, 2019)—Rutgers University-Newark Chancellor Nancy Cantor announced today that Prudential Financial has committed $10 million to the Honors Living-Learning Community (HLLC) at Rutgers-Newark – the largest donation ever to Rutgers-Newark – to create the Prudential Scholars Program for Newark residents. The gift will create cohorts of Newark residents in the HLLC known as Prudential Scholars and provide them with scholarships to cover tuition and fees, as well as room and board, during their full-time study at Rutgers–Newark. The Prudential Scholars will have access to resources to help them build their entrepreneurial skills and the social networks to empower them to become agents of positive change in the city. Tim Eatman, inaugural Dean of the HLLC, sees investments like Prudential’s as significantly advancing efforts to realize the vision to develop and activate the HLLC as a national model.

  • Promoting Understanding and "Application of Effective Study Techniques through Engaging Educational Technologies"

    College of Education
    Department of Educational psychology
    CSTL brownbag announcement

    Promoting Understanding and Application of Effective Study Techniques through Engaging Educational Technologies

    H. Chad Lane
    Associate Professor of Educational Psychology & Informatics
    University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 

    Tuesday, February 9
    12:30 – 2:00
    210A Education Building

    We are pursuing the development and study of a proposed new genre of engaging educational technologies that seek to help learners better understand processes involved in learning and how to use that knowledge to improve their own study practices. The novelty of the envisioned tools lies in the use of playful (digital) contexts for conveying and learning about basic evidence-based principles of learning, with integrated tools to visualize performance. Our proposed research is translational in that we seek to incorporate findings from basic psychological research into educational contexts, and also interdisciplinary since it combines ideas from psychology, entertainment, and behavioral science to address the challenge of helping people become better learners. Underlying our approach is over a century of psychological science research on human cognition, memory, and learning. Principles stemming from this expansive body of work have straightforward implications for education, but those gains have yet to be fully realized. In fact, in an almost outright rejection of scientific findings, the world continues to be saturated with misplaced advice for learners that is based on intuition and opinion rather than evidence. In this project, we approach the problem of promoting evidence-based learning techniques by using educational games to illustrate fundamental principles of learning, and building tools to promote understanding and application of those principles in academic contexts.

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

  • Progressive Education in Nepal: Creating an Education System

    Time: Tuesday, May 16, 10:00 am-noon

    Place: Room 22, College of Education

    Description: We think of progressive education as an early 20th century movement in U.S. schools, or perhaps as what occurs in modern, “progressive” schools, often small, private schools serving more privileged students. But the progressive impulse has been an important factor in many places and many eras. In Nepal today, there is a strong progressive education movement, one that I worked with during Fall 2016. That movement is especially noteworthy given the country’s extremely low resources (it’s a UN Least Developed Country). But many Nepalis see progressive education as aligned with their national education plan, whose goals include education for all, ages 4-12, community learning centers to deliver literacy and lifelong learning, and fully inclusive and equitable access.

    Questions: How can Nepal essentially create an education system? How can knowledge, people, tools, and other resources from the West help? What can be learned from the Nepali experience, even though the Nepal situation is quite different from that in the U.S.?

  • Program Review Advisory Committee Plans for the Future

    The 2023-2024 Program Review Advisory Committee (PRAC) held its first quarterly meeting of the academic year in October with an in-person get-together at Olive Harvey College. The meeting kicked off a year-long focus on strategic planning and vision-casting goals for the committee’s future. Members are striving to embed collaboration and collective responsibility as they return to in-person engagement after the last few years of conducting mostly virtual work due to COVID. 

  • Programmers Needed for VRchaeology Course

    VRchaeology has an opportunity for programmers to work with Dr. Laura Shackelford, associate professor of Anthropology.

  • Prof. Rodney Hopson Named Co-PI for New NSF INCLUDES Program

    Hopson part of NSF program with new funding to develop partnerships among stakeholders across the public, private and academic sectors, share promising practices for broadening participation and other useful data, contribute to the knowledge base on broadening participation in STEM through research, and establish a framework for supporting communications and networking among partners. 

  • Prof. Gloriana González Awarded NSF Funding for Project with University of Puerto Rico-Rio Piedras

    C&I professor's funded research project is titled, Developing Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge of Pre-service Math Teachers by Enhancement of a Methods Course Using Instrumental Orchestration and Lesson Study Strategies.

  • Professors Luc Paquette and H. Chad Lane Awarded Additional NSF Grant for Project

    This project, entitled "Collaborative Research: Advancing the Science of STEM Interest Development through Educational Gameplay with Machine Learning and Data-driven Interviews" is under the direction of principal investigator Luc Paquette and starts on July 15, 2023.

  • Professor Rochelle Gutiérrez featured in Math Ed Podcast

    Professor Rochelle Gutiérrez of the Department of Curriculum & Instruction was interviewed in March by Math Ed Podcast, an online outlet hosted by Samuel Otten, who interviews mathematics education researchers about their background and recent studies.

  • 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.

  • Professor Michaelene Ostrosky Selected as Interim Dean of the College of Education

    "Professor Michaelene Ostrosky has been selected to serve as Interim Dean of the College of Education, pending approval by the Board of Trustees, until the next permanent dean begins their appointment," said Provost Cangellaris.

  • Professor Meghan Burke Named 2022-23 University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Provost Fellow

    The Provost Fellows program was created to further develop leadership skills at the university level for some of the university's most accomplished tenured faculty. Each Provost Fellow focuses on a critical campus strategic initiative to ensure we are living up to our full potential in our scholarly missions. These initiatives are designed to further strengthen their individual interests and career goals.

  • Professor Linda Herrera a Featured Speaker at UI Global Summit

    Professor Linda Herrera was a featured speaker at the campus' Global Summit, held on October 19 at the I Hotel, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. The Summit was a one-day symposium held in honor of Vision 2030: Illinois’ Global Strategy.

    The panel was titled, “Supporting Youth Development for Global Change” and included Herrera and professors Phillip Cotton and Soo Ah Kwon.

  • Dr. Jennifer Cromley

    Professor Jennifer Cromley Named Co-editor of Journal

    Dr. Jennifer Cromley has become the new co-editor of the journal Applied Cognitive Psychology. 

  • Professor Herrera publishes educational video about Asef Bayat's book

    In her column "Critical Voices in Critical Times," which can be found in the North Africa and West Asia page of openDemocracy, Professor Linda Herrera collaborates with Heba Khalil, a Ph.D. student in the Departemnt of Sociology at Illinois, to present Asef Bayat's new book, Revolution without Revolutionaries: Making sense of the Arab Spring (Stanford, 2017). Watch the video by Herrera and the interview text by Khalil.

  • Professor Herrera Participates in Policy Dialogue on Youth Political Engagement in the Middle East

    Professor Linda Herrera participated in a policy dialogue on Youth Political Engagement in the Middle East and North Africa hosted by the the Hollings Center for International Dialogue in Istanbul, September 18-19.

  • Professor Herrera Lectures at Tampere University, Finland on Youth Transitions to the Labor Market in the Middle East

    Professor Linda Herrera  gave a lecture in the series at Tampere University, Finland, on Youth Transitions to the Labour Market in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) on September 25. She talked about the notion of youth precarity and the growing disconnect between education and employment. 

  • Professor Gutiérrez to speak about submitting, publishing academic work

    Professor Rochelle Gutiérrez of the Department of Curriculum & Instruction will host a Sept. 11 conversation about publishing quality journals and submitting proposals to special issues.

  • Professor Gandhi To Present on Latest Book, Lead Online Course on Grandfather’s Legacy

    Professor Rajmohan Gandhi will give a talk on his latest book, Modern South India: A History from the 17th Century to Our Times on February 26 at noon at the Lucy Ellis Lounge in the Foreign Languages Building at 707 S. Mathews Avenue in Urbana.

  • Professor Emeritus Stafford Hood the CREATE 2022 Jason Millman Memorial Award Recipient & Lecturer

    The Consortium for Research on Educational Assessment and Teaching Effectiveness (CREATE) has named Stafford Hood the recipient of its 2022 Jason Millman Memorial Award and annual conference lecturer.

  • Don Hackmann

    Professor Emeritus Don Hackmann Published in Teachers College Record

    Hackmann's study examined how cross-sector collaboration has shaped the development and implementation of district-wide high school career academies in a large urban school district.

  • Professor emerita Susan Fowler

    Professor Emerita Susan Fowler Awarded ECE Honorary Fellowship

    Please join us in congratulating professor emerita Susan Fowler, who has been selected to receive the 2021 Yew Chung College of Early Childhood Education Honorary Fellowship.

  • Professor emerita receives CEC lifetime achievement award

    Professor Emerita Susan Fowler has received the 2018 Council for Exceptional Children J.E. Wallace Wallin Special Education Lifetime Achievement Award. The honor recognizes individuals who have made continued and sustained contributions to the education of children and youth with exceptionalities.

  • Professor Emerita Lilian Katz receives Friend of Children Award

    Professor Emerita Lilian Katz is presented with the Friend of Children Award at the Southern Early Childhood Association annual conference. 

  • Professor David Huang Named a Health Innovation Faculty Member

    Congratulations to EPOL's Wenhao David Huang, who is one of 10 faculty members from across the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign bringing expertise to Carle Illinois College of Medicine as the latest group of Health Innovation Professors (HIP).

  • PROFESSOR AND HEAD, DEPARTMENT OF CURRICULUM AND INSTRUCTION

    We seek a nationally known scholar with effective leadership qualities to serve as a full-time tenured Professor and head of the department, who will support a strong and diverse faculty as we fulfill the teaching, research, and service missions of the Department and College in a major research land-grant university. The Department consists of 23 nationally and internationally recognized tenure-track faculty and 6 clinical faculty, from racially, culturally, and linguistically diverse backgrounds. Research anchors our work at the graduate level, with our intellectual work organized into four program areas: Curriculum, Aesthetics, and Teacher Education (CATE); Digital Environments for Learning, Teaching & Agency (DELTA); Language and Literacy (L&L); and Mathematics, Science, and Engineering (MSE). At the undergraduate level, we focus on global, national, and local concerns of pre- and in-service teacher education in early childhood, elementary, and secondary education, and our faculty contribute significantly to the College’s licensure and non-licensure degree programs. The department head has the administrative support of an associate head for graduate programs, program area chairs, and administrative assistance. The department head works collaboratively with a College executive leadership team committed to transformative education and with the College-level I-Teach I-Lead office, which coordinates undergraduate programs in the College. Confidential inquiries about the position may be directed to Professor Daniel G. Morrow, Search Committee Chair, dgm@illinois.edu, phone: (217) 300-0915.

  • Professor Adrienne Dixson Named a 2021 AERA Fellow

    Congratulations to professor of Education Policy, Organization and Leadership Adrienne D. Dixson on being selected as a 2021 AERA Fellow by the American Educational Research Association.

  • Preview the State-of-the-Art Illinois Digital Ecologies And Learning Laboratory

    The College of Education is hosting a collegewide event Friday, May 8, to showcase the new, state-of-the-art Illinois Digital Ecologies and Learning Laboratory (IDEALL).

  • Present Your Research: 2023 Graduate Student Conference

    The College of Education's Graduate Student Conference, scheduled for March 3, 2023, is now accepting proposals from graduate students interested in sharing their work and research. Submit your abstract by January 9, 2023, for full consideration.

  • 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.

  • Position Announcement: Open Rank Position Social Studies/History of Education

    The Departments of Curriculum & Instruction and Education Policy, Organization & Leadership are seeking candidates for a position in social studies and history of education. Candidates will undertake a program of research that will lead to a sustained record of scholarship and external funding.

    Teaching assignments will include graduate and undergraduate courses in social studies and history of education.

    For the complete job description, please go to https://jobs.illinois.edu/academic-job-board/job-details?jobID=121011&job=college-of-education-open-rank-social-studies-history-of-education-curriculum-and-instruction-121011.

    Please share the job posting with potential candidates! To ensure full consideration, applications be received by October 15, 2019

     

  • POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT: Assistant/Associate Professor in Evaluation

    The Department of Educational Psychology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, announces a position for an outstanding emerging or established scholar in evaluation. The successful candidate will have a strong record of intellectual contributions to evaluation, substantial field experience as an evaluator, and expertise in qualitative, quantitative, and/or mixed methods.

    For more information, please go to www.education.illinois.edu/cbo/human-resources/available-positions.

    To ensure full consideration, we ask that applications be submitted by October 10, 2019.

    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.

  • Porshe Garner Wins 2019 AERA Arts Based Educational Research SIG Outstanding Dissertation Award

    Congratulations to Education Policy, Organization & Leadership's Porshe Garner, Ph.D, who is the recipient of the AERA Arts Based Educational Research (ABER) Outstanding Dissertation Award for the best Doctoral Dissertation that explores, is an exemplar of, and pushes the boundaries of arts-based educational research. Garner will present highlights from her dissertation at the Annual Meeting.

  • Podcast: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy in Early Childhood and Beyond

    Online master's student in EPOL Dr. Fawzia Reza recently hosted a podcast with the CEO and founder of Childhood Education International regarding the role of culturally responsive pedagogy in early childhood and beyond.

  • #PMENA19 Plenary | Gloriana González and Tonya Bartell | "Empowering Teachers to Construct Problems"

    We invite you to watch Dr.  Gloriana González's Plenary session from the recent North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education conference held in St. Louis.

  • Pilot Project Funding Available from TIER-ED

    The Technology Innovations in Educational Reserach and Design (TIER-ED) initiative announces a Pilot Projects Program designed to foster inter- or trans-disciplinary intellectual engagement through funding pilot or proof-of-concept projects to better position faculty teams for competitive external funding and have more collaborative research opportunities for students interested in pursuing graduate studies in TIER-ED focused areas.

    Submission deadline is Friday, March 27, 2020 by 5 p.m. CST.

  • Phi Kappa Phi Inductees for 2018-19

    Phi Kappa Phi was born in 1897, when 10 senior students, two faculty members and the University of Maine President created a new kind of honor society, one that recognized excellence in all academic disciplines. The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign chapter began in 1933.

    Today, Phi Kappa Phi recognizes and promotes academic excellence in all fields of higher education and engages the community of scholars in service to others. We recognize and congratulate these 2018-2019 inductees from the College of Education.

  • Ph.D. EPOL student writes book

    Tanisha King-Taylor, a doctoral student in the Department of Education Policy, Organization & Leadership, has written a book that is a genuine reflection of her life and story of escaping the superwoman syndrome, the Speaker. Coach. Facilitator, and now author at tanishakingtaylor.com uses her story as a guide to help other women, especially Black women, achieve freedom. Word by word, Tanisha demonstrates the ways in which being too helpful to others while ignoring yourself can be to your detriment. Tanisha tells it like it is from the relationships you choose to the unhealthy friendships you have. Out of Battle Into Freedom is a much-needed story to spark and awaken the real you, motivating you to live your best life. It is the key to freedom.

    Learn more at http://bit.ly/OutOfBattleIntoFreedom.

     

  • Jennifer Ventimiglia

    Ph.D. Candidate Selected for Prestigious State Department Program

    Jennifer Ventimiglia, a Ph.D. candidate in EPOL, was selected for the English Language Specialist Project focusing on environmental issues and sustainable development in Albania.

  • EPOL doctoral student Leslie Morrow

    PhD Candidate Leslie Morrow Awarded OVCDEI's Larine Y. Cowan 'Make a Difference Award'

    Morrow will be honored with the award during the 36th Celebration of Diversity for her outstanding research and advocacy for the LGBTQ population, achievements as Director of the LGBTQ Resource Center, and contributions within the College, campus, and community.

  • Michelle Perry

    Perry, Bosch, Bates Awarded $1.5M NSF Grant to Study Professional Learning for Math Teachers

    The College is pleased to announce that yet another group of Education at Illinois researchers have been awarded National Science Foundation funding for research.

  • Paying the Price – College Costs, Financial Aid, and the Betrayal of the American Dream

    Paying the Price – College Costs, Financial Aid, and the Betrayal of the American Dream

     

    There is a new economics of college in America. Millions of people enroll in higher education with plans to work, borrow, and conserve, only to find that their funds still fall short of today’s high college prices. How has this changed what it means to attend college? How do students make ends meet while pursuing degrees, and how can we make it easier for them to succeed? In this talk, Dr. Goldrick-Rab will discuss a six-year- long multi-method experimental study that sought to find out.

     

    April 25, 2016

    Room 22 10:30am – 12:00pm

     

    Sara Goldrick-Rab

     

    Sara Goldrick-Rab is a Professor of Educational Policy Studies and Sociology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Founding Director at the Wisconsin HOPE Lab. Her research examines the intended and unintended consequences of the college-for-all movement in the United States. She is the recipient of the William T. Grant Foundation’s Faculty Scholars Award and the American Educational Research Association’s Early Career Award. In fall 2016, the University of Chicago will publish her latest book, Paying the Price: College Costs, Financial Aid, and the Betrayal of the American Dream.

     

    This event is sponsored by The Forum on the Future of Public Education

    Please direct questions about this event to Jameson Brewer (tbrewer2@illinois.edu)

  • Pathways to Results Grant Announcement

    Pathways to Results, Partnership and Planning for Student Success Grant - FY2017

    We are excited to share that the Illinois Community College Board (ICCB) has released the FY2017 Pathways to Results: Partnership and Planning for Student Success Grant. The Pathways to Results (PTR) year one project, facilitated by the Office of Community College Research and Leadership, aims to assemble a meaningful plan for implementing an evidence-based improvement that addresses documented gaps in students’ equitable outcomes. Teams will participate in an intensive institute requiring both pre-work and follow-up conference calls to prepare for the final deliverable—an intervention plan that is eligible to be considered for a Year Two PTR grant to support implementation and scaling of the project intervention.

     

  • 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. 

  • 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

  • Participants needed for research focus group

    Are you a queer, lesbian, or bisexual woman? Your opinion is needed for an upcoming research focus group taking place the evening of either April 18th or 20th. Participate in an interactive focus group about gender expression in LBQ women. Trans women are welcome! Two hours of research participation credit for a class can also be attained by participating. Food and beverages will be provided. Email Dawn Brown at dmbrown4@illinois.edu for details.

  • Participants Needed for Collaborate Ultra Customer Roadmap Survey

    Blackboard is conducting a survey to help determine the direction to move toward regarding Collaborate Ultra in 2018. Please take a few minutes to fill out the survey and make your voice heard. 

  • Panel: The Impact of ChatGPT on the Research of Teaching and Learning

    This panel is being organized by the College of Education to discuss recent progress in ChatGPT, its impact on research, and particularly how it impacts the research of teaching and learning. The aim of this discussion is to consider the impact of multi-purpose AI on research and teaching and what we must consider as we continue to study teaching and learning in response to current developments.

    Zoom Webinar Registration required.

  • PANEL: Demonstrations of Research on Teaching & Learning with ChatGPT

    Hear directly from research teams currently conducting ChatGPT research on the Illinois campus. This session is part of our ongoing focus on ChatGPT's impact on research and teaching and what we must consider as we continue to study teaching and learning in response to the rapid development and implementation of ChatGPT and other generalized AI tools.

  • 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.