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College of Education Announcements

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  • Two College of Education Faculty and Staff Involved in New Credentialing Initiative

    Drs. Natasha Jankowski and Gianina Baker will help lead a new initiative, Credential as You Go, exploring the feasibility of a nationally-recognized, incremental credentialing system in higher education which expands upon existing certificates and degrees at the associate, bachelor’s, and graduate degree levels.

  • Undergraduate Student Scholarships Available for 2015-2016 Academic Year

    Students, the College of Education Undergraduate Honors & Awards Committee invites you to review the college scholarships available for the 2015-2016 academic year and to apply for those scholarships for which you meet the criteria. Scholarship criteria vary depending on the donors' wishes. Examples of donor wishes include, but are not limited to, the following: financial need, educational interests and or goals, support for non-traditional students, and support for students from specific Illinois counties.

    The deadline for scholarship application submission is Wednesday, April 1, 2015.  Scholarship application and instructions and a complete list of available scholarships can be found at http://education.illinois.edu/students/undergrad_awards. Scholarship announcements will be made in late May, and scholarship recipients will be honored at the College of Education Student Recognition Banquet held annually in the fall semester.

    If you have questions, please contact your adviser.

  • 2021 College of Education Convocation Information

    In-person convocation ceremonies will not take place due to the global COVID-19 pandemic. However, the Convocation website shows the exciting things that are happening to celebrate your great achievement! Read on to learn more.

  • COVID-19 Briefing Series: SHIELD: Target, Test, Tell

    The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign is hosting a series of online COVID-19 Briefings. During these live-streamed briefings campus leaders and subject experts will present the latest information on a specific topic related to the university’s responses to COVID-19. Additionally, during some briefings, members of the Chancellor’s COVID-19 committees will provide updates on their committee’s work.

  • Catherine Corr

    Corr Wins Early Career Award from MMIRA

    Catherine Corr, associate professor SPED and C&I, will receive her award at the MMIRA global conference in July.

  • Toward an Illinois Learning Sciences Design Laboratory – A Lightning Symposium

    Call for Proposals

    Toward an Illinois Learning Sciences Design Laboratory – A Lightning Symposium
    iHotel; February 27, 2015; 9:00 AM – 2:00 PM

    [Proposal Submission Deadline: February 6, 2015]

    Summary

    The new Illinois Learning Sciences Design Laboratory (ILSDL) is being launched with a Lightning Symposium on February 27, 2015, to showcase the work of UIUC faculty and research groups, facilitate discussion among participants, build networks, and initiate a number of specific proposals for seed funding. ILSDL is seeking proposals (300-word abstracts) for 5-minute presentations and posters that address the grand challenges of:

    1. Advancing the scientific understanding of learning
    2. Designing tools, environments, and platforms to improve/deepen/accelerate learning, and learning processes and outcomes
    3. Designing tools to analyze big data with the aim of transforming uniform learning platforms into adaptive personalized learning environments

    Details

    Illinois Learning Sciences Design Laboratory

    The Visioning Future Excellence at Illinois Outcomes Report (July, 2013) put forth the development of a Learning Sciences Laboratory among the New Strategic Investment Initiatives for campus. The laboratory aims “to understand learning mechanisms and to invent learning and educational tools, practices, and spaces for the future of teaching and learning across disciplines and professions” (p. 11).

    At the direction of campus leadership, a steering committee of deans and faculty from across campus has been working to launch the Illinois Learning Sciences Design Laboratory (ILSDL), which is aimed at building, synthesizing, translating, and applying theories of learning to guide designing, developing, prototyping/trialing, assessing, scaling, disseminating, and commercializing transformational, cutting-edge, replicable, technological tools, solutions, and platforms in support of learning environments and practices.

    Lightning Symposium

    This symposium is a major first step toward articulating a coherent framework, and an encompassing vision and plan for an ILSDL. The symposium will help identify UIUC faculty and research groups who would bring to this initiative deep and varied expertise in research, design, development, and tool creation; and who currently are operating within departments, schools, colleges, centers, institutes, and start-ups across campus. Leveraging our wealth of expertise in a creative, collaborative, trans-disciplinary, and enabling laboratory environment is key to ensuring Illinois excellence and leadership in the context of an increasingly prominent global focus on the implications of the learning sciences for designing learning environments.

    The symposium is structured to showcase the work of faculty and research groups, facilitate discussion among participants, build networks, and initiate a number of specific proposals for seed funding. Our goal is to be generative of ideas addressing grand challenges in design and tool creation for teaching and learning, and to create a network of design and research collaborations across campus.

    “Learning,” “learning environments,” and “tools” are conceptualized broadly to capture the varied meanings these concepts carry in different academic communities and stakeholder groups. Consider, for example, evidence of learning: A neuroscientist may point to changes in gray matter; a school administrator may look at shifts in standardized test scores; a medical educator may focus on a healthcare provider’s enhanced skills in controlling a robotic surgical system; and a teacher or parent may consider a child’s ability to participate in a practice or skill that motivates and engages them. Similarly, learning tools and environments range from online courses and MOOCs; to games, simulations, or virtual and augmented realities to books, media, and the natural world; and extend from formal (e.g., P-20 classrooms), to informal (e.g., science centers, art museums) or ubiquitous (e.g., various media) learning environments. The symposium aims to reflect this range and facilitate inter- and trans-disciplinary discussions and understanding of learning, and how to create and design 21st century tools and environments in support of such learning.

    Symposium Themes and Grand Challenges

    The symposium will feature 5-minute lightning presentations and posters that address themes under a number of 21st century grand challenges in the learning sciences and the design and creation of learning tools:

    1. Advancing the scientific understanding of learning
      1. Mechanisms/processes, cognition, metacognition, learning to learn, creativity
      2. Emotions/affect, motivation, social/cultural aspects, collaboration/teamwork
      3. Physical/embodied aspects
      4. Neuro/biological aspects
    2. Designing tools, environments, and platforms (physical, online, virtual, simulations, visualizations, etc.) to improve/deepen/accelerate learning, and learning processes and outcomes
      1. Interventions intended to improve learning across contexts
      2. Putting basic science to work in MOOCs, educational apps, games, classroom teaching, homework technologies, museums and afterschool clubs, etc.
      3. Teaching/tutoring/coaching, promoting deep conceptual understanding, self-explanations and other self-regulated learning approaches
      4. Creating tools to help coordinate learning activities (home, museums, libraries, schools, outdoors) and articulate lifelong learning
    3. Designing tools to analyze big data with the aim of transforming uniform learning platforms into adaptive personalized learning environments
      1. Collecting, curating, and securing (e.g., ethically, legally, technologically) massive amounts of data about the choices and behaviors of learners in various learning environments (e.g., keyboard strokes, mouse clicks, physiological responses, eye tracking, body movements)
      2. Building data analytics that draw on theories of teaching, learning, and assessment, and peta-scale computational capabilities, as well as cutting-edge research in data mining, statistics, and natural language processing to analyze big data in the service of providing assessments—including automated summative and real-time formative assessments—and to enable adaptive and personalized learning experiences
      3. Providing individualized real-time and delayed feedback to the thousands of students enrolled in a MOOC so as to optimize their engagement, enhance self-regulation and self-monitoring, and eventually sustain their engagement and maximize their learning

    Proposal Submission

    Deadline: February 6, 2015 @ 5:00 PM

    To propose an individual or group session, go to https://illinois.edu/fb/sec/6486157 to submit:

    • Researcher name(s) and unit affiliation(s)
    • Session/poster title
    • A short abstract (200 to 300 words)
    • Keywords or phrases

    Authors should anticipate hearing about the status of their proposals as soon as possible and no later than by February 16, 2015.

    If you have questions or would like assistance with submitting proposals or preparing your presentation, please contact Tanya Sutton tsutton@illinois.edu

    Registration to Attend the Symposium

    If you submit a proposal, there is no need to register to attend the symposium.

    If you like to attend the symposium without submitting a proposal, please register at https://illinois.edu/fb/sec/253477

  • Department of Psychology Hosting Two Speakers from UW-Madison

    The Psychology Department is hosting two language talks of interest on Friday, 2/14. Dr. Maryellen MacDonald and Dr. Mark Seidenberg from the University of Wisconsin-Madison will be speaking at noon and at 1:30 p.m., respectively, in 819 Psychology.

     

  • 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.

  • Aiman Ghani, ElEd '22, Named a U. of I. Fulbright Student Scholar

    Sixteen University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign students and recent graduates were offered Fulbright grants to pursue international education, research, and teaching experiences around the globe this coming year. Another six Illinois students were named Fulbright alternates.

    The Fulbright U.S. Student Program builds international relationships to help solve global challenges. This flagship international educational exchange program of the U.S. government awards grants to students based on their academic and professional achievement, as well as their ambassadorial skills and leadership potential. The Fulbright student program will fund approximately 2,200 U.S. citizens to live abroad for the 2022-23 academic year.

  • Fall 2019 Hardie Conference Travel Support Award Competition for Students and Faculty

    The generous support of an endowment from Charles Dunn Hardie allows the College of Education to offer the Hardie Conference Travel Support Award to faculty and students. This award supports College of Education research activity by reimbursing travel and registration expenses for faculty and students presenting their work at major research conferences in their field. Deadlines are set throughout the academic year.

    Fall 2019 applications will open September 10 and will be accepted through September 24, by 5:00 pm.

    https://education.illinois.edu/associate-dean-for-research/bureau-of-educational-research/college-research-awards/hardie-conference

  • 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. Yoon Pak

    Yoon Pak, EPOL Department Head, Appointed to ISBE State Assessment Review Committee

    Yoon Pak, professor and department head of Education Policy, Organization and Leadership, has been appointed to the Illinois State Board of Education's State Assessment Review Committee.

  • Jamie Roundtree

    Roundtree Named Director of Curriculum and Instruction for Rantoul City Schools

    Roundtree, a three time Illinois alumna was approved by the Rantoul City School Board on April 17.

  • Funding Reminder: Reminder: NSF - Discovery Research PreK-12 (DRK-12)

    The full proposal for this funding opportunity is due Dec. 7, 2015, by 5 p.m. Click on the above link for more information.

  • Hood, Hopson Editors of New Book from Harvard Education Press

    Stafford Hood, Sheila M. Miller professor emeritus of Curriculum and Instruction, and Rodney Hopson, professor of Educational Psychology, are editors of a new publication from Harvard Education Press, Race and Culturally Responsive Inquiry in Education, examining how to improve research, evaluation, and assessment.

  • THE SAVVY RESEARCHER

    Join us for 50 minute, hands-on workshops that will help you improve your research and information management skills. Upcoming sessions include:

    •             Intro to data management

    •             Getting organized with Mendeley

    •             How to create a great poster

    •             Deep searching the web

    •             How-to series: Mobile media production

    •             Your research rights: Ownership awareness to maximize the impact

    •             Digital humanities workshop: Omeka in a nutshell

    •             Digital historian series: Using digital tools for archival research

    And much more! For more details and registration: http://illinois.edu/calendar/list/4068

    All sessions held in the Main Library, Room 314 unless otherwise noted.

  • TIER-ED Graduate Fellows Program

    Technology Innovation in Educational Research and Design (TIER-ED) Graduate Fellowships will be awarded to graduate students working on a research project in a TIER-ED focused area. Selected TIER-ED Fellows will receive $20,000 for one academic year. Please submit required documents and reference letters by email to tier-ed@education.illinois.edu. The submission deadline is Friday, April 23, 2021, by 5 p.m. CST.

  • Ronald S. Rochon Inaugurated as President of the University of Southern Indiana

    April 5-6, 2019, the University of Southern Indiana celebrated the inauguration of its fourth president, Education at Illinois alumnus Ronald S. Rochon, Ph.D. ’97 EPS.

  • Join the Fun at Education at Illinois 2015 AERA Reception!

    The 2015 AERA Meeting takes place April 16-20 in Chicago. We look forward to connecting with our alumni, students, and faculty members! The event is free and a cash bar will be available.

  • 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.

  • What Would Have to Happen for All 28 State Prisons to Offer Academic College-level Programming?

    The News-Gazette asked seven local advocates, including Rebecca Ginsburg, professor of EPOL and director of the Education Justice Project, to offer solutions for criminal justice system reform.

  • Rush recruitment for service fraternity Alpha Phi Omega

    Looking to make an impact on campus? Trying to diversify your resume for graduate school? Read on to learn about how you can join Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternity at Illinois.

  • Angel Velez

    ICYMI: Angel Velez Featured in NBC News Story on Racism Within Racial Diversity

    ICYMI: Angel Velez, EPOL Doctoral Candidate and OCCRL Research Associate, featured in NBC News story on Racism Within Racial Diversity.

  • 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).

  • Jonathan Phelan

    Jonathan Phalen, '23 Secondary Education Minor, Receives Fulbright Award

    Fulbright grants allow students and recent graduates to pursue international education, research, and teaching experiences around the globe this coming year.

  • 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. 

  • Health Equity Scholars Poster Session and Celebration Luncheon

    The Interdisciplinary Health Sciences Institute (IHSI) and the College of Education invite you to the Health Equity Scholars Poster Session and Celebration Luncheon on Wednesday, Aug. 7, 11 a.m. – 1 p.m., at the Beckman Institute.

  • 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.

  • Rebecca Ginsburg

    Education Justice Project Awarded Two New Mellon Foundation Grants

    Congratulations to director Rebecca Ginsburg and the Education Justice project team on more than $1.5M in new funding from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

  • Job Announcement for Visiting Assistant Professor

    Position: Visiting Assistant Professor Position in Education Administration/Leadership. This is a full-time nine-month non-tenure-track faculty position in the College of Education for one year, with the possibility of renewal. The Department of Education Policy, Organization and Leadership (EPOL) includes divisions of Educational Administration and Leadership, Global Studies in Education, Higher Education, Social and Philosophical Foundations, and Human Resource Development. Departmental faculty address critical issues in PK-12 and postsecondary education, fostering an interdisciplinary understanding of education policy and practice across the traditional divides among educational administrators, philosophers, historians, social scientists, organizational theorists, and policy analysts. The individual sought for this position would work within the Educational Administration and Leadership division, which focuses on the preparation of PK-12 school leaders. The successful candidate would be immersed in school leadership issues related to social justice, equity, and equality and should understand and be committed to the diverse social, economic, and policy context in PK-12 education. To ensure full consideration, applications must be received by March 6, 2015. Application will continue to be accepted until a hiring decision is reached. Please create a candidate profile at https://jobs.illinois.edu and upload one file that contains a cover letter, curriculum vitae, personal statement of teaching and research philosophies, unofficial copies of undergraduate and graduate transcripts, and the contact information for three references by the close date. All requested information must be submitted for your application to be considered. Applicants may be interviewed before the closing date; however, no hiring decision will be made until after that date. For more information please contact: Dr. Eboni Zamani-Gallaher, Search Committee Chair, 217-300-0897 or ezamanig@illinois.edu.

  • Learn More About the Instructional Design MasterTrack Certificate Program

    Join expert faculty from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign for this FREE webinar that offers insider information about the Instructional Design MasterTrack Certificate Program, offered online through our partnership with Coursera.

    Speakers include Wenhao David Huang, PhD, Eunjung Grace Oh, PhD, Denice Ward Hood, PhD, and Yoon Pak, PhD.

    When: Feb 21, 2019 12:00 PM Central Time (US and Canada) 

    Click Here: to Register in advance for this FREE Zoom webinar

  • Youth Literature Festival Presents: Barnes & Noble Bookfair

    The Youth Literature Festival presents the Barnes and Noble Bookfair! 

  • Ananya Tiwari

    Ananya Tiwari Named 2020-2021 YMCA Fred S. Bailey Fellow

    For her contributions and acheivements to community leadership, service, and activism, Educational Psychology PhD candidate Ananya Tiwari has been awarded one of two 2020-2021 YMCA Fred S. Bailey Fellowships for graduate students and professionals on campus.

  • Hispanic Heritage Month Celebration

    All Are Invited to the Hispanic Heritage Month Celebration

    The Gies Access and Multicultural Engagement Team want to extend an invite to our College of Education neighbors to join us for our Hispanic Heritage Month Celebration scheduled for Wednesday, October 6 from 4 to 7 pm on the Sixth Street Lawn (the grassy area between BIF and KAM).

  • 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.

  • UI Alumni Association honors Education alumnus

    College of Education at Illinois alumnus Dale H. Flach has been honored with a Distinguished Service Award by the University of Illinois Alumni Association for his insight and innovation in developing programs that serve communities throughout the state.

  • Hamsa/Khamsa

    Envisioning Collective Thriving During Ramadan

    In this post on the Psychology Today website, PhD student in Educational Psychology Amir Maghsoodi joins the Psychology of Radical Healing Collective as a guest contributor on their blog to explore the application of the psychological framework of radical healing among American Arab, Middle Eastern, and North African (MENA) peoples during the COVID-19 pandemic and the month of Ramadan.

  • Global Education Symposium 2020

    Global Education Symposium 2020

    The Office of International Programs in the College of Education at Illinois invites you to participate in the second Global Education Symposium, October 14-17, 2020. The deadline for submitting an abstract is July 15, 2020, and the registration deadline is July 31, 2020. Click here for more information: https://go.illinois.edu/GES20

  • EPS 412 Critical Thinking in Education

    Fall 2014

    EPS 412 Critical Thinking in Education (4hrs)

    crn: 63178

    Tuesdays, 4-6:50pm

    Instructor: Nicholas C. Burbules

     

    This course starts with the question, “What is critical thinking?” We will review some of the major views on critical thinking and its role as an educational aim.

    Next, we will move on to how to teach critical thinking, its relationship to developmental issues, and its relationship to various subject matters. Is, for example, there are generic model of “critical thinking” that we can promote, or does critical thinking only exist in relation to particular subject matters (critical thinking about history, or about science, etc).

    Finally, we will consider wider social and psychological influences that might constitute barriers to the teaching of critical thinking. For example, what special challenges does the Internet pose for developing critical thinking skills and dispositions?

    Everything in this class is discussed in relation to teaching. It does not assume a previous background in philosophy.

    This class also satisfies the master degree EPS foundations requirement.

  • Michele Schutz

    Michele Schutz Receives $2.5M Grant from the Department of Education

    Funding was granted to Schutz, co-PI, for the project entitled "EMPOWERing Transition-Aged Youth with Visual Impairments: Equipping More Professionals for Work and Education in Rural Communities"

  • EPSY Alumna Ayesha Boyce, PhD, win AEA 2019 Marcia Guttentag Promising New Evaluator Award

    Ayesha Boyce, PhD '14, EPSY, Wins Award at AEA

    Educational Psychology alumna Ayesha Boyce, PhD, was recently awarded the American Evaluation Association 2019 Marcia Guttentag Promising New Evaluator Award. This award, which she received at the American Evaluation Association (AEA) Conference, Nov. 12–16 in Minneapolis is presented to a promising new evaluator during the first five years after completion of his or her master’s or doctoral degree and whose work is consistent with the AEA Guiding Principles for Evaluator.

  • 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.

  • College of Education Research Team Creates Online Database of Sustainability Curriculum

    The Sustainable World Collaborative, a group of researchers from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, has created an online database called Sustainable World to support educators in making sustainability a central focus of cross-disciplinary instruction.

  • Call to Action to Address Racism & Social Injustice Research Program

    In July 2020, Chancellor Jones announced a $2 million annual commitment by the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign to focus intellectual and scholarly talent of our university to examine two of the greatest challenges facing our society and seek new solutions. Recognizing the critical need for universities across our nation to prioritize research focused on systemic racial inequities and injustices that exist not only in our communities but in higher education itself, the Call to Action to Address Racism & Social Injustice Research Program will provide support for academic research and the expansion of community-based knowledge that advances the understanding of systemic racism and generationally embedded racial disparity.

  • Discovery Partner Institute (DPI) Illinois Workforce and Education Research Collaborative. Part of the University of Illinois System

    IWERC: Understanding Illinois' Teacher Shortage in 2024

    The Illinois Workforce and Education Research Collaboration has partnered with The Illinois Association of Regional Superintendents of Schools (IARSS) to deliver a report examining the teaching shortages in Illinois in 2024.

  • Looking for a Study Tour MOOC?

    JOIN US ON OUR VIRTUAL STUDY OF CHILE THIS SUMMER!

    This 4-credit course will examine the current educational system in Chile in relation to its history, economy, media environment and political movements. 

  • Campus' New Mental Health & Wellness Website Launches, Centralizes Resources

    Public Affairs at Illinois announces the launch of the centralized Mental Health and Wellness website: https://wellness.illinois.edu/ for the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign community.

  • Campus Is Going Smoke & Tobacco Free Beginning August 26

    Starting the first day of instruction for the fall semester, the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign campus will be smoke & tobacco free. The new effort builds upon the smoke-free policy that was successfully implemented in 2014, banning the use of all smoke-producing tobacco products on campus.

  • Emily Stone

    Emily Stone Named College's Inaugural Director of Public Engagement

    The Dean's Office is pleased to announce that Emily Stone has accepted their offer to serve as the College of Education’s inaugural Director of Public Engagement.

  • Strong Enrollment Numbers for Illinois, College of Education

    Strong increases in enrollment at the campus and college level, tenth-day numbers reveal.