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  • Rochelle Gutierrez' Work Influences Seattle Schools' Push to 'Rehumanize' Math

    Professor of mathematics education in Curriculum & Instruction, Rochelle Gutierrez and her work on "rehumanizing" math education, was featured in an Education Week story referencing Seattle Schools' recent push to integrate ethnic-studies questions into core subjects.

  • 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

  • Sign Up for Spring 2019 EPS Courses with Dr. Bernice M. Barnett

    Sign up for Spring 2019 EPS 420 & EPS 421/HDFS424/AFRO 421 Courses!

    Professor Bernice M. Barnett (bmbarnet@illinois.edu)

    Two Sociological Foundations in Education Courses:

    (1) EPS 420 Sociology of Education, Tuesday, 1-2:50 p.m., Education Building, Room 323

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

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

    Description: EPS 420 is a sociological examination of education and schooling in society, including major sociological theories, concepts, assumptions, questions, research, and ongoing and current issues and debates related to education and schooling and race, gender, and class diversity in educational achievement. One of the highlights is a focus on the impact of social movements of the 1960s on education and schooling. 

    (2) EPS 421 Racial & Ethnic Families Diversity, Tuesday, 10-11:50 a.m., Education Building, Room 323

    4-Hours Credit EPS 421 Graduate section A: crn #68790

    3-Hours Credit EPS 421 Undergraduate section B: crn #68791

    Description: EPS 421/ (HDFS 424 & AFRO 421) is a sociological examination of racial and ethnic diversity of families across and within racial ethnic groups in the U.S. and the basis of family diversity in various regions of the world. One of the highlights of the course is a focus on sociologist Gerhard Lenski's "The  Religious Factor." Topics of the class include the significance of diverse religions among ethnic families, religion’s impact on education and schooling and the politics, economy, and religion as a basis of  family ethnic cultural diversity, competition, and conflict in the U.S. and world.

    ************

    4-Hours Credit HDFS 424 Graduate section A: crn #68794

    3-Hours Credit HDFS 424 Undergraduate section B: crn #68795

    ************

    4-Hours Credit AFRO 421 Graduate section A: crn #68792

    3-Hours Credit AFRO 421 Undergraduate section B: crn #68793

  • Final Passport Workshop!

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

  • The role of input in bilingual development

    The role of input in bilingual development

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

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

  • Available position: School-University Research Coordinator

    The Bureau of Educational Research is seeking a School-University Research Coordinator, with support from the OVCR and OPRS. The primary function of the position is to serve as the Campus and College of Education research liaison to public and private school districts throughout the State of Illinois, and beyond. The full job announcement and link to application interface are available at http://jobs.illinois.edu.

  • Image of Research competition for grad, professional students taking place through Jan. 22

    Graduate and professional students at Illinois are invited to submit images of their research, creative, or scholarly work for the fifth annual Image of Research competition.

  • Spring Class (Dual Mode) EPS 411

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

    Spring 2017 (Tuesdays 4-6)

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

    Theme: Educating for Social Justice

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

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

  • DELTA faculty seeking students interested in tech in learning environments

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

     

  • Kelly Searsmith: Invited Speaker at ASHA 2019

    M.Ed. candidate in EPOL-Higher Education and autism advocate Kelly Searsmith gave an invited talk on Nov. 22 titled "Autism & Neurodiversity: Reimagining the Strengths of the Human Spectrum" with co-presenter Prof. Laura DeThorne of Western Michigan University at the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association's annual convention in Orlando, Florida.

    The talk helps medically-oriented practitioners to reframe their approach to autism therapies using a social model of disability and to understand the importance of adopting an assumed-competency, strength-based, and person-centered perspective.

  • School Research Projects Spring 2018

    Please visit the School University Research Relations Web page for details on requesting assistance to develop research partnerships between university researchers and local preK-12 schools. For Spring 2018 dissertation or faculty research projects, or external funding submissions needing school district support, please submit inquiries by Monday, December 11, for priority consideration.

  • SOAR after-school program now recruiting tutors for Spring 2017

    SOAR tutoring is scheduled for TWR from 2:00-3:15, with time for reading, homework assistance, and social activities with the children. Illinois students are paired with the same child for the semester and may choose to volunteer more than one day per week. Spanish-speaking skills are not necessary in order to participate. Tutors will need to complete a background check through the Champaign School District the third week of classes. The SOAR program coordinator will provide the clearance form for the tutors. This opportunity is especially interesting to Illinois students who want to gain cross-cultural awareness and relationship skills.

  • Inaugural Faculty Research Talk Series

    On selected Thursdays at 1pm throughout the semester, join us in room 192 Education for snacks as faculty members present their current research.  Topics and presenters include:  

    January 29:  Betsy Basch – Diversity and Ability

    February 12:  Rosa Milagros Santos –Early Intervention Services for Infants and Toddlers with Disabilities and their Families

    February 26:  Robb Lindgren – Educational Games and Interactive Technologies

    March 12:  Patrick Smith –Linguistic Discrimination and the Education of Bilingual Learners

    April 2:  Cheryl Light Shriner – Augmentative and Alternative Communication

    April 23:  Luz Murillo – Language, Literacy, and Justice in the Education of Mexican-Origin University Students

    April 30:  Matt Giani – Higher Education and Social Mobility

    Visit http://go.illinois.edu/frt to register.

  • #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.

  • Sensitivity Reading Panel poster

    Sensitivity Reading Panel

    Join the Center for Children's Books for a virtual panel discussion of youth literature and sensitivity reading, the practice of evaluating manuscripts for bias, inclusivity, and authenticity.

    Panelist speakers will include Professor Sarah Park Dahlen and School of Information Science doctoral students Jessie Maimone and Lettycia Terrones. 

  • 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.

  • EPOL professor to give keynote at diversity conference

    Dr. Adrienne Dixson will give a keynote presentation at the 2017 Diversity in Education Conference at the University of Iowa on March 24.

  • VariABILITY 2017: A call for interested students

    VariABILITY 2017 is a two-day event that aims to bring together students from different backgrounds to collaborate and understand some ongoing challenges that people with disabilities experience. Our goal is to take a proactive approach to disability awareness and advocacy through human-centered design. This is a great chance to become part of a community conversation on inclusion. We are looking for Illinois students from all academic disciplines and backgrounds who are passionate about this area, or just want to learn more!

    For more information, visit our FB page: https://www.facebook.com/VariABILITY-2017-255958794856110/?fref=hovercard

    Register here to attend the event: https://illinois.edu/fb/sec/1108043.

    Location: BIF Atrium

    Date: Friday, March 31 2017 6-8 PM - Saturday April 1 2017 10AM-5PM (Food and snacks will be provided on both days)

    Contact us for more questions at variabilityuiuc@gmail.com!​ Looking forward to seeing you there!

  • 5th International CREA Conference Program Available

    On Tuesday, March 26, the Center for Culturally Responsive Evaluation and Assessment begins its fifth annual gathering with pre-conference workshops. The conference gets underway Wednesday, March 27 and runs through Friday, March 29 at the Palmer House Hilton in Chicago, Illinois.

    You can view or download the full conference program and schedule here.

    Follow the hashtag #CREA5th online for all the latest news and information.

  • 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.

  • TIER-ED Calls for Pilot Project Proposals

    The TIER-ED Pilot Projects Program is designed to foster inter- or trans-disciplinary intellectual engagement through funding pilot or proof-of-concept projects. The submission deadline is Friday, April 23, 2021, by 5 p.m. CST.

  • EPOL scholar to serve on editorial board of flagship AERA journal

    Higher education funding expert Jennifer Delaney will serve on the editorial board of the journal Educational Researcher during 2017, with the possibility of a renewed appointment in 2018.

  • DEMO DAY: Engaging Ed Tech

    Please join us for an open house demo session (with refreshments!) on Wednesday, May 6 from 2:00 - 3:30pm in 176 Education Building (IDEALL Lab) to see class projects from the spring semester of EPSY/INFO 590, Engaging and Interactive Educational Technologies (taught by Dr. H. Chad Lane). You will have the chance to use the prototypes, talk to the students, and learn more about this interdisciplinary course (which will be offered again in the fall). If you have any questions, please send them to hclane@illinois.edu. We hope to see you!

  • DELTA/AppLeS Capstone Project Presentations

    Learning & Education Studies (LES)
    DELTA/AppLeS Capstone Symposium
    Monday, May 6
    2:00 – 4:00 pm
    Education 22

    A reminder that the DELTA/AppLeS joint Capstone Symposium is being held on Monday. Please join us as we hear from our graduating seniors in both the DELTA & AppLeS concentrations of the LES major for a symposium to celebrate and share their capstone research projects.

    DELTA = Digital Environments for Learning, Teaching, and Agency
    AppLeS = Applied Learning Science

  • Tap In organization accepting articles and content for magazine

    Tap In Leadership Academy (Tap In) is a nonprofit academic enrichment organization. Tap In has a mission to enhance educational achievement, support leadership development and captivate cultural awareness for children and families upon graduation. Tap In is currently looking for research based articles on educational topics to publish in our quarterly magazine. Desired articles should be less than 3000 words; however, submissions of any length will be considered. Submissions must be original and unpublished. To submit an article for consideration, please e-mail Jessica Bryson at Jessica@tapinacademy.org

  • Shana Calhoun

    SPED Graduate Featured for Supporting Students in Need

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

  • Library services and support

    The Social Sciences, Health, and Education Library (SSHEL) offers many services and resources to assist you with your class work, research and other projects.

    Our web site http://www.library.illinois.edu/sshel/ has links to subject-specific resources and to services, such as chat reference service, and forms for making an appointment with a librarian for one-on-one assistance or recommending items to purchase.

    Education-related information may be found at http://www.library.illinois.edu/sshel/education/index.html

    Please contact Nancy O’Brien by email (npobrien@illinois.edu) or phone (217-333-2408) if you would like to schedule library orientation and instruction sessions for classes.  Each session is structured to fit the needs of your particular class.  Individual meetings to discuss library services and collections to support your research needs can also be scheduled.

    Library hours for SSHEL and the Main Library for the fall semester are:

    Monday-Thursday:        8:30 am-10 pm

    Friday:                         8:30 am-6 pm

    Saturday:                     1-5 pm

    Sunday                         1-10 pm

    Thank you for your continued support and use of SSHEL.   I look forward to working with you all during the coming year!

    Nancy O’Brien

  • Fall 2017 Foundations Course EPS 420/SOC 420 Sociology of Education Space

    Fall 2017 Course EPS 420 & SOC 420 Sociology of Education

    Day/Time: Tuesdays, 10am to 11:50am, Education Building, Room 323

    Credit: 4 Hours Graduate (section A) or 3 Hours Undergraduate (section B)

    EPS 420 – Sociology of Education: 4-Hours Graduate #33715 or 3-hours Undergrad #64995

    SOC 420- Sociology of Education: 4-Hours Graduate: #33716 or 3-hours Undergrad #64996

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

    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. The course will examine major sociological theories, research studies, questions, and issues in the sociology of education. A spotlight of the course is student and teacher activism in society and in education. Among other things, we examine the education impact and legacies of diverse 1960s/1970s movements led by New Left students (such as Mario Savio in the Free Speech Movement), teachers (such as literacy pioneer Septima Poinsettia Clark in the civil rights movement), hippies/flower children, Vietnam anti-war activists, women, people with disabilities, European Americans, African-Americans, Latinos/as, Asian/Pacific Americans, Native Americans, LGBTQ+, welfare recipients and anti-poverty activists, language minorities, immigrants, migrant farm workers, and others who protested in and 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 Department of Educational Policy, Organization, & Leadership (EPOL), Department of Sociology, and Department of 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 in 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).

     

  • College of Education Graduate Student Conference CALL FOR PAPERS

    pro·pos·al

    noun: proposal; plural noun: proposals

    a plan or suggestion, especially a formal or written one, put forward for consideration or discussion by others.

    “The graduate student put forward a convincing proposal for curricular reform.”

     

    We invite proposals for individual papers, works in progress, or panel sessions, which could consist of several works in progress. Consider sharing your proposals from AERA, CREA, AESA, ASHE, and other conferences. This is also a great way to become comfortable sharing your research before submitting a proposal to a national or regional conference.  http://education.illinois.edu/gradconference 

    We encourage graduate students to consider submitting proposals on topics as they relate to this year’s theme: From Research to Praxis: Scholarship Today for the Society of Tomorrow.

     

  • Betty Trummel to Continue Alumni Speaker Series

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

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

  • Active secondary ed minor named to 2017 Illinois Homecoming court

    Cierra Phillips, a senior who is minoring in secondary education, was named to the 2017 Illinois Homecoming court.

  • Fall 2019 MSTE Friday Lunch Series: IT Accessibility at the University of Illinois

    What is accessibility all about and how does it apply to the University of Illinois and you? In this presentation, Tim Offenstein will give an overview of IT Accessibility. He will explain what “assistive technology” is, who uses it and how it benefits them, and the current state of the legal landscape – are we going to get sued? Please join in for this conversation about IT Accessibility! RSVP!

  • C&I graduate student receives CADRE Fellowship

    Curriculum & Instruction graduate student Gabriela Vargas has been selected as a recipient of the highly competitive Community for Advancing Discovery Research in Education (CADRE) Fellowship.

  • Business Leadership Conference

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

  • 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.

  • Submissions for Undergraduate Research Symposium Now Being Accepted

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

  • Campus Charitable Fund Drive (CCFD) Ends Nov. 9

    The Campus Charitable Fund Drive (CCFD) is currently underway and ends on Friday, Nov. 9. Indivudials are urged to consider giving to one of the more than 700 charitable organizations that they have a passion for. These organizations are listed in the agency booklet under the 12 umbrella organizations. The minimum contribution is as little as $24 annually, and every gift matters, no matter the size.

    Please see Julie Kellogg in Room 210C of the Education building for inquiries or for needed assistance in completing the online giving form via payroll deduction. Those who want to contribute may also fill out a one-time payment form.

    Online Giving Page

    One-time pledge form

    Agency booklet

    CCFD FAQs

    Agency search by keyword/cause

    GIVING SPARKS HOPE

  • Chancellor Jones' State of the University address

    Chancellor Robert J. Jones invites faculty, staff, students and the general public to a State of the University address on Thursday, Nov. 8 from noon to 1 p.m. in Illini Union Rooms A, B and C. Jones will provide a brief overview of highlights of the past year and outline specific ways Illinois is taking control and ownership of our future success. A Q&A session will follow. 

  • 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)

  • Newbery Maker Studio Poster

    Newbery Maker Studio Pop-Up

    Come de-stress from Finals Week by crafting with the Center for Children’s Books and the Champaign-Urbana Community Fab Lab! We will be creating Newbery Medal-inspired pop-up cards, designing our own literary awards, and more.

  • Upcoming Winter Break Closures: Bureau of Educational Research and Sponsored Programs Administration

    Winter Break office closures will impact submission timelines for external research proposals having deadlines between December 20, 2017 and January 4, 2018. We ask faculty and researchers to please plan accordingly.

    The Bureau of Educational Research and the Sponsored Programs Administration (SPA) offices will close the afternoon of Friday, December 22, 2017 and re-open on Tuesday, January 2, 2018.

    All proposals having a sponsor due date between December 15, 2017 and January 4, 2018 should be submitted to the Bureau as soon as possible to allow sufficient time for submission set-up, post-production and submission to campus. The staff at SPA pre-award intend to submit proposals due on December 20, 2017, through January 4, 2018, on or before December 20, 2017, and to use December 21 - December 22 for resubmission of proposals presenting fatal errors within sponsor submission systems.

    College faculty and researchers who anticipate proposal submissions with due dates on or before January 6, 2018 are encouraged to communicate with Jane Schingel (jschinge@illinois.edu or 244-3564) as soon as possible to discuss individual submission needs.

  • Teacher of the Week: Natasha Capell

  • View University Primary School's 'Project Studies' exhibition

    University Primary School, the preK through fifth-grade lab school of the College of Education, invites campus and community members to walk through its "Project Studies" exhibition in the first- and third-floor lobby areas of the Education building (1310 S. Sixth St., Champaign) on Feb. 2-7. Documentation and representation of fall-semester inquiry studies will be on display.  

  • 2015 Digital Humanities Symposium, February 27-28

    The Scholarly Commons at the University Library and the Institute of Computing in the Humanities, Arts, and Social Science (I-CHASS) are pleased to announce the 2015 Digital Humanities Symposium: Explorations of Technology in Humanities Research on February 27th-28th, 2015:

    Hands-on workshops will be held on the evening of February 27th at the Main Library, and will feature leading digital humanities practitioners from UIUC teaching on topics such as text analysis, geographical information systems, and data visualization. This will be followed by a day-long research symposium featuring leading researchers in digital humanities presenting on current digital research and methodologies on February 28th at Altgeld Hall.

    Please join us for this great opportunity for faculty and graduate students to learn about digital humanities tools and research approaches and to build a research community for digital humanities practitioners at Illinois.

    Register for FREE here:

    https://eventbrite.com/event/15364430425/

    For more information, visit http://publish.illinois.edu/digitalhumanities/dh-symposium/

  • Education Justice Project Seeks Instructors

    The Education Justice Project (EJP) is seeking applicants to teach for a higher education program at the Danville Correctional Center.

  • Student Assistance Center Changes | Office of the Dean of Students

    The Student Assistance Center in the Office of the Dean of Students is excited for the spring 2019 semester. We want to inform you of some changes we have made in order to better serve students.

    To be better prepared for the issues students may bring, we are moving to a model in which we strongly recommend that students make an appointment. This is beneficial in the following ways:

    • Students can have concentrated time with a Dean to address their questions or concerns.
    • The student’s issue may require research prior to the meeting, allowing the Dean time to do some preparation in advance.
    • A Dean may not be readily available at all times during peak drop-in hours.

    Students can schedule appointments by calling (217) 333-0050.

  • Image with profile pictures at the top of (from left to right) Dr. Maryam Kia-Keating, Mr. Mona M. Amer, and Dr. Gigi Awad. The Liberation Now Podcast logo is shown on the bottom left. On the right, there is a maroon text box with text reading: Episode 9: Racial-ethnic Trauma & Liberation for MENA Americans (Part 2).

    Liberation Now Podcast Releases Episodes on Arab/MENA Trauma and Liberation

    EPSY doctoral candidate Amir Maghsoodi (Counseling Psychology) interviewed pioneering Arab/MENA psychologists Dr. Germine "Gigi" Awad, Dr. Maryam Kia-Keating, and Dr. Mona M. Amer, for the latest two episodes of the Liberation Now Podcast.

    Maghsoodi spoke with his guests about their paper (published in American Psychologist) on cumulative racial-ethnic trauma among MENA Americans, and its applications to healing and liberation. Liberation Now is produced in the Liberation Lab research group, led by Dr. Helen Neville. The podcast can be accessed by searching for "Liberation Now" on any podcast streaming service and via the following link: https://bit.ly/LiberationNow.

  • Theory and Biography: A Conversation with Carlos Alberto Torres

    Abstract: Scratch a theory, find a biography. Torres, working over three decades in critical studies in education, will analyze key moments of his own biography as an exiled intellectual, migrant, international student and academic professor in diverse countries. He will discuss what he has learned to advance an agenda of research, teaching and social transformation for a better world. 

    DATE: Wednesday, March 1

    TIME: Noon - 1:30 p.m. CT

    PLACE: Room 242 Education or join by Zoom: Meeting ID 852 0388 8968; Password 398009

    LUNCH PROVIDED

  • The now-familiar likeness of Phillis Wheatley that appeared as the frontispiece to her 1773 Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral is an image of, by, and for Black children. The iconic poet, born in the Senegambia region of West Africa, was kidnapped into slavery at the age of seven or eight. Her first published poem appeared when she was a teenager, and she was no more than twenty when her volume of poetry was published in London. Tracing how Wheatley has been pictured in early Black periodicals, educational materials, pageant plays, and contemporary children’s literature, we see how she has been imagined not only as a Black woman writer but specifically as a child creative—someone whose literary acumen was surprising to white adults because of the various intersectional positions of oppression she occupied. Reading these repetitions and reverberations of Wheatley’s image across time shows how picturing Wheatley became a practice for celebrating and fostering creativity among Black children.

    CCB 2022 Gryphon Lecture: "Picturing Young, Gifted, and Black: Phillis Wheatley’s Image and the Creative Black Child"

    On April 8, 2022, Brigitte Fielder, associate professor in the College of Arts and Letters at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, will give the 2022 Gryphon Lecture. Attendees may participate virtually over Zoom.  

  • National and International Scholarships Program | April Information Sessions

    During the first two weeks of April, the National and International Scholarship Program is hosting information sessions for undergraduate students across colleges and fields to learn about some nationally competitive scholarship opportunities.