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  • Cynthia Watson

    Watson Named Principal at Edison Middle School

    Watson will rise to the principal position from her district role as director of school improvement in Unit 4.

  • Looking for Teachers for Summer Youth Arts Camp

    The Office of Volunteer Programs (OVP) at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign is rounding up arts and education students who can serve as volunteer teachers for a summer youth art camp. 

  • Humanities Without Walls’ Summer Bridge Program Welcomes EPOL PhD Student Rayven Morrow

    Humanities Without Walls’ Summer Bridge participants were just announced, and among them is an EPOL PhD student Rayven Morrow. Participants in this program, supported by the Mellon Foundation, are matched with local community organizations to collaborate on a summer project.

  • Thirteen EPOL Students Named DFI Fellows

    Thirteen students in the Department of Education Policy, Organization and Leadership have been named Diversifying Higher Education Faculty in Illinois (DFI) Fellows by the Illinois Board of Higher Education.

    Congratulations to Chequita Brown, Nancy Cardenas Gonzalez, Tiffany Harris, Marisol Jimenez, Bianca Lopez, Susan Ogwal, Marielisbet Perez, Amari Simpson, Nathaniel Stewart, Anthony B. Sullers, Jr., Ronald Threadgill, Angel Velez, and Larry Washington.

  • Students expand educational, personal insights studying in Chile

    Professor Cameron McCarthy of the Department of Education Policy, Organization & Leadership led a group of students studying in the Global Studies in Education (GSE) program on a July 17-30 study abroad excursion to Chile.

  • Education alumnus Mark Foley receives state award for teaching history

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

  • 6th-8th graders needed for reading experiment

    The EdPsych Psycholinguistics Lab (Beckman Institute) is looking for children grades 6-8 for a reading experiment. Participants will read sentences while their eyes are tracked. The expt. lasts less than 90 min. and has IRB approval. Parents can stay in the room during the experiment. $15 payment. See https://ris-youth.youcanbook.me/ or call 217-979-6666 for more info.

  • Library Website Survey

    The Social Sciences, Health, and Education Library (SSHEL) would like your opinion about our website (http://library.illinois.edu/sshel).

    SSHEL was formed in Fall 2012 with the merger of the Applied Health Sciences Library and the Education and Social Science Library.

    In preparation for the merger, a new website was created to host information previously on the two libraries’ websites. We would like our patrons to evaluate the content, aesthetics, and navigation of our website. We need your input and want you to share your honest and open thoughts with us.

    Participants must be 18 years old or older to participate. The survey will be available for three weeks starting Monday, September 16th.

    Please access the survey here: https://illinois.edu/sb/sec/7749459

    Thank you.

  • SPED's Catherine Corr Awarded OpEd Project Public Voices Fellowship

    Congratulations to Catherine Corr, associate professor of Special Education, who has been awarded a 2022-23 OpEd Project Public Voices Fellowship.

  • Volunteers needed to help build Homecoming float

    The College of Education is looking for volunteers to pair with University Primary Students to help build the Homecoming float.

  • I-Watch Training Session

    The University of Illinois Police Department (UIPD) needs your assistance with crime prevention and reporting of suspicious and/or criminal activity within the campus area. As such, the Office of the Dean of Students is collaborating with UIPD to introduce members of the campus community—students, faculty, and staff—to the I-Watch program. In addition to receiving information on personal, home, and auto security, I-Watchers—the trained program participants—are given instruction in observation and reporting suspicious activity. To learn more about the I-Watch program, contact a representative at campuscommunity@illinois.edu, or REGISTER at https://illinois.edu/fb/sec/2441589 for our upcoming training session on Tuesday, October 29. All Sessions are at 7:00PM in Lincoln Hall Room 1066.

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

    Title: DIG507 BOD - Learning and the Body

    Instructor: Robb Lindgren

    Time: Wednesdays 4-6:50

    Location: Education Bldg. Room 17

    Credit: 4 hours

    CRN: #31988

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

  • Rochelle Gutierrez

    Gutiérrez Recieves AERA 2025 SIG/RME Distinguished Scholar Award

    Gutiérrez was recognized by the Research in Mathematics Education SIG.

  • #BlackLivesMatter: From the Frontlines of Criminal Justice Reform | Abolition Event on Feb. 18

    Please join the CAS for a conversation with Los Angeles-based artist, activist, educator, and public speaker Patrisse Cullors. Ms. Cullors is the Co-Founder of the Black Lives Matter Global Network and Founder of the LA-based grassroots organization Dignity and Power Now. For the last 20 years, she has been on the frontlines of criminal justice reform and led the Reform LA Jails “Yes on R” campaign, a ballot initiative voted on in March 2020.

  • Job Opportunity: Web Developer

    Inclusive Illinois and The Women Equity Council is seeking a graduate student that has skills in web design. This person would update websites for Inclusive Illinois and the Women Equity Council with current information and update the website design. They should be able to commit to 10 hours a week (but this can be negotiated). Pay is competitive. Work will start mid-February until May and perhaps over the summer.
  • International Women's Day Celebration: March 8, 2022

    The Women and Gender in Global Perspectives Program and the Humanities Research Institute co-host this annual event bringing together faculty, staff, students, and community members to recognize people who have made a difference in academia. Each speaker will have five minutes to tell the story of a woman in their discipline who changed the field in important ways.

  • picture of Educating Egypt book cover

    EPOL's Linda Herrera Publishes Book on Education in Egypt

    Education Policy, Organization and Leadership professor Linda Herrera's book by the title, "Educating Egypt: Civic Values and Ideological Struggles" by the American University in Cairo Press was released on March 1, 2022.

  • Five Education Graduate Students in Research Live! Finalist Showcase

    Please congratulate our graduate students on this important distinction and do what you can to cheer them on Thursday, April 6, at 4:00 pm CT, either in person at the Knight Auditorium in the Spurlock Museum (600 S. Gregory St., Urbana) or via the live stream.

  • NSF-funded project to explore improvement of multimedia learning

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

  • Fall 2014 Foundations Course on Diversity in Racial and Ethnic Families

    Fall 2014   Foundations   Course!  

    Diversity in Racial & Ethnic Families

    Educational Policy Studies:     EPS 421-BAR   #42601            EPS 421-BB2   # 54748

                                Sociology:  SOC 421-BAR   #42604            SOC 421-BB2   # 54749

     Hum Dev & Family Studies:   HDFS 424-BAR # 42605          HDFS 424-BB2 #54750

       African American Studies:   AFRO 421-BAR # 42606          AFRO 421-BB2 # 54751

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

         Tue 10-11:50am section BAR: EPS 421 #42601 ●SOC 421 #42604 ●HDFS 424 #42605●AFRO 421 #42606

         Tue  1-2:50pm  section BB2: EPS 421 #54748 ●SOC 421 #54749 ●HDFS 424 #54750●AFRO 421 #54751

       Professor: Dr. Bernice McNair Barnett (Ph.D., Sociology)   Email: bmbarnet@illinois.edu

     

    ABOUT   THE   COURSE

                    This combined Graduate and Advanced Undergraduate (Juniors, Seniors only) 400-level foundations course is a sociological examination of diversity in racial and ethnic families, which are the foundations of education. Understanding how race, gender, class, ethnicity, disability, language, sexuality, immigrant status, age, and other stratifying relations in society influence diversity in families is important, especially for teacher education/preparation and educational policies because families generally are the first agents of education, learning, and socialization of children before they enter schools and because family background and learning styles are related to schooling experiences and achievement. In addition, the nature of relationships between students/parents/families in homes and teachers/administrators/staff in classrooms/schools/colleges/universities can impact educational outcomes. Moreover, local, state, regional, and global population demographics are changing racially/ethnically; thus, families, educators, the public, and policymakers in schools, colleges, universities, and major societal institutions need to be prepared for the racial-ethnic demographic shifts. The objectives of this social foundations course are: (1.) to introduce, survey, and evaluate major sociological theories, approaches, concepts, research, questions, debates, issues, and data on diversity in families; (2.) to develop/strengthen research and analytical skills, especially by critically analyzing the reality vs. the images, ideals, and myths about “typical” racial-ethnic “minority”/“majority” families and their social constructions as “deviant”/“normal;” (3.) to foster an awareness and understanding of cultures/structures/dimensions/patterns of diversity among and within families in the U.S. and the basis of diversity globally;   (4.) to consider how families are reciprocally connected to education, economy, politics, religion, and other social institutions; (5) to examine how families are agents of education and how children from diverse family backgrounds with varying home cultures, compositions, resources, practices, traditions, compositions, and environments come of age, grow up, develop identities, experience schooling, achieve in education, react to racial-ethnic differences/similarities, and live/learn/work cooperatively and democratically in a multiracial U.S and global society.

    The course analyzes family diversity among and within these U.S. groups: Black African American, Latino/a American, Asian American, Native American as well as White European American and Socio-Religious Ethnic Groups (such as Catholic, Baptist, Mormon, Jewish, Muslim, Amish). It also explores diversity globally in periphery, semi-periphery, and core regions of the world-economy (such as China, Mexico, Nigeria, Japan, Ghana, Russia, Israel, Kenya, Australia, India, Pakistan, S. Africa, Germany, Iraq, Britain, Cuba, France, Haiti, Jamaica, Ireland). In analyzing diversity, we explore the strengths, adaptations, resiliencies, resources, values, and contributions of all families and their past, present, and future opportunities and challenges. Course Readings: Diversity in American Families,10th edition (2014) by M. Baca Zinn,S. Eitzen; Ethnic Families in America: Patterns and Variations, 5th ed (2011) by R.Wright et al; choice of book about how some children from diverse family backgrounds come of age, develop identities, experience schooling and educational achievement.

  • Group from Taiwan visits College of Education

    On July 5 a delegation from National Tsing Hua University in Taipei, Taiwan, traveled to the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign campus. The visit included an afternoon stop at the Education building, where the group met with Dean Mary Kalantzis and received a tour of the Illinois Digital Ecologies and Learning Laboratory with Robb Lindgren, an assistant professor in the Department of Curriculum & Instruction. The Taiwanese contingent included President Hong Hocheng and Senior Vice President of Operations Hwai-Pwu Chou.

  • BER to Host Lightning Talk Events on COVID-19 Research

    The Bureau of Educational Research is very pleased to bring you Lightning Talk sessions over two days. We offer these as a space for the research teams, and colleagues, to share and hear more about their research experiences and findings. It is also an opportunity for all to make connections with these research teams.

  • 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: 

    Revamping Your Research Plan: Citation Chasing, Keyword Searching, and More

    Research in Conversation: Demystifying the Literature Review

    Digital Publishing with Scalar

    Smart and Simple Data Management

    GIS for Research I: Introduction to GIS Concepts, Software, and Data

    Advanced Text Mining Techniques with Python and HathiTrust Data

    And much more! For more details and registration:   http://go.library.illinois.edu/savvyresearcher

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

  • Michaelene Ostrosky Named Grayce Wicall Gauthier Professor of Education

    Professor Michaelene Ostrosky of the Department of Special Education has been named the Grayce Wicall Gauthier Professor of Education.

  • On-Site Background Checks - September 4, 2013

    Accurate Biometrics will be on site to administer fingerprint criminal background checks on Wednesday, September 4, 2013 between 11:00 a.m. and 1:00 p.m. at the College of Education in Room 192. 

    IF YOU ARE CONDUCTING RESEARCH IN LOCAL SCHOOLS THIS ACADEMIC YEAR:

    Visit the Bureau of Educational Research in Room 142 between August 26 and August 30, 2013 to secure an appointment time with an Accurate Biometrics representative during the time listed above. Please note that appointments will be handled in five-minute time blocks. This will be the only date during the Fall semester when an Accurate Biometrics representative will be on-site at the College.  We encourage you to take advantage of this service as background check requests that fall outside of this window will require researchers to visit the local Accurate Biometrics office.

    What to bring to your appointment:

    1. A valid, government issued picture ID (i.e., driver’s license, State ID, or passport). School IDs WILL NOT be accepted.
    2. Payment of $30.00 is required at the time of fingerprinting, and may be made via cash or money order made out to Accurate Biometrics. NO PERSONAL CHECKS WILL BE ACCEPTED. Although cash or money orders are preferred, credit card payments will be accepted with a mandatory $2.00 service fee assessment.

    Other important information:

    • You will be given a computer-generated receipt upon completion of the fingerprinting process. If a research grant will cover the costs of the background check, the researcher must first pay the fee to Accurate Biometrics and submit the receipt along with the approval of the Principal Investigator to the College Business Office for reimbursement.
    • The results of the background check will be sent by the Illinois State Police directly to the agency/individual requesting it on the form you complete. At no time will Accurate Biometrics receive the criminal history response.
    • If you miss Accurate Biometrics’ on-site services on the dates provided above, you will need to complete the form provided and visit their Champaign location (or another location most convenient to you). Please check their website often at www.accuratebiometrics.com for the most up-to date hours of operation & locations.
  • "Stability and Change in Chinese Education" presented by Professor Emeritus Richard C. Anderson

    Stability and Change in Chinese Education

    presented by Professor Emeritus Richard C. Anderson

    Thursday, October 27, 2016
    12:00 – 12:50
    22 Education Building

    Economic and social change have proceeded at breathtaking pace in China since the end of the Cultural Revolution in the late 1970s. Education has been changing, too, but I think at a much slower pace. I will offer my impressions of Chinese education and show two video clips of Chinese children responding to a new learner-centered pedagogy far different from standard Chinese instruction.

  • Gabriel Rodriguez

    Rodriguez Publishes Chapter in New Book

    Gabriel Rodriguez, assistant professor in the Department of Education Policy, Organization & Leadership has co-written a chapter in a book titled Civic Engagement in Communities of Color: Pedagogy for Learning and Life in a More Expansive Democracy, published by Teachers College Press.

  • Annual free book jackets & posters giveaway in Library

    It is time once again for the SSHEL book jacket and poster giveaway! This year the festivities take place the week of November 10th through the 14th in the Social Sciences, Health, and Education Library (100 Main Library). The giveaway will be going on during all hours that SSHEL is open. The fun begins in the School Collection Room (Room 112) at 9:00 a.m. on Monday, November 10th. Come and pick up free posters, book jackets, and more! Posters and book jackets are a great resource for:

    • decorating your classroom or office

    • book talk visual aids

    • art projects

    • library displays

    • creative writing (have students predict or create a story from the picture/title and write about it)

    Please share this information with anyone who might be interested. We will be giving the posters and book jackets away until they are all gone. If you have any questions about this event, feel free to call the Social Sciences, Health, and Education Library (217-244-1864) or email Nancy O'Brien (npobrien@illinois.edu).

  • University Primary School "Music & Sound" Project Culminating Event

    Please join University Primary School in our "Music & Sound" Project Culminating Event, opening Wednesday, January 20 6:00 PM through Friday, January 23 3:00 PM in the College of Education first and third floor lounges. Wednesday, January 20, University Primary families and friends will be meeting to celebrate in the lounges and College faculty, staff, and students are welcome to join. Project work features preschool-5th grade childrens' discoveries and understandings during their semester long study of this topic. Look for photos of our College of Education student teachers in action, as well as University collaborators and researchers. Instructors discussing inquiry approaches, the various roles of teachers and students, and children's social-emotional-congitive-physical development may wish to tour the event displays with their College students!

  • Illinois Center for Transition and Work to Host 2024 Events & Highlighting New School-to-Work Transition Guide

    The Illinois Center for Transition and Work (ICTW) will be hosting regional workshops in February for transition educators and staff who want to increase their knowledge on how to plan instruction across a range of work-based learning settings. In addition, ICTW will hold its annual symposium at the I Hotel & Illinois Conference Center on April 25-26.

  • EPOL Graduate Student's Book Published on Diversity and Inclusion in Higher Ed

    Online EPOL graduate student Fawzia Reza is the editor of a new book, just released from Cambridge Scholars Publishing.

  • The True Story of Teens and Social Media: Using Teen-Centered Research to Break Down Pervasive Stereotypes

    Professor Denise Agosto, from the College of Computing and Informatics at Drexel University, will be giving the 2016 Gryphon Lecture on "The True Story of Teens and Social Media: Using Teen-Centered Research to Break Down Pervasive Stereotypes." Agosto is the recipient of national teaching awards from ALISE and ASIS&T, and her research interests include youth information behaviors, public libraries, multicultural issues in youth library services, and qualitative research methods. 

     

    Free and open to the public, the Gryphon Lecture series is hosted every spring semester by the Center for Children's Books and features a leading scholar in the field of youth literature. The lecture will begin at 7:00 p.m. in Room 126 of the GSLIS Building. A reception will follow in the East Foyer.

     

    Contact the CCB with questions.

  • Public Engagement Research Assistantship for Ph.D. Students: Applications Now Open

    Applications are now open to Ph.D. students in the College of Education for a yearlong 50% graduate research assistant position with the Sola Gratia Farm: Urbana Farm to School Program for AY2023-24 (August 16, 2023 – May 15, 2024). This RA position is created in partnership between the College of Education (COE) and the Humanities Research Institute (HRI). 

  • Education Grad Students Winners at 2023 Research Live! Competition

    Congratulations to Ricky Price and Joe Mirabelli, two of the winners of the eighth annual Research Live! competition, sponsored by the Graduate College.

  • Y. Barry Chung

    Chung Selected for American Psychological Association Award

    Y. Barry Chung is Dean of the College of Education at San Diego State University.

  • CI 578: Bilingual & Biliteracy Development of Young Children

    CI 578:  Bilingual & Biliteracy Development of Young Children

    Instructor: Dr. Eurydice Bauer, ebbauer@illinois.edu

    Time: Monday 4-6:50pm, Fall 2014

    Location: 385 Education Building

    Credit: 4 hours

    CRN: 53602

    C&I 578 section EBB is a graduate-level course for students in the PhD degree program. However, highly interested master level students may participate in the course. This course is offered on a 2-3 year cycle. The purpose of C&I 578 is to help students better understand the language and literacy development of young bilinguals. Students will engage in reading, writing, and discussion of various research articles and chapters. In addition, students will be given the opportunity to observe young children as they engage in learning to read and write across their two languages. Students are expected to: (a) develop a general understanding of the major issues in biliteracy research; (b) explore and appreciate the diversity of research topics, issues, trends, and perspectives in biliteracy research; and (c) learn to think and write critically and analytically about research on early biliteracy development. 

  • Illinois alumna awarded for building support between teachers and students

    Carrie McMenamin, who minored in secondary education at the College of Education, was a co-recipient of this year’s Cupcake Award from the Champaign Urbana Schools Foundation thanks to her work with students outside of the classroom.

  • Fall 2014 course on Adult and Professional Education

    The Human Resource Development Division at EPOL is offering HRD 550 Adult and Professional Education (CRN: 63148) in Fall 2014.

    This course takes a broad look at the philosophy, theory, research, and practice of adult education, along with additional considerations for the development of professionals. The broad perspective includes the social, cultural, and political factors that affect the research, planning, development, and implementation of adult education. You may explore the major adult learning theories, the practice of adult education, and the aims and challenges of professional education that match you scholarly and practical interests.

    The course is now open for enrollment for advanced Masters and doctoral students on campus.

    For more information please contact the course instructor at wdhuang@illinois.edu.

  • Chad Lane to Speak at St. Louis Science Center Gaming Event

    “Crafting Interactive Experiences: The Power of Games for Meaningful Engagement and Impact”

  • Canned food being accepted at Education Building through Sept. 28, 2015

    Education students, staff, and faculty members are encouraged to contribute canned food donations during the eighth annual "Cans Across the Quad" food drive. Drop off your food Sept. 21-28 at Room 110 in the Education Building.

  • Tips for Applying to HRD Online Degree Program

    Do you have questions about our HRD program or the application process? Come to our session "Tips for Applying to HRD Online Degree Program at University of Illinois: Chatting with the Program Coordinator" on October 9 from 8-9pm CST. Our program leader, Dr. David Huang will be on hand to answer any of your questions and provide an overview of our program.

    To access the session, please copy and paste the following link into a new web browser: https://sas.elluminate.com/m.jnlp?sid=407&username=&password=M.E145D890C25630D27D3E56B41F574D


    If you need technical assistance with this session, please contact our College of Education user services team at 217.244.7005 or userservices@education.illinois.edu

  • Question & Answer Session on Bilingual/ ESL Online

    Do you have questions about our BESL endorsement or the application process? Come to our session "Questions about the BESL Online Endorsement at University of Illinois: Chatting with the Program Coordinator" on October 21 from 6:30-7pm CST. Our program leader, Dr. Eurydice Bauer will be on hand to answer any of your questions and provide an overview of our program.

    To access the session, please copy and paste the following link into a new web browser: https://sas.elluminate.com/m.jnlp?sid=407&username=&password=M.289C039C597F737DDFB889B04034D2


    If you need technical assistance with this session, please contact our College of Education user services team at or userservices@education.illinois.edu

  • Liora Bresler, Professor Emerita of C&I, Awarded Honorary Doctorate from University of Athens, Greece

    The University of Athens, Greece, is awarding the title of Doctor Honoris Causa to Professor Emerita Liora Bresler of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign's College of Education.

    The ceremony will take place at the National and Kapodistrian University Ceremonial Hall, on February 22, 2023.

  • Megan Best and Elizabeth Coder

    Best, Coder Receive Leadership Awards from Graduate College

    Megan Best and Elizabeth Coder were selected for their work on initiatives and displays of leadership.

  • Education of an Ordinary White. March 27 2025. 5:15 - 6:45 p.m. Lincoln Hall 1002. 600 Gregory Street. Urbana

    David Roediger, Lecture "Education of an Ordinary White"

    David Roediger is the Foundation Professor of American Studies at University of Kansas.

  • College of Education COVID-19 Research Seed Funding: Spring 2021 Call for Applications

    The Bureau of Educational Research and the College Research Committee, honoring faculty research and scholarship in these areas, invite College of Education researchers to apply for this third call for COVID-19 Seed Grants.

  • Dean’s Distinguished Lecture Series Presentation: Disentangling Continuous and Discrete Structure Within Data

    Presented by Dr. Doug Steinley, Professor of Psychological Sciences
    University of Missouri - Columbia
    Monday, April 27, 2015
    242 Education Building
    Noon-1:30 p.m.

  • HRD Doctoral Student Part of iVenture Accelerator Project

    Congratulations to Bethanie Couri, an Ed.D. student in EPOL's Human Resource Development program, who is part of two projects selected as part of the Gies College of Business' 2022 iVenture Accelerator cohort.

  • From Community College to Medical School: Supporting the Transition

    OCCRL Director Lorenzo Baber will be one of the session speakers at this free virtual event, which will offer a collaborative environment for community college counselors who want to gain valuable insights, resources, and best practices to help aspiring medical students achieve their academic and career goals.

  • Siebel Center for Design

    Gonzalez Rivera, Herrmann, Tissenbaum among Inaugural Siebel Center for Design Affiliates