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College of Education Announcements

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  • Education Justice Project applications due Oct. 1

    Applications to work with the Education Justice Project (EJP) at the Danville Correctional Center are being accepted through Oct. 1. Two EJP Info Nights will take place in the Education Building in September.

  • Dr. Koritha Mitchell

    Students Needed for Events Featuring Award-winning Author Koritha Mitchell

    As part of its MillerComm Lecture Series, the Center for Advanced Study has several opportunities for students—especially students of color—to get involved when award-winning author Koritha Mitchell presents October 7 and 8.

  • 2 Research Assistant positions

    Dr. Patrick Smith (Department of Curriculum & Instruction) is seeking a Research Assistant to support a new program of research with emergent bilinguals and immigrants. This work will include developing a bibliography of print and digital resources related to the demographics and education of Spanish-speaking populations in Illinois. If you are looking to develop research and scholarly writing skills around issues of biliteracy, human capital, and transnationalism, and are able to work 10 hours per week (flexible hours), please contact phsmith@illinois.edu, call (217) 244-7367, or stop by the College of Education, Rm. 399. Biliteracy in Spanish/English and experience with immigrant populations are desired qualifications. 

    Dr. Luz Murillo (Department of Curriculum & Instruction) is seeking a Research Assistant to support ethnographic research on the literacies of Spanish-speaking (im)migrant families in Champaign-Urbana and Rantoul. Responsibilities will include interviewing families and transcribing interviews in Spanish and English; conducting participant observation in households/community sites; taking detailed field notes; collaborating in data analysis; and identifying literature related to the literacy education. If you are able to work 10 hours per week (flexible hours) and are interested in the literacies of Latina/o (im)migrant children, adolescents, and families, please contact Dr. Murillo at lmurillo@illinois.edu, call (217) 244-9186, or stop by the College of Education, Rm. 321.

  • MSE Fireside Chat: Making Sense of the Natural World through Translanguaging | Enrique Suárez, UMass Amherst (via Zoom)

    Friday, October 18, 2019

    Time: 3 p.m.

    Location: Room 378, College of Education

    Enrique (Henry) Suárez will be kicking off our MSE Brown Bag series with a virtual fireside chat about his research on emerging bilingual elementary school students’ use of translanguaging during their participation in science practices. Enrique is an assistant professor Math, Science, and Learning Technologies at UMass Amherst. During this informal, interactive conversation, Enrique will be telling us the “story behind the story” of the attached paper; talking about his career trajectory; discussing his perspective on doing equity-focused research in MSE; and/or answering any questions we may have.

  • ADHD Coaching Group, In Focus

    This group is a 6-week long supportive and skills group for students identifying concerns common to Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder. We meet on Wednesdays from 1-2:30 in the Counseling Center. Students do not need a diagnosis of ADHD nor do they need to be clients of the Counseling Center to join. Registration is required, as spaces are limited. The fall 2013 group is planned to start on Oct. 30th.  A flyer is attached. Contact jmthomas@illinois.edu for more information. 

  • 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. Cheryl Light Shriner

    Cheryl Light Shriner Named Goldstick Family Scholar

    Dr. Cheryl Light Shriner has been named the Goldstick Family Scholar, effective February 1, 2022.  She is one of four accomplished scholars from the Department of Special Education to receive this honor, which was established by Phillip C. and the late Beverly Kramer Goldstick to provide sustainable training and research programs in the area of communication disorders in special education.

  • Stephanie Renee Toliver

    Toliver Wins 2024 Book Award from Qualitative Research SIG

    Stephanie Renee Toliver, assistant professor Curriculum & Instruction, has been named a recipient of the 2024 Outstanding Qualitative Research Book Award from the Qualitative Research SIG of AERA. The award for her book, Recovering Black Storytelling in Qualitative Research: Endarkened Storywork, was given in recognition of significant contributions to qualitative educational research methodology. 


  • Calling Faculty and Researchers: Apply to Become a DPI Member

    Led by the University of Illinois system, faculty, researchers, and educators play a vital role as DPI members. Request to join DPI by submitting your name, short biography, and CV.

  • Sherry Yi, first place winner of Research Live!

    Congratulations to EPSY's Sherry Yi, First Prize Winner of Research Live!

    The Graduate College just announced the graduate student 2021 Research Live! Winners. First prize ($300) went to Sherry Yi in Educational Psychology for "Using Videogames to Spark Interest for Learning." Research Live! is a fun, fast-paced competition where Illinois graduate students share their remarkable research in 3-minutes or less.

  • Register for SCD's Workshops for Learners

    SCD's workshops for learners show you how to expand your creativity, empathy, and storytelling using human-centered design.These standalone sessions are free and open to students and staff at UIUC - all majors and disciplines welcome! You can attend in-person or virtually, though in-person capacity is limited.

  • Three from Department of Special Education Win Awards at DEC 2022 Conference

    Congratulations to SPED professor Amy Santos, graduate student Grace Sawyer, and alumna and local practitioner Teresa O'Connor, who all won awards at the recent international Council for Exceptional Children's Division for Early Childhood 2022 Conference recently held in Chicago.

  • College of Education Receives Engaged Unit Program Award from Campus

    Congratulations to Assistant Professor of Special Education, Erica Mason, and a team of scholars from the College of Education: Emily Stone (lead coordinator), James Harden, Victor Perez, Gloriana González Rivera, and Dean Chrystalla Mouza! They have been selected for an Engaged Unit Program Award through the Office of the Chancellor.

  • 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.

  • Summer 2016 EPS 420 & SOC420 "Sociology of Education" Social Foundations Course---Many Seats Still Available

    2016 Summer Term 2A, 1st 4 Weeks, June 13-July 8th

    Course Title: EPS 420-BRB "Sociology of Education" crn # 35166

    & SOC 420-BRB "Sociology of Education"  crn# 35167

    Course Credit: 2  to 4 Hours Credit

    Days, Time, Location: M, T, W, Thr, 10:00-11:50am, 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)

  • Black Teacher Collaborative Selects Asif Wilson as a Clark-Woodson Fellow

    Congratulations to Asif Wilson, assistant professor of Curriculum and Instruction, who was named a 2022-23 Clark-Woodson Research Fellow by the Black Teacher Collaborative.

  • 6th Annual INTC Beginning Teacher Conference

    The Illinois New Teacher Collaborative invites beginning teachers (all grade levels and content areas) who have just completed their first year of teaching in Illinois to the INTC Beginning Teacher Conference Y2: Moving Beyond Survival.

    This conference is an opportunity for new teachers to reflect on and share the past year’s teaching experience, network with other new teachers from around the state, gain valuable teaching tools and ideas to use in their classroom next year, hear the motivational Freedom Writer Manuel Scott, and volunteer to share their own practice in the innovative Un-Conference: U-Teach session.

    The conference takes place June 30 and July 1, 2015 at the I Hotel and Conference Center in Champaign. More information about the conference is available at intc.education.illinois.edu/btc.

  • Statewide Election Day Holiday | No Classes on Tuesday, November 3, 2020

    The University of Illinois System will observe a state holiday on this year's Election Day, November 3, 2020.

  • The Nuts and Bolts of Apartment Hunting

    The Tenant Union and Campus and Community Student Services, both units under the Office of the Dean of Students, will be co-hosting a workshop entitled “The Nuts and Bolts of Apartment Hunting” on Thursday, October 8th at 7pm in room 112 CHEM Annex. We’ll engage attendees in a presentation and discussion around what items should be on their apartment hunting checklist and how to distinguish apartment living myths from facts. In addition to discussing when, where, and how to begin the apartment search, we’ll also present information on how to get a lease reviewed and how to avoid getting caught up in the promises offered by landlords and leasing staff. Our workshops are FREE and open to all undergraduate, graduate, and professional students. No registration is required.

  • Spring 2015 Course Announcement: CI 552 Qualitative Analysis and Writing

    Spring 2015

     

    CI 552 Qualitative (Analysis and) Writing

     

    CRN: 57745

    Mark Dressman, Instructor

    Wednesdays, 4:00-6:50 pm, Education 22

     

    Overview

    This course will focus on the analysis and “writing up” of qualitative research data from a wide variety of social science areas (social work; communications; writing studies; library information science, and other fields) and from multiple theoretical, methodological, and rhetorical perspectives. Topics will include:

     

    • the history and development of multiple approaches to qualitative writing over the last century;
    • four approaches to the analysis and interpretation of multiple forms of data (semiotic/structural/poststructural analysis; coding; conversation analysis; text and document analysis);
    • different styles of qualitative narrative (realist, autoethnographic [including action research], confessional, impressionist) and their rhetorical implications;
    • the use of social theory as a framing device;
    • the process of writing for publication in peer-reviewed journals

     

    The course is designed for advanced masters and mid-stage doctoral students in education and a range of applied social sciences interested in writing qualitatively for academic publication across a range of research and practitioner journals. Assignments will include weekly readings, an analytical project, three short writing assignments, and a more substantial writing project.

     

    Texts

    Rapley, T. (2008). Doing conversation, discourse, and document analysis. London: Sage.

    Dressman, M. (2008). Using social theory in educational research: A practical guide. London: Routledge.

    Selected book chapters and journal articles, to be announced.

     

    The Instructor

    Mark Dressman is a Professor in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction. He is a qualitative ethnographic researcher of school literacy, former co-editor of Research in the Teaching of English, and the author of multiple books, chapters, and journal articles on the theory and practice of qualitative and ethnographic research, including Using Social Theory in Educational Research (Routledge, 2008).

     

    For a copy of the preliminary syllabus, contact Mark Dressman at mdressma@illinois.edu

  • Announcing the 2022 College of Education Public Engagement Faculty Fellows Program

    The new Public Engagement Faculty Fellows Program is open to full-time faculty with their primary appointment in the College of Education. A maximum of three faculty fellows will be selected for the 2022-2023 academic year. Faculty at the assistant professor level are especially encouraged to apply.

  • Alumna Ebonie Durham, Ed.M. '14, EAL, Named Pahara-NextGen Fellow

    Congratulations to Educational Administration & Leadership alumna Ebonie Durham, who has been named a Pahara Institute Next-Gen Fellow for their Winter 2020 cohort.

  • Sharon Lee

    Lee Honored for Excellence in Online Teaching

    Awardees are cited for sustained excellence and innovation in undergraduate and graduate teaching, undergraduate and graduate advising and mentoring, online teaching and research guidance. The Office of the Provost sponsors the awards.

  • College Supports New First Generation Latinx Grad Student Group

    There is a new graduate student group that has organized in the College of Education for those who are first-generation college students and identify as Latinx.

  • School Research in Local Schools

    If you want to do research in Champaign or Urbana public schools, this is important for you to read.

  • EPSY's Jennifer Cromley Awarded New NSF Grant

    Cromley's funded project, Expanding Applications of Network Analysis to STEM Education Research, officially kicks off October 1, 2022.

  • Jessica Li

    Jessica Li Named Associate Dean for Research and Director of BER

    Dr. Jessica Li has accepted the offer to serve as the next College of Education Associate Dean for Research and Director of the Bureau of Educational Research (BER).

  • OCCRL to Collaborate on Project to Strengthen Equity in CTE

    The ECMC Foundation is funding an effort to enhance equity in career and technical education, and the Office of Community College Research and Leadership in the College of Education will be a co-partner in the endeavor. The institutions within the robust partnership will develop resources that support community and technical colleges with the transition to online learning while working to reduce completion gaps.

  • SOAR After-school Program for Latina/o Children Now Recruiting Tutors for Spring 2019

    SOAR serves Latina/o emergent bilinguals grades 2-5 in a Dual Language setting at a local school. Every semester, we recruit around 120-150 university students to help provide reading and homework support for these children.

    Tutoring is scheduled for TWR from 2:00-3:15 p.m. 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.

    Please contact Maria Lang at mglang2@illinois.edu or at 956-535-1459 for more information.

  • College of Education Open Position

    The College of Education seeks to fill the following faculty position: Clinical Assistant Professor in Education Administration: Departmernt of Education Policy, Organization and Leadership (F1400022) - Close Date: March 31, 2014 Full position description for the position and application information can be found at http://education.illinois.edu/about/jobs The University is an AA-EOE www.inclusiveillinois.illinois.edu

  • Gloriana González Joins Mathematics Teacher Educator as Editorial Panel Member

    Gloriana González, an associate professor in the Department of Curriculum & Instruction, has been appointed as an editorial panel member for the journal Mathematics Teacher Educator, a scholarly, peer-reviewed publication for practitioners.

  • Fall 2020 EPOL Social Foundations Course

    EPOL 410 Racial & Ethnic Families Diversity (formerly EPS 421), Tuesday, 10-11:50 a.m., EDUC Building, Room 323 (same as HDFS 424 & AFRO 421)

    Professor: Dr. Bernice Barnett (PhD in Sociology; email: bmbarnet@illinois.edu)

    EPOL 410 Section A; CRN#73295: 4-Hours for Graduate students

    EPOL 410 Section B; CRN#73296: 3-Hours for Undergraduate students

  • EPSY 590KR Focus Groups in Education and Social Science Research

    EPSY 590KR Focus Groups in Education and Social Science Research

    CRN: 61424

    Instructor:    Katherine Ryan (k-ryan6@illinois.edu)  Time: Tuesday, 1:00 - 3:50 p.m.

    Location:      15 Education 

    The focus group interview involves a group of participants that interact with each other and the interviewer in answering questions about a specific topic. This course emphasizes the focus group as a distinctive research method, not just as an extension of interviews. In the course, students will develop an understanding of the design and implementation of focus groups research in education and the social sciences. The course will introduce students to the research literature on the nature and unique methodological characteristics of focus groups, critically examine focus group approaches, and explore the benefits/costs of focus groups through readings, discussions, and conducting a focus group project. Topics covered include the history and uses of focus groups, nature of focus group evidence, role of participant interaction, focus group protocols, moderator and observer/note taker techniques, focus group logistics, and analyzing and reporting focus group data.

  • Michael McKelvey

    Michael McKelvey, MSTE, Wins First Annual Greg Gulick Service Excellence Award

    At the recent campus IT Pro Forum, two winners of the first annual Greg Gulick Service Excellence Award were named. Congratulations to the Office of Math, Science, and Technology Education's Michael McKelvey on this outstanding recognition.

  • Asif Wilson

    Wilson Honored by Critical Race Studies in Education Association

    Asif Wilson, assistant professor, Curriculum & Instruction, was given the Early Career Scholar award from CRSEA at their annual conference in Chicago on October 26.

  • Brian Brauer

    Brian Brauer, Ed.M. HRD '06, Ed.D. EPOL '16, Named Campus' Inaugural Executive Director of Emergency Management

    Congratulations to two-time Education alumnus Brian Brauer, who has been chosen to serve as the campus’s first Executive Director of Emergency Management. 

  • Master's Degree in Education Programs Ranked #24 Nationally by TFE Times

    The College of Education at Illinois' Master's degree in Education programs was recently named #24 in the TFE Times 2019 Best Master's of Education Rankings.

    TFE Times is an online platform that offers news on business, culture, and tech to its users. Additionally it provides rankings on colleges, accounting, business analytics, computer engineering, economics, education, finance, law, management, marketing, and medicine.

  • EPOL Doctoral Student Jack Baldermann Wins 2022 Golden Apple Award for Excellence in Leadership

    On Thursday, May 12, Westmont (IL) High School Principal and Ed.D. candidate in Education Administration and Leadership Jack Baldermann was honored Thursday with a surprise all-school assembly to announce his Golden Apple Award for Excellence in Leadership.

  • Ananya Tiwari

    Ananya Tiwari Receives International Dissertation Fellowship

    EPSY doctoral candidate Ananya Tiwari recently received the Rita and Arnold Goodman Fellowship, supportsing graduate students at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign who work in the field of women, gender, and international development issues.

  • Cromley, Collaborators Awarded $2M Grant from U.S. Department of Education

    EPSY professor Jennifer Cromley is part of a team of researchers who have been awarded funding from the U.S. Dept of Education's Institute for Education Sciences for their project Promoting Reading Comprehension and Learning With Multimodal Science Texts (PRISM).

  • Gloriana Gonzalez

    Vote for C&I Professor's Video in NSF STEM Diversity & Inclusion Challenge!

    Dr. Gloriana Gonzalez is part of a research team whose entry, Developing technological pedagogical content knowledge of pre-service math teachers by enhancement of a methods course using instrumental orchestration and lesson study strategies has made it to Round Three and the People’s Choice Voting Round of the STEM Diversity and Inclusion Video Exhibition Challenge.

  • Scholar Nancy Latham to lead CoTE on campus starting Sept. 1

    Dr. Nancy Latham will begin her tenure as executive director of the Council on Teacher Education (CoTE) on the Illinois campus starting Sept. 1.

  • 2016 Environmental Education Seasonal Jobs - Champaign County Forest Preserve District

    Champaign County Forest Preserve District

    Museum & Education Department - HLIC

    2016 Seasonal Positions

     

    Review of applications for the following positions will begin February 26, 2016. To apply, complete online application at www.ccfpd.org/About/employment.html. For more information please visit www.ccfpd.org or contact Pam Leiter, Education Department Assistant Director, at 217-896-2455 or pleiter@ccfpd.org.

     

    Seasonal Naturalist:                                                                            

    Main Duties:

    Teach natural history programs for children grades pre-k to 12 at Forest Preserve sites and in local schools Assist with special events and public programs Complete short term assignments for the growth of the District Education programs Assist with daily operation of the Interpretive Center Assist with maintenance of education reptiles and fish Must be available to work occasional weekends and evenings

     

    Hours:

    This is a part-time seasonal position (approx. 15-30 hours/week) available from April 18 to Nov. 8. The primary work location is Homer Lake Forest Preserve, with some work at Lake of the Woods. Pay: $9.50-$11.00/hr.

     

    Nature Day Camp Educators                                                                                                                              

    Main Duties:

    Teach Eco-Adventures summer day campsConduct other educational programs for youth and adultsAssist with daily operation of the Interpretive CenterAssist with special programs and eventsMust be available to work occasional weekends and evenings

     

    This is a part-time seasonal position (approx. 30 hours/week) available from June 1 through August 5. Several positions available. The primary work location is Homer Lake Forest Preserve, with some work at Lake of the Woods. Pay: $9.50-$11.00/hr.

     

    Campground Naturalist                                                                                                                                       

    Main Duties:

    Develop and conduct naturalist programs at the Middle Fork River Forest Preserve campground Must be available to work weekends

     

    This is a part-time seasonal position (approx. 26 hours/week), mid-May through early September. The primary work location is Middle Fork River Forest Preserve. Pay: $12.50-$13.50/hr.

  • Alumnus Royel Johnson, EdM '10, EPS, Cited as Emerging Scholar

    Royel M. Johnson, EdM '10, EPS, now assistant professor of higher education within the Department of Education Policy Studies in the Penn State College of Education, has been selected as an Emerging Scholar Designee by the American College Personnel Association (ACPA), a comprehensive student affairs organization that engages students for a lifetime of learning and discovery. He will receive the award at the ACPA20 convention to be held March 2-5 in Nashville, Tennessee.

  • Team Arctic Tigers

    College of Education Alumni Top Fundraisers for Special Olympics Illinois

    The group, made up of Urbana School District teachers and Education at Illinois Alumni, raised over $20,000 for Special Olympics Illinois.

  • Lori Fuller

    'Best Friends' Art Reception Illini Union Art Gallery

    GSSO's own Lori Fuller, of L A Fuller Art, is displaying her art in a show called "Best Friends" at the Illini Union Art Gallery. The opening reception is Thursday, May 5, from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. and all are invited to attend.

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

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

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

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

  • Tap In Leadership Academy Hosting Aug. 19 Job Fair

    The Tap In Leadership Academy is hosting a job fair on Aug. 19 in Champaign. Bring your résumé and be prepared for on-the-spot interviews.

  • Santos, Span, Painter Chosen as 2022-23 President's Executive Leadership Program (PELP) Fellows

    Congratulations to College of Education faculty members Amy Santos and Christopher Span, as well as alumna Jami Painter, Ed.M. '05 HRD, for being selected as 2022-23 President's Executive Leadership Program Fellows by @University of Illinois System President Tim Killeen.