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College of Education Announcements

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  • Education Faculty Awarded Spencer Foundation Research Grant

    Catherine Dornfeld Tissenbaum, Idalia Nuñez Cortez, and Monica Gonzalez Ybarra's project, Our Lives, Our Dreams, Our "Voces": Leveraging Community-Based Collaborations to Increase Representation of Latina/x Girls’ Narratives in Museums has been awarded a Racial Equity Research Grant from the Spencer Foundation.

  • Education Faculty Awarded NSF Grant to Develop Learning Strategies for Elementary Mathematics Teachers

    Faculty members Michelle Perry and Nigel Bosch, along with alumna Meg Bates, will join researchers from the University of Chicago and New York University to investigate teachers' learning through online asynchronous learning modules.

  • Education at Illinois Members Honored with Ebony Excellence Awards

    The Ebony Excellence Awards is an annual awards program of the Bruce D. Nesbitt African American Cultural Center that provides an opportunity for students, student organizations, faculty, staff, and campus departments to be recognized for the outstanding work that they do on the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign campus. 

  • The College of Education

    Education at Illinois Makes Three Administrative Appointments

    Dean Chrystalla Mouza has appointed three faculty members to administrative positions in departments within the College for the 2024-25 school year.

  • Education at Illinois Alumni Award Nominations Open

    Nominations from faculty, alumni, and friends of the College for 2023 awards are accepted through March 1, 2023, at 5 p.m. CST. We encourage all nominations be kept confidential.

  • Education at Illinois Alumni Award Cookout

    Join Dean Mouza and the College of Education for a cookout and meet our 2023 Education Alumni Award recipients! 

  • Education alumnus Mark Foley receives state award for teaching history

    Two-time College of Education graduate Mark Foley was named the 2018 History Teacher of the Year Award from the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History.

  • Education Alumna Tatyana McFadden Talks About Fighting for the Rights of Athletes with Disabilities

    One Ed.M. in Curriculum & Instruction. Seventeen Paralympic medals. Twenty World Championships medals. Twenty-four World Major Marathon titles. At the age of 30, pro wheelchair-racer Tatyana McFadden has quite the hardware collection—and owns some serious real estate in the record books.

  • Dillin Randolph

    Education Alum, Doctoral Candidate Named Cook County Co-Teacher of the Year by ISBE

    Dillin Randolph was one of four co-teachers of the year for Cook County. Randolph is an antiracist English teacher at Niles West High School in Niles Township High School District 219.

  • Educational Theory Summer Institute

    Educational Theory Summer Institute (ETSI) 2016

    Ecologizing Education: Philosophy, Place, and Possibility

    Tuesday, August 16th 

    9:15 am – 5:15 pm

    College of Education, Room 22

    Free conference. Breakfast & lunch will be provided.

    All those interested in the environmental & ecological elements of learning should attend!

    Please plan to join us for the 7th Annual Educational Theory Summer Institute (ETSI). This year’s theme is Ecologizing Education: Philosophy, Place, and Possibility. Educational Theory has commissioned a team of leading international scholars to share fresh and substantive contributions on the theme. 

    This year's participants will be:

    Deborah Bird Rose (University of New South Wales)

    Sean Blenkinsop (Simon Fraser University)

    Ruth Irwin (University of Fiji)

    Clarence Joldersma (Calvin College)

    Huey-Li Li (University of Akron)

    Gregory Lowan-Trudeau (University of Calgary)

    Suzanne Rice (University of Kansas)

    Andrew Stables (University of Roehampton)

    For more information, or to RSVP, please contact Jessica Harless at jharles2@illinois.edu

  • Educational Technology Leadership Summit

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

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

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

    To regrister: go.illinois.edu/ELATechSummit15

  • Educational Psychology scholar awarded IES grant

    Jennifer Cromley, an associate professor in the Department of Educational Psychology, has been awarded a three-year grant worth $756,527 from the Institute of Education Sciences for her research project “Inference-Making and Reasoning: Refinement of an Assessment for Use in Gateway Biology Courses.”

  • Educational Psychology doctoral scholar Ananya Tiwari

    Educational Psychology's Ananya Tiwari Awarded AAUW International Fellowship

    Congratulations to Educational Psychology doctoral candidate Ananya Tiwari, who has been awarded a 2021-22 International Fellowship from the American Association of University Women. The award aims to tackle barriers women face in education.

  • Educational Psychology Available Positions

    We are hiring! We are currently searching for 3 colleagues in the Department of Educational Psychology at Illinois.

    * Open Rank Professor of Statistics and Quantitative Methods (2 Positions) - Close Date: October 1, 2017

    * Associate or Full Professor of Evaluation - Close Date: October 15, 2017

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

    Please help us spread the word to anyone you think may be interested.

  • EDUC 102 Poster Session

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

    North Lobby and Room 192 Education Building

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

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

    Support James Scholars!

    Bagels, donuts, coffee and water will be provided.

    View the event flier.

  • EDUC 102 James Scholar Poster Session

    Please come out and support College of Education first year students as they present their James Scholar research projects on Thursday, December 13. Presentations will be held in the South Lobby of the Education Building from 10:30–11:30am. Refreshments will be served. This event is free and open to faculty, students, and staff.

  • Ed tech scholar receives 2017 Jan Hawkins Award by AERA

    Curriculum & Instruction scholar Robb Lindgren was the April 29 recipient of the 2017 Jan Hawkins Award for Early Career Contributions for Humanistic Research and Scholarship in Learning Technologies, AERA Division C. Lindgren said the award is special to him because of Jan Hawkins’ collaboration with his doctoral adviser prior to Hawkins’ death.

  • Ed Psych scholar to receive Lindquist Award at 2017 AERA Meeting

    Professor Hua-Hua Chang of the Department of Educational Psychology has been awarded the 2017 E.F. Lindquist Award in recognition of his outstanding applied and theoretical research in the field of testing and measurement.

  • Ed Psych scholar Jennifer Cromley Recognized as Lead Contributor to Field

    From 2009 to 2016, Educational Psychology scholar Jennifer C. Cromley was one of the top-producing female authors, editors, and editorial board members in her field, according to a paper in Educational Psychology Review.

  • EdPsych's Ananya Tiwari Recipient of 2019 Illinois International Graduate Achievement Award

    Ananya Tiwari, a second-year PhD student in Educational Psychology, will receive this campus-level award at a banquet on November 20. 

  • Ed Psych researchers receive NSF and IES grants

    Kiel Christianson and Jennifer Cromley, both scholars in the Department of Educational Psychology, received grants from the National Science Foundation and Institute of Education Sciences, respectively.

  • Ed. Psych. CSTL Brownbag Talk: “Explanation and Embodiment in Middle School Students’ Development of Explanatory Models of Molecular Ideas”

    Explanation and Embodiment in Middle School Students’ Development of Explanatory Models of Molecular Ideas

    Presented By:
    Nitasha Mathayas and David Brown
    Department of Curriculum & Instruction
    University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

    Tuesday, March 29
    12:30 - 2:00 PM
    210A Education Building

    With research showing that gesturing while speaking can facilitate learning, it is worth investigating how motion sensing technology can leverage gesturing about complex scientific phenomena. In project GRASP, we investigate the role that gestures play in constructing explanations about critical concepts in science. Specifically we work with middle school students to help us understand how moving their hands can help them explain things such as what causes air pressure and how does heat transfer in metals. We are also creating new computer simulations that can respond to students’ gestures and allow students to become part of the simulation!

    For this brownbag session, we have decided to take a "workshop" approach, and give everyone the opportunity to interact with our simulation designs and share feedback. In this workshop, you will explore simulations depicting heat transfer and air pressure, and demonstrate learning opportunities from these simulations. We will also show you ways students have engaged with these simulations and discuss interactions that point to new ways of teaching science through simulations. We believe that this “hands in” approach to learning will provide new opportunities for students to learn complex ideas and construct new explanations.

    GRASP is a NSF-funded collaboration between the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Concord Consortium. (GestuRe Augmented Simulations for supporting exPlanations).

  • Ed. Psych. AppLeS Student Capstone Project Presentations

    The Department of Educational Psychology
    AppLeS Student Capstone Project Presentations
                                 

    Please join the Department of Educational Psychology to celebrate our first graduating class of AppLeS (Applied Learning Science) students as they finish up their final year in the AppLeS program and the Learning and Education Studies (LES) major. The students will present findings from their Capstone research projects and discuss their future plans. Please come and help us toast our students!

    Tuesday, May 2, 2017
    Noon – 1:30 PM
    22 Education Building

    Presenting their Capstone research projects are:

    Destinee Johnson – "The Effects of Teacher Involvement on the Student Field Trip Experience"

    Jeremy Davis – "Motivation for Learning a Second Language between Different College Departments”

    Xiaoyi (Kellie) Huang – “Gesture and Word Learning”

    ­Lunch will be served!

  • Ed Psych alumna selected as NAEd/Spencer Postdoctoral Fellow

    Tzu-Jung Lin, Ph.D. ’12 Ed.Psych., has been selected as a 2016 National Academy of Education/Spencer Postdoctoral Fellow.

  • Editorial by EPOL's Jessica Li in Human Resource Development International Journal

    Associate professor Jessica Li, the editor of the journal Human Resource Development International, has authored an editorial that is relevant to the COVID-19 pandemic.

  • EdCampCU

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

  • Eboni Zamani-Gallaher on Why Community Colleges are More Important Now Than Ever

    Prof. Eboni Zamani-Gallaher was recently featured in a podcast episode from the university's Center for Social and Behavioral Science about why community colleges are more important now than ever.

  • Eboni Zamani-Gallaher joins Graduate College

    Professor Eboni Zamani-Gallaher will serve as the associate dean of the Graduate College starting Aug. 16. The scholar will continue to serve as the associate head of the Department of Education Policy, Organization & Leadership and as director of the Office of Community College Research and Leadership.

    Read more

  • Early Childhood Education Program Exemplary in Learning Outcomes Assessment

    Congratulations to the Department of Curriculum & Instruction, whose BS program in Early Childhood Education was identified as exemplary in the Learning Outcomes Assessment Update for AY 2018-2019. Fewer than 10 percent of all degree programs at the university received this recognition.

  • Dr. Rachel Roegman named 2018-19 Hardie Faculty Fellow

    Dr. Rachel Roegman, an assistant professor in the Department of Education Policy, Organization & Leadership, was selected as a 2018-2019 Hardie Faculty Fellow, which is supported by the Charles Dunn Hardie Trust Fund in the College of Education.

  • Dr. Peter Kuchinke Inducted into 2018 International Adult and Continuing Education Hall of Fame

    Kuchinke, professor in the Education Policy, Organization & Leadership department, was recently recognized with induction into the International Adult and Continuing Education Hall of Fame. Election to the Hall of Fame acknowledges individuals who have made distinguished contributions to the field of adult and continuing education. Inductees have provided a crucial nexus between resources and learners.

  • Dr. Nicholas Burbules lectures on "The Educational Importance of Communicative Virtues"

    Nicholas Burbules, a Gutgsell Professor in the Department of Education Policy, Organization & Leadership, presented a lecture titled “The Educational Importance of Communicative Virtues.”

  • Dr. Neil Anthony Lewis, Jr. Lecture and Reception

    Please join us for the upcoming Dean's Distinguished Speaker, Dr. Neil Anthony Lewis, Jr., on April 16, 2024 in 22 Education at 12:15 p.m. He is a behavioral and intervention scientist at Cornell University and Weill Cornell Medicine. A short reception will follow his talk.

  • Dr. Natasha Jankowski and Dr. Gianina Baker Help Advance ‘Trends in Assessment’

    Two scholars from the College of Education and the National Institute for Learning Outcomes Assessment (NILOA), Dr. Natasha Jankowski and Dr. Gianina Baker, have authored the opening chapter to a recently published book Trends in Assessment: Ideas, Opportunities, and Issues for Higher Education.

  • Dr. Kiel Christianson and Dr. Yoon Pak to Lead EPSY and EPOL Departments

    Dr. Kiel Christianson has been appointed as Chair of the Educational Psychology department, and Dr. Yoon Pak has accepted the College's offer of Head of the Education Policy, Organization and Leadership (EPOL) department.

  • Dr. Kern Alexander named Distinguished Educational Research Lecturer

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

  • Karla Moller

    Dr. Karla Möller Named College's New Associate Dean for Graduate Programs

    The Dean's Office is pleased to announce that Dr. Karla Möller will serve as the next Associate Dean for Graduate Programs in the College of Education.

  • Dr. Jennifer Randall | Dean's Distinguished Speaker Series

    Please join the College of Education and the Dean's Office for a lecture given by Dr. Jennifer Randall on the subject of Publicly Engaged Research for Social Justice on Thursday, November 2 from 12:15 - 1:15 pm in 22 Education.

  • Dr. Gloriana Gonzalez: Keynote Speaker at the PME-NA 41 Conference

    Dr. Gonzalez will present the Saturday Plenary Session, “Empowering Teachers to Construct Problems for their Students,” for the North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education conference.

    The Realistic Mathematics Education theory establishes that problem contexts provide an entry point for mathematical understanding. Problems that are situated in relevant contexts can also support the development of students’ mathematical identity. At the same time, problems that are situated in contexts that appear to be too contrived may limit students’ opportunities to engage in mathematics and to develop their mathematical identity. In our dialogue, we will argue for opportunities for empowering teachers to design mathematics problems for and with their students. Teachers can identify relevant, authentic contexts for meaningful mathematics learning. We will provide examples from our own work regarding children’s mathematical knowledge bases, using students’ prior knowledge, social justice mathematics, and engaging students in problems situated in visual arts contexts as well as discuss the challenges and tensions in this work. We will discuss implications for mathematics teacher education, such as considerations about teachers’ mathematical and pedagogical knowledge, as well as teachers’ knowledge of their students and their school contexts, when embracing this approach.

    For more information view the conference website.

  • Dr. Gianina Baker to be a Mentor for HLC’s Assessment Academy

    Congratulations to Dr. Gianina Baker, Assistant Director of the National Institute for Learning Outcomes Assessment (NILOA) and College of Education alumna, who will serve as a mentor for the Higher Learning Commission’s Assessment Academy.

  • Dr. Eboni Zamani-Gallaher featured as an expert in WalletHub's "2016's Best & Worst Community Colleges" article

    Dr. Eboni Zamani-Gallaher answers questions about improving the cost and quality of education and training at community colleges:

    Do you think President Barack Obama’s proposal to make community-college tuition free will increase enrollment and graduation rates?

    What can policymakers do to improve the quality of education and training at community colleges and the career prospects of graduates?

    Should community colleges focus more on preparing graduates for the workforce through career and technical education or on preparing graduates to move to a four-year college?

    In evaluating the best and worst community college systems, what are the top five indicators?

  • Dr. Dipesh Navsaria: “Books Build Better Brains: Sharing Books as a Public Health Intervention”

    On Tuesday, April 6 at noon CST, Dr. Dipesh Navsaria will present "Books Build Better Brains: Sharing Books as a Public Health Intervention" a Zoom speaker event.

  • Dr. Allyson Tintiangco-Cubales

    Dr. Allyson Tintiangco-Cubales Dean's Distinguished Speaker Series

    Please join us for a lecture given by Dr. Allyson Tintiangco-Cubales, an award-winning distinguished professor in the College of Ethnic Studies at San Francisco State University on Tuesday, February 27 at 12:15 in 22 Education.

    Since 2000, she’s taught Asian American Studies focusing on Filipina/x/o (American) Studies, women studies, and courses focused on the praxis of Ethnic Studies pedagogy. She is also an affiliated faculty member in the Educational Leadership. She has mentored hundreds of critical master’s and doctoral students, now teaching and working in schools, colleges, and community organizations nationwide. Before her position at SFSU, she did her undergraduate work at UC Berkeley in Ethnic Studies and received her Ph.D. from UCLA in Education.  In 2001, she founded Pin@y Educational Partnerships (PEP), a “barangay” that provides Ethnic Studies courses and curriculum, develops radical educators, and creates resources for Filipina/x/o communities and similarly marginalized people. Over the past two decades, she has worked with school districts, counties, and states to co-develop community rooted Ethnic Studies, Social Justice, and Filipino Language curricula. She has developed models of teacher development that are being used throughout California and beyond. She is also the co-founder and director of Community Responsive Education (CRE), a national firm that supports the development of responsive, equitable, and justice-driven educators. She is the author of four books of curriculum, and many articles focused on the applications of critical pedagogy, Ethnic Studies curriculum, Motherscholarship, and Pinayism.   

  • Dr. Adrienne Dixson

    Dr. Adrienne Dixson Selected to Diversity Scholars Network

    Adrienne Dixson, professor in EPOL, has been selected as a new scholar in the Diversity Scholars Network at the University of Michigan.

  • DPI Adds Professors Rodney Hopson and Robb Lindgren to Executive Committee

    These Education faculty join a highly selective and distinguished group of scholars that will enable DPI to explore and develop solutions to long-term economic and social challenges throughout Illinois.

  • Does Knowledge still Matter? Brownbag talk

    Time: Thursday, May 18, 10:00 am-noon

    Place: Room 22, College of Education

    Description: In a recent book, Why Knowledge Matters, E. D. Hirsch argues for a knowledge-intensive curriculum. Adopting a traditional stance toward learning, but one buttressed by recent cognitive science research, he sees knowledge as the key to becoming culturally literate and as the basis for learning more. In contrast, Sugata Mitra, best known for his "Hole in the Wall" experiment, is a leading proponent of  minimally invasive education. He claims that children in the rural slums of India could explore complex subjects in the absence of adult supervision and create a world of self-promoted learning. Essentially, learning is what matters, and the effort to transmit knowledge is unnecessary and counter productive.

    Questions: What is knowledge? What is its role in education? Is that role changing due to the "worldwide cloud" of information? Are their alternatives to these extreme positions, or is one more correct?

  • Doctoral student speaks at Women’s March at C-U

    Tanisha King-Taylor spoke at the Women’s March at C-U on Jan. 21. Taylor is pursuing a doctorate degree in the Department of Education Policy, Organization & Leadership.

  • Dixson Moderates Town Hall Meeting on Public Education with State of Louisiana Legislators

    Adrienne Dixson, professor in Education Policy, Organization & Leadership, was recently asked to moderate a Town Hall meeting, sponsored by the Louisiana Public School Coalition, intended for teachers and community members to talk with several state legislators about the current status of public education. The meeting was held on March 14, and we followed up with Dixson afterward.

  • Discover Studying Abroad Adventures via Global Café

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

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

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

    More information at: 

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