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  • Course Announcement: EPSY 407 - Adult Learning and Development

    EPSY 407  Adult Learning and Development

    Tuesday and Thursday, 3:30-4:50, 215 David Kinley Hall

    Professor:  Elizabeth A. L. Stine-Morrow, Education 210G, 4-2167, eals@illinois.edu

    Human development continues throughout the life span, as does our capacity to learn.  In this course, we explore the nature of adult development in the domains of perception, cognition, intellectual performance, emotional experience, and personality, as well as the impact of social context. The question driving this course is how multifaceted change in different arenas of life impacts the learning process, and how the capacity for continued learning affects other parts of life. We will review the empirical evidence for development within each of these domains, evaluate the major theories of aging that have be en used to account for these findings, and consider the implications of these principles for best practice in adult education.

  • Special Education scholar receives IES grant

    Hedda Meadan-Kaplansky, an associate professor in the Department of Special Education, is a principal investigator in a new federally funded research project that will involve developing and testing an app designed for parents with young children with disabilities and challenging behaviors, which can place stressful demands on families.

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • Youth Literature Festival Booth: "Everyone Can Be Part of the Story: Accessing the Literacy Tree" - (Adapted Activities and Resources for Children With and Without Disabilities, Parents, & Professions)

    Please plan to attend the Youth Literature Festival on October 22.  You are welcome to visit the booth created by Dr. Cheryl Light Shriner of the  Department of Special Education and several college students.  They will offer adapted story materials, props, and a hands-on interactive activity area for children with and without disabilities and a resource table for educators and parents.  Teachers, parents, and children are all encouraged to come and try out the materials and activities.  This booth area provides college students the opportunity to expand their skills in adapting literature and literacy materials for a wide range of abilities that children have and also the opportunity to interact with children, parents, and professionals.  Children enjoy the activities. Parents and teachers have mentioned in the past that the resources provided give them new ideas and materials that can be implemented in their homes or classrooms immediately.

  • Spring 2015 Course Announcement: CI 501 Fundamentals of Curriculum Development

    Spring 2015 Course

     

    CI 501 Fundamentals of Curriculum Development

    Mark Dressman, Instructor

    Tuesdays, 4:00-6:50, 323 Education

     

    Catalog Description.

    Examines a variety of definitions of curriculum development; readings reflect current theories and research related to substantive issues in the field: how learning is influenced by stated goals of education, cultural background of the learners, structure of the school setting, competencies of teachers, psychological characteristics of the learners, and means of measuring student achievement.

     

    Course Overview

    The central goal of this course is to provide an introduction to past and current theories of curriculum as these are applied to the development of curriculum for specific students, subject areas, and age/grade levels. In the first section of the course, we will review a wide range of approaches to curriculum development, past and present, with an eye to developing a critical view of the implications, advantages, and challenges of each and extrapolating from them some basic principles of curriculum development and design. These approaches will include but are not limited to Critical Pedagogy; Community-Based/Service Learning; Standards-Based designs; Understanding by Design; multiple Constructivist approaches, including workshops; Project-Based Learning; Didaktik; Discipline-Based Arts Education; online and web-based approaches; and any other specific approaches that course participants might suggest.

     

    In the second section of the course, students will apply the critical framework extrapolated from our analysis of general curricular approaches to the analysis of a specific curriculum with which they are familiar, such as the literacy workshop, foreign language education, specific approaches to science or mathematics, or approaches to social education, and write a critical “interrogation” of the implications, advantages, and challenges posed by a particular curriculum.

     

    The third section of the course will become a workshop, in which students will take principles and ideas acquired in the first two sections of the course to rewrite and redesign a curricular approach to a particular area of interest to them professionally. The culminating activity of the course will be a curriculum fair, in which students will present their redesigned curriculum, along with an argument for why and how it improves on existing curricular approaches, to the class.

     

    Readings:

     

    Schiro, M.S. (2012). Curriculum theory: Conflicing vision and enduring concerns (2nd Ed.). Thousand Oakes, CA: Sage.

     

    Elmore, R. F. (2004). School reform from the inside out: Policy, practice, and performance. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Education Press.

     

  • Insight Leadership I-Program

    On campus or in the Chicago area over break? Come to INSIGHT on January 9th in Chicago!

    The Petullo Insight Leadership program is designed to help students focus on the personal knowledge required for effective leadership in a complex, changing world.

    This program helps students increase their level of self-awareness and their degree of self-management skills.

    Students will discover their leadership talents and strengths, identify their values, investigate the role identity plays in leadership, and explore their intrinsic leadership style.

    Our programs are totally FREE for U of I students, provide a great way to build your resume, and gain the skills you need for life.

    Transportation is provided to Chicago and back for free from campus. Those that are in the Chicago area are welcome to join us via their own transportation.

    More info and registration: http://www.illinoisleadership.uiuc.edu/programs/insight.asp

  • Added Course Sp 2014: EPS 420-G/SOC420-G Sociology of Education, Tue, 1-2:50pm

    EPS 420-G/SOC 420-G “Sociology of Education”  is a social foundations course that provides a  sociological examination of education and schooling in society. It introduces, synthesizes, and evaluates  diverse and competing major sociological theories, scholarly research, and important issues in the sociology of education. Click headline to read more...

  • Fulbright Scholarships for 2018-2019

    Applications are now being accepted for the Fulbright Scholarship for 2018-2019! Visit http://www.cies2.org/controls/email_marketing/admin/email_marketing_email_viewer.aspx?sid=1064&gid=1&eiid=3658&seiid=2234&usearchive=1&puid=2e1bd6e8-c246-4840-a883-ba1a665c6974 for more information.

  • University Primary School Application Deadline 3/14/16

    University Primary School Applications are due by Monday March 14, 2016 to be considered for enrollment for the 2016-17 academic year.  Applications will be accepted after the deadline date, however priority is given to those recieved by the deadline date.  Applications can be found on our website

    http://education.illinois.edu/ups/

  • University Primary School Summer Camps

    Visit our website http://education.illinois.edu/ups/ to register for camp or call us at 217-333-3996 for more information! We welcome College of Education student volunteers.

    University Primary School Summer Camp is a weekly camp June 8-July 31 Monday- Friday, 8:45 a.m.-1:00 p.m and/or 1:00 p.m.-5:15 p.m. for children ages 3-12 years old. Campers need not attend University Primary School during the regular school year to attend summer camp. Campers may sign up for single or multiple weeks. Camp experiences for the 3-7 year old group will primarily occur in the school yard gardens and playground where campers will spend time working with plants, water, and new friends. Camp experiences for the 7-12 year old group will include art proj- ects and exploration in sciences. Both groups will have indoor time each day to “cool off” with inside activities including literacy time. 

  • Sustainability Education Collective Conference and Workshop Series

    Join the Sustainability Education Collective, a three-day conference and workshop series focuses on sustainability education as a way to advance equity and justice in research and public education. Advanced registration for in-person and online participants is required. Space is limited.

    Registration is free: https://go.education.illinois.edu/sustainabilityedcollective

  • Art for Health & Unity Competition: Protect & Respect

    Calling all artists! The 2021 Art for Health & Unity Competition was created to reward artists for contributions toward preventing COVID-19 and inspiring our community to be a better place for all. Artists of all ages are invited to submit original art to the community-wide competition. 

  • Welcome to the College of Education Announcements Blog!

    This blog is open to all College of Education students, faculty, and staff. Post all your announcements here, and each week you'll get an email of all the recent announcements. In addition, if you have an event to publicize, you can post it to the online College Calendar

  • EOL 573: The Community College

     

    EOL 573 - THE COMMUNITY COLLEGE

    Wednesday 4:00 – 6:50 p.m. (Hybrid)                      

    162 Education Bldg.                                                

    Meeting Dates: 9/3, 9/10, 9/17, 10/1,  10/8             

    10/15, 10/29, 11/5, 11/12, & 12/3                                 

    Professor Eboni Zamani-Gallaher

    E-mail: ezamanig@illinois.edu                                  

                           

    Course Description

    This course provides an overview of how various types of two-year postsecondary institutions, primarily comprehensive community colleges, have evolved and how they function. Themes running through the course address policies, trends, issues and innovations influencing the evolution and current operation of community colleges from the 20th century to the present. Beginning with a brief history of community colleges, the course offers content dealing with foundations, governance and administration, curriculum, faculty, students, and student outcomes. The course also offers a critical

    examination of community colleges, considering their strengths and weaknesses within the broader context of P-16 education.

     

    Course Objectives

    Ultimately, the course prepares students who aspire to be professors, researchers, policy analysts, and/or administrators of community college and higher education to understand, assess, and contribute to the betterment of community college education, today and in the future.

     

    By the end of the course, students will be able to:

     

    1. Trace the evolution of U.S. community colleges; understand the general mission, typical functions and goals of two-year institutions policies and programs as well as the stakeholders associated with them. 
    2. Identify and describe the status of community college education in terms of varieties; theoretical foundations; finance, governance, and administration; curriculum, faculty, students, and student outcomes. 
    3. Discern the unique linkages of two-year institutions within the K-16 educational pipeline. 
    4. Become familiar with issues related to campus climate and organizational culture at community colleges.
    5. Obtain increased awareness of the diversity of administrators, faculty, and student body
    6.  Describe features of the Illinois community college system relative to the themes identified in objective #2; compare and contrast the Illinois system with other major state systems.
    7.     Appreciate the paradox and complexity of community college through examination of its advocates and its critics.
    8. Identify and explain policies, innovations, trends and issues that influence community college education and assess their impact on future policies and practices.
  • Open slots still available in advanced HRD courses

    Open slots are still available for a few advanced courses in the Division of Human Resource Development.

  • Discover Studying Abroad Adventures via Global Café

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

  • CCSS Presents: October I-Watch Presentations

    Come join Campus and Community Services for our upcoming I-Watch Presentations. I-Watch is a campus initiative that helps students and faculty to become more familiar with their surroundings and aid in reporting suspicious activity and crime. It also helps students to stay safe on campus and know what to do in case they run into criminal activity. Follow this link to register to come to the workshop. If you have friends who want to join in as well, you can tell them to come on by even if they are not registered. 

  • Cope, Kalantzis collaborating on NSF-funded study

    Professor Bill Cope of the Department of Education Policy, Organization & Leadership (EPOL) will be the principal investigator of a two-year study funded by the National Science Foundation in the amount of $550,000. EPOL professor and former Education at Illinois dean Mary Kalantzis is one of five scholars who will also participate in the interdisciplinary study—“Assessing Complex Epistemic Performance in Online Learning Environments”—which will develop online software tools to assess and offer feedback to learners in the medical field, individuals who must communicate complex scientific and technical information.

  • Globalization at Illinois: A Staff Dialogue

    Please join Illinois International for the final event in a three-part series of town-hall style conversatoins about globalization at Illinois on Tuesday, December 8, at 12pm in Room 104 of the Illini Union.

  • Jennifer Timmer Receives 2017 AERA Dissertation Grant

    Jennifer Timmer, a Ph.D. student in Educational Psychology, recently was awarded an AERA Dissertation Grant for her scholarly achievements, quality of proposed research, and potential to contribute to education research. The AERA Dissertation Grant awards a one-year, $20,000 stipend to assist in completion of dissertation research using a large scale data set. Other requirements include participation in AERA's Fall Research Conference and AERA Annual Meeting. More information on the award can be here: http://www.aera.net/Professional-Opportunities-Funding/AERA-Funding-Opportunities/Grants-Program/Dissertation-Grants

  • C&I's Idalia Nunez Wins AERA Early Career Scholar Award

    Congratulations to Idalia Nuñez, assistant professor of Curriculum & Instruction, who is the 2023 recipient of the Early Career Award from the AERA Language and Social Processes special interest group (SIG).

  • Be a Community Advocate and Co-Creator in Chicago with BECOME

    Attention College of Education graduate students:

    BECOME is a nonprofit organization located in Chicago and is a movement building organization that facilitates authentic community leadership and co-creates strategies and solutions to help communities actualize their collective liberation. BECOME is currently looking to expand our team to include a Community Advocate and Co-Creator who would be responsible for organizing, coordinating, planning and designing proposals and projects for and with BECOME’s nonprofit partners.

  • Freshmen in STEM fields needed for video game study

    The Department of Educational Psychology at the College of Education is seeking freshmen who consider themselves experts at the game of Minecraft. For their efforts, participants will receive a $10 Amazon gift card upon completion.

  • C&I's Asif Wilson Selected as Summer 2022 Vivian Harsh Research Society Fellow

    Congratulations to assistant professor Asif Wilson on receiving the 2022 Timuel D. Black Jr. Short-term Fellowship in African American Studies, a summer research fellowship with the Vivian G. Harsh Research Society in Chicago.

  • Summer 2014 EPS 420 Sociology of Education (#35166) Foundations Course

    Summer 2014 Term II  (June 16-July11) EPS 420 Social Foundations Course

    EPS 420-BRB Sociology of Education (#35166)

    SOC 420-BRB  Sociology of Education (#35167)

    Instructor: Dr. Bernice McNair Barnett ( bmbarnet@illinois.edu)

    Summer Term II: 1st 4 Weeks, June 16th-July 11th

    Time & Days: 10-11:50am, MTWR

    Credit: 2 or 4 Hours  Credit

    Location: Room 323 Education Bldg

    Enrollment Space Available: 36 students

    Course Description:

    EPS 420-BRB/SOC 420-BRB “Sociology of Education”  is a social foundations course that provides a  sociological examination of education and schooling in society. It introduces, synthesizes, and evaluates  diverse and competing major sociological theories, scholarly research, and important ongoing and emerging issues in the sociology of education. Other topics include but not limited to: the expansion of education in the USA and globally; family background and school achievement; bilingual education; organization of schools; desegregation; educational reforms and movements; diversity in education; teacher preparation, professionalization, and expectations; college costs and student debt; student achievement "gaps;" women in higher education; race, gender, class, language, citizenship, nationality, residence, immigrant status, and other stratifying  social relations in education and schooling  from pre-k, elementary, middle, and high schools to community colleges, private 4-year colleges, and research universities.

    In addition, reflecting one of the professor's areas of specialization in sociology as well as insights gained from extensive life history interviews with  leaders and activists of the 1960s (including literacy pioneer and social justice activist-educator Mrs. Septima Poinsette Clark and other citizenship school and freedom school teachers), this course provides a brief introduction to the impact and legacies of social movements of the "turbulent" 1960s on education and schooling. We will consider how students, teachers, White/European Americans, Black/African Americans, Latino/a Americans, Asian & Pacific Islander Americans, Native/American Indians, women, disabled, special needs, low income, language minority, and others mobilized, participated in, and led movements for changes in  education and society. The maximum enrollment  space available is 36 students. For questions or problems enrolling, contact Prof. Barnett (bmbarnet@illinois.edu).

  • Siebel Center for Computer Science

    Grainger Engineering Announces Siebel School of Computing and Data Science

    The new school was established with a generous gift from Illinois Alumna Thomas M. Siebel.

  • Giselle Martinez Negrette

    Martinez-Negrette to Serve on Panel to Select School Board Members

    Giselle Martinez-Negrette was selected for the five-member panel by Regional Superintendent Gary Lewis.

  • Alum Matt Linick Featured in Institute of Education Sciences Video

    Former graduate Matt Linick is highlighted in a What Works Clearinghouse (WWC) post about how Cleveland Public Schools uses the WWC to inform policy and practice.

  • Connect With OCCRL Via its New Facebook Page

    Stay engaged with the Office of Community College Research and Leadership (OCCRL) by liking and following their new Facebook page! Connect with OCCRL on Facebook.

  • Celebrating the life of Dick Williams (1914-2016)

    The Illinois School of Architecture will hold a gathering in Chicago to celebrate the life of former architecture professor A. Richard "Dick" Williams, who passed away on May 27 in Tucson, Ariz.

     

  • SAVE THE DATE: On-site Background Checks for College Researchers | January 28, 2015

    Visit the Bureau of Educational Research (College of Education Building, Room 38) between January 20th and January 27th to secure your 5-minute appointment time with an Accurate Biometrics representative on Wednesday, January 28, 2015, between 10:00 a.m. and 12:00 p.m. at the College of Education, Room 28. This will be the only date during the spring semester that an Accurate Biometrics representative will be on site at the College. This on-site background check is available to school researchers ONLY. We encourage you to take advantage of this service as background check requests that fall outside of this window of opportunity will require researchers to visit the local Accurate Biometrics office.

  • Spring 2016 Course EPS 421 Diversity in Racial and Ethnic Families

    Spring 2016 Racial and Ethnic Diversity in Families Course

    Professor: Dr. Bernice Barnett, Email: bmbarnet@illinois.edu

    4 Hours Credit Graduate section A:

    EPS 421: #47206     SOC 421: #47210    HDFS 424: #47209   AFRO 421: #47208

    3 Hours Credit Undergraduate section B:

    EPS #33093    SOC 421 #33098    HDFS 424 #33097    AFRO 421 #33095

     Tuesday, 1-2:50pm; Room 323 Education Bldg

     

    Course Description:

    This combined Graduate and Advanced Undergraduate (Juniors, Seniors only) 400-level social foundations course is a sociological examination of diversity in racial-ethnic families, which are the foundations of education. Understanding how race, gender, class, ethnicity, disability, sexuality, language, immigrant status, and other stratifying relations in society influence diversity in families is important, especially for teacher preparation and educational policies because families generally are the first agents of education, learning, and socialization of children before they enter schools because family background is related to school achievement. In addition, relationships among students/parents/families in homes and teachers/administrators/staff in classrooms/schools/colleges/universities can impact educational achievement. Moreover, local state, regional, and global population demographic are changing racially/ethnically; therefore,  families, educators, the public, and policymakers in schools, colleges, and major societal institutions need to be prepared for the racial-ethnic demographic shifts in the US. The primary objectives of this social foundational course are: (1) to introduce, survey, and evaluate major sociological theories, approaches, concepts, research, questions, debates, issues, and data on diversity in  racial ethnic families; (2) to develop/strengthen research and analytical skills, especially by critically examining the reality vs. the images, ideals and myths about “typical” racial-ethnic minority and majority families and the social constructions of families as  “deviate” vs ”normal;” (3) to foster an awareness and understanding of dimensions/patterns of diversity both across and within  racial ethnic families in the U.S. and the basis of racial ethnic diversity globally; (4) to consider how families are interconnected 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, resources, 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.

                    This course analyzes family diversity both across and within  these U.S. racial ethnic groups: Black African American, Latino/a American, Asian & Pacific American, Native American as well as White European American and Socio-Religious Ethnic Groups (such as Catholic, Baptist, Mormon, Amish, Jewish, Muslim). To a lesser extent, we explore the nature and basis of racial ethnic diversity, inequality, and relations in families 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 learning about, analyzing, and discussing diversity in racial ethnic families, class participants will consider the strengths, resiliency, and contributions of diverse families and their societal, historical, contemporary, and future opportunities and challenges.

    Course Readings:

    Diversity in Families by Maxine Baca Zinn, et al and choice selections of coming of age in diverse families books, including: President Barack Obama's Dreams From my Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance; Frank McCourt's Angela's Ashes; Amy Tan's The Joy Luck Club; Sandra Cisneros's House on Mango Street, among others.

  • Current and Former OCCRL Directors to be Honored by NISTS

    A current and former director of the Office of Community College Research and Leadership (OCCRL) in the College of Education are being honored in February by the National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students (NISTS), an organization that equips professionals with the knowledge and skills to advocate for transfer students through education, research, and advocacy.   

    Dr. Debra Bragg, who was the founding director of OCCRL in 1989 and served in the position through 2015, will receive NISTS’s signature honor, the Bonita C. Jacobs Transfer Champion Award, which recognizes those who have greatly enhanced student-transfer access, persistence, and success in areas such as research, policy, or advocacy throughout their careers. The award was named for the organization's founder, who played a significant role in advancing the national transfer conversation.

    Dr. Eboni Zamani-Gallaher, OCCRL’s current director, will be honored as a co-recipient of the Transfer Catalyst Award, which celebrates midcareer professionals who display game-changing influences in the transfer field at the institutional, regional, or state level.

    According to NISTS’s 2019 conference program, Catalyst awardees “demonstrate evidence of leadership, appropriate risk-taking and disrupting the status quo, along with using relevant research and theoretical frameworks to develop programs and services for transfer students.”

    Zamani-Gallaher will be recognized for the Catalyst Award alongside scholar-practitioners Russell Baker (Ivy Tech Community College), John Fink (Columbia University), and Paulina Palomino (East Los Angeles College).

    In addition to her OCCRL duties, Zamani-Gallaher is a professor in the Department of Education Policy, Organization & Leadership and serves as the department’s associate head. She is also the associate dean of the Graduate College.

    Bragg and Zamani-Gallaher will be honored during NISTS’s annual conference, which takes place this year Feb. 13-15 in Atlanta.

    View the conference program.

  • Tell Your Illinois Story to Legislators

    Become an advocate for the UI System's value to the state of Illinois. Complete the short form and share your story with state lawmakers.

  • Mitzi Koeberlein

    Koeberlein Honored by Graduate College

    Koeberlein is the Admissions and Records officer for the departments of Educational Psychology and Curriculum & Instruction. She was honored at the Graduate College Annual Workshop this week.

  • ICTW Symposium: April 25-26, 2022

    Registration is now open for the ICTW Symposium, focusing on career development and transition to work for students with disabilities, with particular focus on students with significant disabilities.

  • Summer 2015, Term II-A, EPS 420/SOC420 "Sociology of Education" Foundations Course

    Summer 2015, Term II,    1st   4 Weeks (June 15-July 10)

    Social Foundations Course in Educational Policy Studies & Sociology

    SOCIOLOGY   OF EDUCATION

    Educational Policy Studies: EPS 420-BRB Sociology of Education #35166

    Sociology: SOC 420-BRB Sociology of Education crn #35167

     

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

    Course Credit: 2 or 4 hours Graduate, 2 or 4 Hours Undergraduate

    Days, Time, Location: MTWR, 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.

      Spotligth 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)

     

  • EPOL Department Head Yoon Pak Receives Campus Executive Officer Distinguished Leadership Award

    Congratulations to Professor Yoon Pak, who has been recognized by peers and awarded from the campus' Office of the Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs and Provost.

  • Reminder: Don't Miss the 2022 Convocation Ceremony with Our Livestream and Video

    Can't make it to Saturday's College of Education 2022 Convocation Ceremony? Do you have friends or colleagues participating, and want to cheer them on? 

    Join the celebrations online. Visit the Convocation website for links and details.

  • EPOL Doctoral Candidate's Research to be Featured in Art Gallery Exhibit

    Marlee Bunch, doctoral candidate in Education Policy, Organization and Leadership, researchers the history of African American teachers in Mississippi post-Brown decision. Artwork is being created as a visual compenent to her work and will be on display at Haw Contemporary Gallergy in Kansas City, Missouri, beginning August 26, 2022.

  • Alumna Evthokia Stephanie Saclarides Featured in Latest Podcast from Math Teacher Educator Journal

    Check out the latest podcast from the Math Teacher Educator Journal featuring C&I alumna Evthokia Stephanie Saclarides, Ph.D., now at the University of Cincinnati.

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

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

  • Illinois Abroad Day

    Do You Want to Study Abroad?

    THE COLLEGE OF EDUCATION HAS OPPORTUNITIES FOR YOU!

    September 1st

    2 to 5 p.m.

    College of Education North Lobby

    Come and learn about our upcoming study trips to France, Italy, Chile, Hong Kong, and Singapore, and hear about the experiences from the students who just came back from Australia's trip this past summer. Students of all majors and years are encouraged to attend, as there are opportunities available for everyone.  Food from the represented countries will be provided! 

     

  • Dr. Verna F. Orr

    NILOA Report Examines Collaborative Focused on HBCU Assessment

    This report presents the background and subsequent founding of the Historically Black College and University (HBCU) Collaboration for Excellence in Educational Quality Assurance (CEEQA). CEEQA is the first collaborative of its kind, and seeks to help address accountability measures while being true to HBCU missions and culturally relevant assessment approaches. Hence, as both internal and external accountability mandates increase, so too has the need for a strong HBCU alliance. CEEQA can offer significant resources and specific expertise to both the HBCU community and higher education community writ large.

  • Image of Research Competition NOW OPEN

    Graduate and professional students enrolled at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign are invited to submit images of their research, creative or scholarly work, along with a short narrative sharing how it has impacted them or others.

    The entry deadline is Monday, January 27, 2020.

  • EPS 199: Qualitative Research & Leadership in Global Engagement Course SP '17

    There are a limited number of seats left in EPS 199: Qualitative Research & Leadership in Global Engagement!  EPS 199 can be taken for 2 or 3 credits by UIUC students in Spring 2017.  UIUC students will be paired with students from the Honours College of the University of Macau, who will be studying abroad at UIUC for the semester. Teams of students will work together to design and implement a qualitative research project, which they will present at the Undergraduate Research Symposium at the end of the semester.  The course will also explore issues related to global leadership.  This course meets Tuesdays and Thursdays from 4-4:50. Feel free to email Jenn at raskaus2@illinois.edu with any questions.  

  • User Services - Holiday Hours

    User Services will be closed beginning Monday, December 23, until Thursday, January 1st. We will reopen on January 2nd at 8am. Office hours will be 8am to 4pm through January 17th.

    Please contact User Services at userservices@illinois.edu or 217-244-6053 if you have questions.

  • Dr. Allyson Tintiangco-Cubales

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

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

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

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

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