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  • New Book Co-Edited by OCCRL Director Reimagines Colleges, Communities

    Drs. Lorenzo D. Baber and Heather McCambly have edited a new book titled “Critiques for Transformation: Reimagining Colleges and Communities for Social Justice.”

  • Rebecca M. Taylor

    New Book from EPOL's Rebecca Taylor Focuses on Ethics, Equity, and Inclusion in Higher Ed

    Rebecca Taylor, assistant professor of Education Policy, Organization and Leadership, is the co-editor of the new book Ethics in Higher Education: Promoting Equity and Inclusion Through Case-Based Inquiry, published by Harvard University Press.  

  • New book: Wired Citizenship: Youth Learning and Activism in the Middle East

    Linda Herrera has edited a new book with Routledge titles, "Wired Citizenship: Youth Learning and Activism in the MIddle East. This state of the art book about citizenship, learning, and politics in the digital age includes case studies from some of the hotspots of the region  including Egypt, Iran, Pakistan, Palestine, Turkey, and Morocco.

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  • NEW: College of Education-branded PPT Templates, Zoom Backgrounds, and More

    The Office of Marketing and Communications has updated resources for the College of Education community to use in presentations, event promotion, and more.

  • New Course: CI 482: Social Learning and Multimedia

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

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

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

  • New Course for Spring 2016 Semester

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

  • New Course Offering on Advanced Learning System Design in Spring 2014

    New Course Offering on Advanced Learning System Design (HRD 590) in Spring 2014

    Learning system design embodies the effect of educational, instructional, training and development interventions across organizations. Merely applying design models and processes has been proven insufficient to resolve ill-structured learning- and performance-related problems. Designers often found themselves overwhelmed by the multifaceted nature of learning design problems. To advance your understanding and analytical abilities facing the implicit complexity of design situations, the first part of the course reviews, analyzes, and synthesizes design theories situated in published instructional design cases. Second, the course looks at motivational design theories and learning engagement frameworks to augment existing instructional design theories that are lacking emphasis on learning engagement. You will have opportunities to develop advanced knowledge and skills in designing and evaluating learning engagement systems for various learning environments.

    For more information, please contact Dr. Huang at wdhuang@illinois.edu.

  • New COVID-19 Podcast Series Available from Illinois Early Learning Project

    The Illinois Early Learning Project (in the Department of Special Education) recently released three podcasts related to childcare and how the campus' Child Development Laboratory has been impacted by, and responded to, the pandemic.

  • New Directions in Leadership Development

    Don't miss this April 28 talk given by Alexandre Ardichvilli of the University of Minnesota.

     

     

     

  • New doctoral course: CI: 590-IL, "Introduction to Language in Globalizing Times"

    Introduction to Language in Globalizing Times (CRN 49639) is a doctoral seminar that approaches the study of language and education from the understanding that bilingualism/multilingualism, within-language variation, and language contact are norms rather than exceptions. Readings explore language use in local and globalizing settings in Illinois, the U.S., and trans/international contexts.Prior study of (applied) linguistics is not required;all College of Education doctoral students are welcomed. Professor Patrick H. Smith, Tuesdays, 4:00-6:50 p.m.   

  • New Elementary School Opening for Neurodiverse Students

    Current Ph.D. student in Special Education and SLP-BCBA Landria Seals Green is opening a new K-third grade school in Champaign to address the needs of neurodiverse learners, called Excel Prep.

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

    Title: DIG507 BOD - Learning and the Body

    Instructor: Robb Lindgren

    Time: Wednesdays 4-6:50

    Location: Education Bldg. Room 17

    Credit: 4 hours

    CRN: #31988

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

  • New Health Equity Scholars Program | Seeking Faculty With Community-based Projects

    The College of Education and the Interdisciplinary Health Sciences Institute at Illinois are launching a new Health Equity Undergraduate Scholars Program that will empower up to five promising undergraduates to pursue community-based projects focused on issues in health disparities. The students will work closely with a faculty member and community organization as part of an existing collaboration, and receive a $3,000 disbursement for the 10-week summer program.

  • New Online Class in SPED for Summer 2014

    The Department of Special Education is offering a new online course on The Ethics and Professional Behavior in Education. Please consider signing up for this class

    SPED 488Ethics & Prof. Behavior

    Online: June 2-June 27

    Credit: 3 undergraduate hours. 3 graduate hours.

    Designed to introduce students to ethical issues and challenges that teacher educators and other professionals, including Board Certified Behavior Analysts, may encounter in practice. The topics to be covered all revolve around ethical conduct in practice and research, as well as the decision-making foundations for resolving ethical issues. Students will obtain knowledge and skills through readings, discussion and various case scenarios, reflections, and discussion of the concepts of issues addressed in the reading and assignments.

    [Course Information:] 3 undergraduate hours. 3 graduate hours. Prerequisite: Graduate standing. Undergraduate Seniors (with permission).

    Instructors: Dr. Cheryl Light Shriner and Dr. Hedda Meadan

    For more information:  217-333-0260 or slight@illinois.edu 

  • New Online Ed.M. in Curriculum & Instruction

    Applications are open now for the NEW online master of education degree in Curriculum & Instruction, launching in Fall 2019. The program emphasizes professional development of teachers and other educators to understand interconnections among theory, research, and practice. Program participants will have the opportunity to understand the latest developments in curriculum and pedagogy as well as designing and implementing inquiry projects in their own classrooms or other learning environments.

    Students may pursue a General degree or select a focus area in Bilingual/Bi-cultural Education or Digital Learning. Digital Learning focus area emphasizes the creation and research of digital environments for learning and teaching. The Bilingual/Bi-cultural focus area provides all educators with a better understanding of key teaching strategies that can help support multilingual students in their classrooms.

    You can find the full course listing for the Ed.M. program in Cirriculum & Instruction in the Academic Catalog.

    Please email gradservices@education.illinois.edu with any questions.

  • New OVCRI Series | A Year of Creative Writers 2020

    Antoinette Burton, Janice Harrington, and colleagues in IPRH, the Creative Writing Program, and beyond have pulled together a remarkable slate of activities: performances, lectures, and conversations that are open to campus and community alike.

  • New school university research coordinator joins Bureau

    Dr. Raya Hegeman-Davis has joined the Bureau of Educational Research as a school-university research coordinator for the campus. Her position has been developed as a collaboration between the College of Education and the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research, with support from the campus Office for the Protection of Research Subjects. Raya is available to work with college and campus student and faculty researchers seeking to conduct research with PreK-12 Schools.

  • New Series Geared Toward International Students, Scholars | Understanding the Context of Current Protests in the U.S.

    The College of Education engages with international students in various ways to facilitate a view of the full range of the University of Illinois experience. This new series is aimed at helping international students build an understanding of the U.S. by engaging in conversations and activities about current events.

  • New Spotify Playlist From the College of Education

    This summer, get in the groove of work time, free time, or any time! Have a funky, fun, and energized day with this Spotify playlist created especially for you by the College's Office of Marketing & Communications.

    Listen to A Sonic High Five From the College of Education on Spotify...

  • New Video Featuring the College of Education's IDEALL Facility

    The College of Education's Illinois Digital Ecologies and Learning Laboratory (IDEALL) is an innovative, one of a kind facility for learning with emerging technologies.

    Watch the new video showcasing the IDEALL facility's features here.

  • Nidia Ruedas-Gracia Lead Author of Paper on Fostering Belonging in Research Groups

    Educational Psychology assistant professor Nidia Ruedas-Gracia, along with colleagues at Stanford University, present ten simple rules for creating a sense of belonging in research groups. Read more in their new article published in PLOS Computational Biology.

  • Dr. Gianina Baker

    NILOA Associate Director Gianina Baker Selected 'Forty Under 40' Woman of the Year

    Congratulations to Dr. Gianina Baker, associate director of the National Institute for Learning Outcomes Assessment, how has been named the 2020 'Forty Under 40' Woman of the Year by Central Illinois Business Magazine.

  • Degrees That Matter thumbnail

    NILOA challenges higher education’s status quo

    Natasha Jankowski, director of the National Institute for Learning Outcomes Assessment (NILOA), and David Marshall, a senior scholar at NILOA, offer a critique of the current higher-education system in their new book, Degrees That Matter: Moving Higher Education to a Learning Systems Paradigm. Jankowski and Marshall claim that the student experience in higher education is often disjointed. To address that problem, the authors present a learning system in which critical educational elements are in alignment, not only enhancing the learning experience for students, but improving higher education altogether.

  • NILOA logo

    NILOA Launches Their Revamped Website

    The National Institute for Learning Outcomes Assessment (NILOA) which is co-affiliated with the College of Education at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and at Indiana University officially launched its new website! We invite you to peruse the new website and browse through the freely-available resources.

  • National Institute of Learning Outcomes and Assessment

    NILOA Publishes Co-edited Book, Student-Focused Learning and Assessment: Involving Students in the Learning Process in Higher Education

    NILOA is proud to share the release of a new book from our colleagues and friends, titled: Student-Focused Learning and Assessment: Involving Students in the Learning Process in Higher Education. Co-edited by Natasha A. Jankowski, Gianina R. Baker, Erick Montenegro, and Karie Brown-Tess, this contributed volume explores institutional and programmatic policies and practices which actively engage students as partners in improving student learning.

  • NILOA releases its third national survey of institutional assessment practices

    Following up to its 2009 and 2013 surveys of chief academic officers, the National Institute for Learning Outcomes Assessment (NILOA) continues to provide a landscape of current approaches and practices related to assessing student learning unfolding on college and university campuses. To take a snapshot of institution-level assessment in 2017 and trends over time, Director Natasha Jankowski and the NILOA team conducted its third nationwide survey of provosts between April and September 2017. This report summarizes the major findings and presents implications for policy and practice. Watch a video discussing the report here.

  • NILOA Releases Report, Assessment During a Crisis: Responding to a Global Pandemic

    National Institute for Learning Outcomes Assessment (NILOA) released a new report, “Assessment During a Crisis: Responding to a Global Pandemic,” based on a survey of more than 800 college personnel responsible for assessment in June. Read the coverage of the report from the Chronicle of Higher Education

  • Dr. Verna F. Orr

    NILOA Report Examines Collaborative Focused on HBCU Assessment

    This report presents the background and subsequent founding of the Historically Black College and University (HBCU) Collaboration for Excellence in Educational Quality Assurance (CEEQA). CEEQA is the first collaborative of its kind, and seeks to help address accountability measures while being true to HBCU missions and culturally relevant assessment approaches. Hence, as both internal and external accountability mandates increase, so too has the need for a strong HBCU alliance. CEEQA can offer significant resources and specific expertise to both the HBCU community and higher education community writ large.

  • NILOA logo

    NILOA to be Honored with ACPA’s Contribution to Higher Education Award

    The National Institute for Learning Outcomes Assessment (NILOA), will be honored with the 2020 Contribution to Higher Education Award at this year’s American College Personnel Association (ACPA) Annual Convention in Nashville, TN. The Contribution to Higher Education Award recognizes individuals and organizations who advance a broad higher education agenda through meaningful work at the institutional, regional, and national levels. This award acknowledges the impact NILOA has had across the higher education landscape as they work tirelessly to inform and enhance assessment work focused on improvement of teaching and learning.

  • 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.

  • Nominate deserving Education at Illinois students for Outstanding Student Medal

    The Office of Advancement and the Education Alumni Association are seeking nominations for Outstanding Student Medal honorees.

  • Nominate Deserving Person for Larsen Award

    The Robert P. Larsen Human Development Award has been presented annually to persons or groups who enhance student development and maximize student capabilities to make effective and satisfying life choices. Eligibility is open to any person or group that is a part of our University community (except individuals associated with the Counseling Center).

  • Nomination Deadlines Approaching for Campus-Level Student Awards

    Nominations are open for several campus-level student awards, but application deadlines are fast approaching.

  • Nominations Invited for Innovation Celebration 2014

    Innovation Celebration is an annual event that recognizes the entrepreneurial spirit in our community and on our campus. Awardees are recognized for contributions in several categories, including economic impact, social entrepreneurship, and student start-ups. 

     

  • Nominations Open: 2021 Asian and Asian American Leadership Awards

    The Asian American Cultural Center's 2021 Leadership Awards nominations are open!

  • Now Accepting Applications from In-service Teachers for Global Fieldwork

    Applications for global fieldwork in 2018-1019 are now open for in-service teachers. Join teachers, faculty and students from the College of Education on travels to schools abroad for research and collaboration. Choose from 14 different locations including Singapore, Costa Rica, Australia, and Spain.

  • NSF Awards Funding to Prof. Adrienne Dixson to Study STEM NOLA

    Professor of EPOL is the principal investigator on the project that is studying STEM NOLA, a community-based Saturday STEM program for students in grades 2–12.

  • NSF-funded FLIP (Diversifying Future Leadership in the Professoriate) Alliance

    The goal of the NSF-funded FLIP (Diversifying Future Leadership in the Professoriate) Alliance is to address the broadening participation challenge of increasing the diversity of the future leadership in the professoriate in computing at research universities as a way to achieve diversity across the field. 

    Dr. Stafford Hood and Dr. Denice Hood at University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign will be the  senior personnel to oversee the evaluation and assessment. The FLIP Alliance will focus on strategic dimensions for scaling the effective programs. The principle investigators on the grant are include Valerie Taylor (University of Chicago), Charles Isbell (Georgia Tech), and Jeffrey Forbes (Duke University). Find out more

  • NSF-funded project to explore improvement of multimedia learning

    Associate Professor Jennifer Cromley of the Department of Educational Psychology will lead a study funded by the National Science Foundation that will seek to improve the design, learning, and future research of multimedia learning.

  • NSF Funding Opportunity: EHR Core Research (ECR)

    The full proposal for this grant opportunity is due Sept. 10, 2015 by 5 p.m. Click on the above link for more information.

  • NSF's 2022 STEM For All Video Showcase is On!

    This year there are two videos from UofI College of Ed project teams. Robb LindgrenEmma MercierJina Kang and several C&I students have a video titled Connections of Earth And Sky with Augmented Reality (CEASAR) and Nigel BoschMichelle Perry, and EPSY students have a video titled Help-seeking and Help-giving in Online STEM College Courses. Please check out these videos and vote them for a public choice award!

  • OCCRL Awards Gates Foundation Grants

    The Office of Community College Research and Leadership is pleased to announce the recipients of two grants sponsored by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Requests for proposals for both grants were announced in October 2018.

    Read more.

  • 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.

  • OCCRL Graduate Student Named an AAHHE Fellow

    Angel Velez, a research associate in the Office of Community College Research and Leadership in the College of Education, was selected as a fellow in the Graduate Student Fellows Program of the American Association of Hispanics in Higher Education.

  • OCCRL Invites Community Colleges to Submit ELECT Grant Proposals

    The Office for Community College Research and Leadership (OCCRL) invites community colleges to submit proposals for the Educational Leaders Equity–Centered Transformation (ELECT) Spark Grants Initiative Program.

  • OCCRL Partners to Launch Career and Technical Education CoLab (CTE CoLab)

    The Office of Community College Research and Leadership is one of five partnering organizations that has helped launch the CTE CoLab, in response to addressing equity gaps related to low completion rates in career and technical education, particularly among students of color who face systemic inequalities and challenges accessing and completing high-quality CTE programs.

    The CTE CoLab aims to reduce equity gaps for students of color—especially students who are Black, Latinx, or Indigenous—enrolled in credit-bearing online postsecondary CTE programs. Funded by ECMC Foundation, the CTE CoLab is a collaboration led by the Urban Institute in partnership with five national organizations: World Education, Inc., the National Council for Workforce Education, the Office of Community College Research and Leadership at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, the Instructional Technology Council, and the National Coalition of Advanced Technology Centers. This coalition supports the College Community of Practice—a group of community and technical colleges—to build knowledge, center equity in program goals and delivery, and develop and share resources to improve education and career outcomes in online CTE programming.

    The CTE CoLab coalition will select up to 15 community and technical colleges to join the College Community of Practice. CCP will advance the work of these institutions in scaling or enhancing equity-centered approaches to online teaching and learning through a focus on a selected credit-bearing CTE program.

    Each CCP college team will be awarded a $30,000 grant to support participation in this two-year engagement.

    Visit the Urban Institute website for the RFP, CCP Application, and FAQ.

  • OCCRL Releases Fall 2023 UPDATE on Research and Leadership Issue

    The fall UPDATE on Research and Leadership issue from the Office of Community College Research and Leadership delves into critical research such as the impact of the SFFA v. Harvard Supreme Court decision on community colleges and the role of community colleges in empowering student parents. “While this UPDATE edition provides no concrete answers to the difficult questions presented,” Dr. Lorenzo Baber writes in the Director’s Note section, “I believe the research reflected on these pages engages with the tradition of social justice, in the face of attempts to suppress progress.”

  • Aidana Sirgebayeva

    OCCRL Research Assistant Selected for Editorial Board

    OCCRL research assistant Aidana Sirgebayeva was selected to serve on the editorial board of the Journal of Student Affairs Research and Practice for a three-year term.

  • OCCRL Research Assistant to Present at Black Art Workshop Weekend and Exhibition

    Ayinde Rochon, a research assistant at the Office of Community College Research and Leadership, will be a guest artist presenter at this summer's Black Art Workshop Weekend and Exhibition at the University of Southern Indiana.

  • Angel Luis Velez

    OCCRL Research Associate Recognized by Alma Mater

    Angel Luis Velez, a research associate in the Office of Community College Research and Leadership (OCCRL), was recognized by the institution this year with the Outstanding GOLD Alumni Award for his dedication in serving marginalized communities through principled research and leadership.