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  • User Services Open this Sunday for Assistance

    User Services - Copy Center will be open this Sunday, 1 pm - 5 pm, to assist with any copy or scanning needed prior to the first day of classes. User Services has recently moved to 25 Education Bldg. We look forward to assisting you.

  • College of Education On-Site Researcher Background Checks--September 3, 2014

    Dear College of Education Researchers,

    Accurate Biometrics will be on site on Wednesday, September 3, 2014, between 10:00 a.m. and 12:00 p.m. to administer fingerprint criminal background checks at the College of Education, Room 160.

    This on-site background check is available to school researchers ONLY.  Students who are part of teacher education programs who need background checks for the Council on Teacher Education (CoTE) must make individual appointments at an Accurate Biometrics location of their choice.

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

    Visit the Bureau of Educational Research (College of Education Building, Room 38) between August 25th and September 2nd to secure your 5-minute appointment time with an Accurate Biometrics representative on the date and times listed above.  This will be the only date during fall semester that 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 of opportunity 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  money order made out to Accurate Biometrics.  NO CASH or PERSONAL CHECKS will be accepted.  Although money orders are preferred, credit and debit 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 cost 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 date 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.  Hours of operation in the Champaign office vary, but are currently Monday & Thursday from 9:00 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. and 1:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m., and occasional Saturdays from 9:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.  The Champaign office is located at 701 Devonshire Drive, Suite 140, Champaign, IL.  The phone number is (866) 361-9944.
    • If the researcher has had a background check done previously in the State of Illinois and can provide the appropriate verification, it may be acceptable for research in schools.  Please bring your documentation to the Bureau office for approval and entry into the Bureau system.

     

    Bureau of Educational Research

    College of Education

  • SAVE THE DATE! 6th Annual Graduate Student Conference

    The 6th Annual Gradaute Student Conference will be on Friday March 13th, 2015. More information will be provided on our new webiste, which can be found here: http://education.illinois.edu/gradconference

  • CoE Graduate Student Conference is Looking for Committee Members

    Are you... Creative, looking to expand your skills and marketability, would like to enhance your CV, or enjoy event planning?

    Join the College of Education Graduate Student Conference Planning Committee! We are seeking enthusiastic and innovative grad students interested helping to plan the 2015 Graduate Student Research Conference.

    Informational/Planning meeting Friday, September 19th at 12:00pm in Room 192 EDU.  For more info contact Megan Dino or Alisha Johnson at mdino2@illinois.edu or adjohns2@illinois.edu

  • 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.

  • 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.
  • 6th Annual Graduate Student Conference Call for Papers

    The Program Committee invites proposals on all topics relevant to the field of education in any time period or nation, and especially papers or panels that cross cultures, time periods, or national boundaries. The Committee defines ‘education’ broadly, to include all institutions of socialization—mass media, voluntary organizations, and so on—as well as schools and universities. We invite proposals for individual papers, works in progress, or panel sessions, which could consist of several works in progress. Consider sharing your proposals from AERA, CREA, AESA, ASHE, and other conferences. This is also a great way to become comfortable sharing your research before submitting a proposal to a national or regional conference.

    We encourage graduated students to consider submitting proposals on topics as they relate to this year’s theme:

    From Research to Praxis:  Scholarship Today for the Society of Tomorrow

    Go here for submission guidelines and more information: conferences.education.illinois.edu.

  • College of Education Graduate Student Conference CALL FOR PAPERS

    pro·pos·al

    noun: proposal; plural noun: proposals

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

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

     

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

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

     

  • 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. 

  • U Can Help: CU One-to-One Mentoring Program

    The One-to-One mentoring program matches willing adults with Champaign-Urbana students in 3rd -7th grade.  The mentors receive an initial training and then come to the schools, during the school year once a week, to meet with their mentees.  The pairs play games, visit, eat lunch, and share together.  It is a hugely rewarding program that provides encouragement and support to kids who need it!
     
    Here is the link to the website: http://cu1to1.org/  There is great information here for anyone who may be interested.  We are currently recruiting and training our next group of mentors; so if you are interested or know anyone who may be interested, please let us know!  The fall Mentor Training is Tuesday, October 7, 6:30-8:30 p.m., at the Mellon Administration Building (703 New St in Champaign).
     
    There are students on our waiting list at every school…won’t you consider being a part of the life of a child?

  • Illinois Leadership® Center Opportunities

    The Illinois Leadership® Center at the University of Illinois provides students, faculty and staff with opportunities to develop, or enhance, essential leadership skills. Our programs and services provide leadership training through both academic coursework and experiential programming. We help provide the 'experience you need for life' to be successful in your community, organizations, and relationships.

    Upcoming Opportunities:

    • LeaderShape Info Sessions on October 8th & 9th
    • Integrity I-Program on October 11th
    • Intersect I-Program on November 8th
    • We also offer a Leadership Certificate Program that looks great on a resume!

    For more information, check us out at www.illinoisleadership.illinois.edu, or on Facebook: www.facebook.com/IllinoisLeadershipCenter and Twitter: www.twitter.com/IL_Leadership 

  • CoE Graduate Student Conference - Call for Proposals

    The Program Committee invites proposals on all topics relevant to the field of education in any time period or nation, including papers or panels that cross cultures, time periods, or national boundaries.

    The Committee defines ‘education’ broadly, to include all institutions of socialization—mass media, voluntary organizations, and so on—as well as schools and universities. We invite proposals for individual papers, works in progress, or panel sessions, which could consist of several works in progress. Consider sharing your proposals from AERA, CREA, AESA, ASHE, and other conferences. This is also a great way to become comfortable sharing your research before submitting a proposal to a national or regional conference.

    Proposal Deadline: Friday, December 5th

    http://conferences.education.illinois.edu/

  • 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

  • Uni High is hosting: New World of Learning seminar.

    University of Illinois Laboratory High School is hosting a New World of Learning seminar. New World of Learning is presented by Jim Stelter, founder and president of Vanerum•Stelter. Jim is a dynamic leader with a passion for environments that inspire the exchange of knowledge and lifelong learning and has shared this topic all across the country.  He will explore the drivers of change in education and identify the implications these changes have on the classroom and learning spaces in all organizations.

    Tuesday, October 7, 2014 at 6:30 pm at Beckman Institute #1005

  • 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

  • Integrity & LeaderShape

    We still have a few spots left for INTEGRITY this Saturday! More info: https://www.illinoisleadership.uiuc.edu/programs/integrity.asp

    "Integrity was a really inspiring program which helped me to better understand the qualities that it takes to be a leader. I also learned how to correct myself when I have a lack of integrity which really gave me a feeling of contentment and hope. I give this program a thumbs up for the amount of effort and energy that was put into making it an effective learning experience." - Marina S., '10 Fine & Applied Arts

     

    LeaderShape Info Sessions are also being held this Wednesday and Thursday. More info: https://illinois.edu/lb/files/2014/10/02/54318.pdf

    Questions? - leadership@illinois.edu

  • Homecoming Parade Float Building at the College of Education

    Join in building a Homecoming Parade float representing the College of Education. The Homecoming Parade is a tradition dating back to 1910! It is a time to collaborate with current students, faculty & staff from across the College & University. Bring family and friends to join with classmates & colleagues to build the float on October 22 & 23rd from 6-9 P.M. And, throughout the day on October 24th. The parade starts at the College of Education and continues down 6th Street. Join the festivities and watch the parade with friends from the College of Education in front of the Library on 6th Street. The parade starts at 6 P.M. on October 24th. For more information regarding float building contact Allison Witt at awitt1@illinois.edu To learn more about all the Homecoming Festivities check out http://homecoming.illinois.edu/

     

  • Bringing School and Community Together - Prof. Emeritus Chip Bruce | Monday, October 13, 4–6 PM | College of Ed Room 2

    Prof. Emeritus Chip Bruce | Monday, October 13, 4–6 PM | College of Ed Room 2

    What is the real purpose of education? Is it all about preparation for college and career or is it helping to develop critical thinkers who can shape a just and equitable society in order to lead good and purpose-filled lives? This talk considers examples from the US, Turkey, Spain, France, and Romania of how schools and communities can work together to promote individual and social growth. Some involve new media, others libraries and civic activism. Overall, the examples point to a more critical and dynamic conception of education goals as a necessary element of a healthy society.

  • 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.

  • Focal Point Project: More than Words: Engaging in a collective training and application of social justice

    We seek to continue current conversations on campus regarding academic freedom and to ask for whom and under what circumstance(s) it exists within the larger context of human rights events both nationally and globally. In addition, we would like to explore the complexities and critiques of doing social justice work. Guided by the question of what constitutes education, we invite the campus community in general, and graduate students in all fields in particular, to our first event:

    Speaker: Dr. Bettina Love

    Talk: Hip Hop Pedagogy, Racial Battle Fatigue & The State

    Cypher Workshop: Can’t Do The Work Without The Elements: Social Justice & The 5th Element of Hip Hop

    Performances by WeLevitate and T.R.U.T.H

    Commemoration of the life of Ashley S. C. Walls

    Date: Friday, October 17th,12-4pm

    Location: Asian American Cultural Center

    Please RSVP for Lunch Arrangements: https://illinois.edu/fb/sec/9737561 

    For more information, please email morethanwordsuiuc@gmail.com.

    A project made possible by the Graduate College.

  • Film: "At-Risk Summer"

    Young adult author e.E. Charleton-Trujillo traveled the country offering writing workshops for marginalized youth.  Those experiences are captured in this candid, thought-provoking, and riveting documentary.  Several children's and young adult authors join Charleton-Trujillo at various times and offer their expertise and support.  The documentary will be screened on October 16, 6-8pm, Room 102, La Casa Cultural Latina, 1203 W. Nevada Street.

    e.E. Charleton-Trujillo's appearance is a part of the 2014 Youth Literature Festival activities and is sponsored by College of Education, the Department of Latino Studies, and La Casa Cultural Latina.

  • IES Postdoctoral Research Symposium

    Please join us on Monday, October 20th in Room 242 for the IES Postdoctoral Research Symposium.  We will have the following two sessions:

    11:30 AM - 12:30 PM: The Postdoctoral Experience: Reflections from Past & Current Fellows

    12:45 - 2:00 PM: IES Postdoctoral Fellows' Research Presentations

    Lunch will be provided by the Department of Curriculum and Instruction Colloquium Series.

  • Teacher Education at National Institute of Education, Singapore

    Teacher Education at National Institute of Education, Singapore 
    Tuesday, October 14, 2014
    12 - 1:00pm in Room 22

    Dr Angela Wong is spending two weeks of her sabbatical leave at our College. She will be giving a presentation about the programs of teacher education at National Institute of Education (NIE), the national teacher preparation institute in Singapore. NIE has been preparing beginning teachers for careers in education and providing continuing education pathways and professional development for serving teachers for more than 60 years. Today, NIE is an autonomous institute of the Nanyang Technological University (NTU), and is well regarded as a leading teacher education institution in the world.

    Dr Wong Foong Lin, Angela is an associate professor with the Learning Sciences and Technologies Academic Group. She currently teaches courses in the areas of instructional technology and classroom management. Her research interests are in learning environments, instructional technology and practicum-related issues in teacher education. She is also the Practicum Coordinator of LST.

  • Seeking Lantern Slides for University Collection

    The Visual Resources Curator of the University Library, Sarah Christensen, is engaged in a project to identify lantern slides unique to the University of Illinois in subject matter or institutional significance, and then digitize and make these slides available. You can find examples of these materials by going to http://www.library.illinois.edu/contentdm/cdm4/search.php and entering "lantern slides" as a search term. If you know of any such collections currently in your departments or held by an emeritus professor, would you please contact Sarah Christensen (schrstn@illinois.edu) or Nancy O'Brien (npobrien@illinois.edu) so that we can add to this resource? Thank you!

  • 10th Annual INTC Induction and Mentoring Conference

    Join the Illinois New Teacher Collaborative (INTC) at its 10th annual induction and mentoring conference in February 24 & 25, 2015, in Springfield, IL, where the heart of teaching emphasizes teacher growth, developing the skills and confidence to have professional conversations, and building high quality mentor/new teacher relationships.

    Induction is the catalyst for a successful teaching career. It can turn a bad day into a good one. It is the heartbeat that motivates new teachers to do better from Day One until the last day of school. Induction can develop a value-added mentoring relationship. It helps new teachers determine where they are, where they want to be, and how to become more effective. It works in partnerships with others, including ROEs, education agencies, and higher education. It prepares new teachers to better serve their students.

    This conference will feature two days of breakout sessions, Educator Chats, facilitated roundtables, and more. Targeted attendees include induction and mentoring program coordinators, mentors, administrators, higher education faculty, professional development providers, and other stakeholders.

    For more information, contact Nancy Johnson at 217-244-3166 or nljohnsn@illinois.edu, or visit http://intc.education.illinois.edu/conference

  • LeaderShape Applications due October 27th!

    The Illinois Leadership Center is providing this five-night leadership retreat for FREE to students this January.

    LeaderShape is a nationally-recognized leadership development program that takes place at many college campuses every year. At the LeaderShape Institute, participants learn how to lead with integrity through a variety of fun and educational experiences. They will create a vision for change focused on their organizations and an action plan designed to assist them in effectively implementing their vision and goals.

    "[LeaderShape] has truly changed the way I look at the world, and more importantly, the way I evaluate and challenge myself. Thank you for giving me a healthy disregard for the impossible."

  • 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.

     

  • 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

  • Free Research Workshop

    Learn to use the world class University of Illinois Library.  Workshops available completely online to provide you with personalized research training in the subject of your current coursework or research interest. 

    November 12 and 13 at 6:00 pm Central Standard Time. 

    Bring your research topic and questions and log in to

    http://go.illinois.edu/researchworkshop

    Use the enrollment key “researchworkshop”

    Additional training materials are available at the workshop site.

  • 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).

  • PROFESSOR AND HEAD, DEPARTMENT OF CURRICULUM AND INSTRUCTION

    We seek a nationally known scholar with effective leadership qualities to serve as a full-time tenured Professor and head of the department, who will support a strong and diverse faculty as we fulfill the teaching, research, and service missions of the Department and College in a major research land-grant university. The Department consists of 23 nationally and internationally recognized tenure-track faculty and 6 clinical faculty, from racially, culturally, and linguistically diverse backgrounds. Research anchors our work at the graduate level, with our intellectual work organized into four program areas: Curriculum, Aesthetics, and Teacher Education (CATE); Digital Environments for Learning, Teaching & Agency (DELTA); Language and Literacy (L&L); and Mathematics, Science, and Engineering (MSE). At the undergraduate level, we focus on global, national, and local concerns of pre- and in-service teacher education in early childhood, elementary, and secondary education, and our faculty contribute significantly to the College’s licensure and non-licensure degree programs. The department head has the administrative support of an associate head for graduate programs, program area chairs, and administrative assistance. The department head works collaboratively with a College executive leadership team committed to transformative education and with the College-level I-Teach I-Lead office, which coordinates undergraduate programs in the College. Confidential inquiries about the position may be directed to Professor Daniel G. Morrow, Search Committee Chair, dgm@illinois.edu, phone: (217) 300-0915.

  • Got Papers?

    Don't forget to get your proposal written for the CoE Graduate Student Conference - DUE DECEMBER 5th.

    Go to: http://education.illinois.edu/gradconference 

  • User Services - Reduced Service Hours

    During the week of Thanksgiving break, User Services will be open on Monday and Tuesday 8am to 4pm and Wednesday 9am to 12pm with reduced staff.

    Happy Thanksgiving!

  • Course Announcement: CI 437 Educational Game Design

    Course Announcement - Spring 2015

     

    New Course!

    CI 437 A: Educational Game Design

    Spring 2015

    Instructor: Robb Lindgren, robblind@illinois.edu 

    Meeting Time: Tuesday/Thursday 2-3:20pm 

    Location: Education Room 42A

    Credit: 3 hours undergrad/4 hours grad

    CRN: 62106

    How do you design a game that is fun to play, but also helps people to learn something important? This course looks at how both physical games (board games, card games) and digital games can be designed to teach people important concepts and skills in a variety of areas. Combining strategies from the game design industry with research on how people learn, students in this course will create original games that have educational value. In class discussions and small-group activities, students will examine games from various viewpoints in order to understand the most effective ways to deliver instructional content. The course will survey and sample many types of educational games (e.g., serious games, games for impact, persuasive games) and in many formats (e.g., console games, online games, board games).

  • CI 576: ASSESSMENTBASED READING INSTRUCTION

    Day: Mondays
    Time: 5:7:00 pm
    CRN: ONC 62104; RTE 62341
    Credit hours: 4
    Dates: January 20th – March 13th, 2015
    Mode: Online

    Would you like to learn how to connect reading instruction to reading assessment? Are you searching for a
    hands-on experience where you administer reading assessments to students and create and enact an
    individualized instructional plan catered specifically for your student? Are you interested in learning the best
    practices for phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension instruction? Would you
    like to consistently engage in discussions that demonstrate how instruction can be modified to cater to English learners? If your answer to any of the previous questions is “yes,” then Assessment-Based Reading
    Instruction is meant for you.

    Assessment-Based Reading Instruction is designed to provide you with:
    • An overview of the nature of reading difficulties
    • Hands-on experience with identifying reading difficulties
    • Experience in responding to the findings from assessment of reading difficulties
    • Experience with considering assessment and instruction as a holistic, interconnected and individualized
    process based on each learner
    • Insight into the ways in which linguistic and cultural diversity impact reading assessment
    • Insight into the ways in which social factors impact interpretations of the results from reading
    assessments

    Assessment-Based Reading Instruction is structured such that assessments are all conducted in the first
    two weeks of the course followed by instruction based on the findings from these assessments. Scholarly
    reading materials will influence your assessment and instructional processes as you progress. Among the
    areas we will explore are orthographic development, emergent/early literacy, word study, text complexity,
    fluency, vocabulary, comprehension, motivation, linguistically and culturally responsive assessment, highstakes testing, and response to intervention.

  • Spring 2015 Course Offering: HRD 585 Program Evaluation

    Course Title: HRD 585 Program Evaluation

    Meeting Time: Thursdays from 1 pm to 4 pm, Spring 2015

    Course Instructor: Dr. Wenhao David Huang (wdhuang@illinois.edu)

    Course Description:

    This course prepares students to conceptualize and develop a comprehensive evaluation plan for various educational programming across disciplines and organizations. Upon completing the course, students will be able to:

    • Articulate the difference between research and evaluation
    • Develop concise evaluation purposes based on the need of the clients/stakeholders
    • Align evaluation questions according to the evaluation purposes
    • Design data collection instruments to answer the evaluation questions
    • Select data analysis approaches that are appropriate for the scope and intention of the evaluation
    • Develop evaluation budget and project management plan
    • Build reciprocal and productive relationships with stakeholders of the intended evaluation

    This course is open to all graduate students. For more information, feel free to contact Dr. Huang at wdhuang@illinois.edu.

     

     

  • University Library Winter Break Hours

    Please note that the Library will have significantly reduced hours during the winter break. The Social Sciences, Health, and Education Library (SSHEL) will be open regular Fall semester hours through the end of finals, Friday, December 20 at 6pm. SSHEL will be open on Monday and Tuesday, December 22-23 from 8:30am-5:00pm. SSHEL will be closed December 24 through January 2. From Monday, January 5 through January 16, SSHEL will be open 8:30am-5pm Monday through Friday. The Library will be closed on weekends during the winter break. Regular Spring semester hours resume on Tuesday, January 20.

    If you need Library materials or services for your research or studies, please plan ahead.

    For a complete list of library hours during fall finals, see: http://www.library.illinois.edu/services/hours.php?semester=146

    For a complete list of library hours during winter break, see: http://www.library.illinois.edu/services/hours.php?semester=153

    The following library service points (2nd floor, Main Library) will be open on Dec 29, 30 & 31 and January 2 from 8:30am-5:00pm:
    *Central Circulation
    *Main Stacks
    *Information Desk

    All Libraries will be closed Friday, January 9, 8am-1pm except for Law, Health Sciences, and Prairie Research Institute.

  • 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

  • SOPS 5th Annual Postdoctoral Research Symposium

    We are the board of the Society of Postdoctoral Scholars (SOPS).  Currently, we are organizing our 5th Annual Postdoctoral Symposium, which will take place on February 6th, 2015.  We came by the College of Education office earlier this week to drop off a couple of flyers for the bulletin boards, and we were told to contact individual departments for distributing the symposium information through the listserv.  Could you please help us forward the announcement below to postdocs, graduate students, and faculty through the departmental mailing list?  Please feel free to contact us should you have additional comments or questions!  Thank you very much in advance!

    The registration for the 5th Annual Postdoctoral Research Symposium is now open!  The event will be held at the Beckman Institute on February 6th, 2015, and is open to all disciplines. The deadline for abstract submission and registration is January 16th, 2015. Audience will get to vote for outstanding presentations, and the chosen talk and poster finalists will be awarded cash prizes.  Several travel awards will also be provided for out-of-town presenters. Graduate student posters are also welcome!

    January 16th, 2015. Audience will get to vote for outstanding presentations, and the chosen talk and poster finalists will be awarded cash prizes.  Several travel awards will also be provided for out-of-town presenters. Graduate student posters are also welcome!

    Please help us spread the word about this symposium not only to the fellow researchers on campus, but also to the scholars beyond its boundaries! For more information and to register, please visit our website.

     

    SOPS Organizing Committee

    http://sops.beckman.illinois.edu

  • 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.

  • EPOL Winter Lecture

    Department of Education Policy,Organization & Leadership

    Winter Lecture

    Dr. Ghazala Ovaice

    The Practical Application of Organization Development in a Global Organization


    January 23, 2015
    11:30 a.m. - 12:50 p.m.
    42A Education


    This lecture will focus on Dr. Ovaice’s journey and evolution from University of Illinois Human
    Resource Development doctoral student to global organization development practitioner and leader.
    She will provide insight regarding the association of organization development theory and practice
    from a practitioner’s standpoint. During the discussion Dr. Ovaice will integrate examples from her
    vast and expansive experience as a leader in a complex global organization.

    Ghazala Ovaice, Ph.D., Director, Organization Development, works in Abbott Learning & Development,
    where she leads the Consulting function for strategic business performance needs with specific
    concentration large scale change, M&A culture integration, organization assessment & design,
    organization culture and employee engagement. Her research interests include trust in the
    workplace, cross-cultural issues in work related values, and the relationship of organization
    culture and performance.  Her background is in Organization Development, Organization Research,
    Leadership Development, and Evaluation. Ghazala received a Ph.D. from the University of Illinois at
    Urbana-Champaign with a concentration in organizational development and evaluation.

  • HRD 575 Innovations in e-Learning

    HRD 575 Innovations in e-Learning

     

    Time: Wednesdays from 9 am to 1150 am

    Location: 215B DKH

    Instructor: Dr. W. David Huang (wdhuang@illinois.edu)

    CRN: 62334

     

    Course Description:

    This course is designed to provide you with resources that will familiarize you with ongoing innovations in Web-­based electronic technologies that can be used to deliver e-Learning content across organizations. You will critically review ongoing e-Innovations that you may be able to integrate with your content in today’s e-Communication and e-Learning environments.

    The first strategy is for you to stay informed of emerging technologies, as indicated by The Horizon Report. The Horizon Report is a joint publication by New Media Consortium (NMC) and the EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative, who each year identify and describe six areas of emerging technologies that are likely to exert major effects on learning in higher education within 1–5 years. The report draws on the ongoing discussion and research efforts of the advisory board’s members in the fields of business, industry, and education. During your second week of instruction you will be introduced to EDUCAUSE and the NMC. You will read this year’s Horizon Report and those of the past two years.

    Although The Horizon Report focuses on emerging technologies for teaching and learning, it is ultimately up to you to decide which technologies you will use to facilitate e-Learning. Thus, this course’s goal is to expose you to multiple technology genres.

    The second strategy of this course is to keep you updated on e-Learning technologies, organized by genres. Technologies are emerging and advancing faster than we can grasp. This course is organized to help you focus on the diversity of technology genres. (A technology genre is a set of conventions organized by similarities.) Although genres are usually discussed more in the fields of literature and art, in this course we will be talking a lot about technology genres. This approach will help you understand how the different Web-­based technologies are categorized, and will also help you organize current and emerging Internet-­ and Web-­based technologies for e-Learning. These can include social virtual worlds, social networking, mobile access, multimedia development, social bookmarking, and educational games. Many more Web-­based technologies exist—and who knows? You may be able to identity a Web-­based technology genre we don’t discuss in even this course.

    These strategies will help you stay as current as possible with ongoing innovation in Internet-­ and Web-­based technologies for e-Learning. This course will introduce you to these strategies in greater depth and help you apply them in your own life.

  • Seasonal and Summer Outdoor Education Positions at CCFPD

    Champaign County Forest Preserve District

    Museum & Education Department - HLIC

    2015 Seasonal Positions

     

    Gain valuable experience in classroom management and hands-on educational techniques with one of these seasonal positions at the Champaign County Forest Preserve District!

     

    Seasonal Naturalist: May-Nov 2015

    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 program animal collection
    • Must be available to work occasional weekends and evenings

    Qualifications:

    Excellent communication skills, Experience working with children, Knowledge of area flora and fauna, College-level coursework in Natural Resources, Education or related field preferred, Ability to work outdoors in all conditions

    Hours:

    This is a part-time seasonal position (approx. 15-30 hours/week) available from May 1 to Nov. 20. The primary work location is Homer Lake Forest Preserve, with some work at Lake of the Woods. Pay: $9.50-$11.00/hr.

    Review of applications will begin February 27, 2015. Applications may be accepted after that date only if space allows. 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.

    Looking for an internship? Check with your college or university department about receiving internship credit for these positions.

     

    Nature Day Camp Educator

    Main Duties:

    • Teach Eco-Adventures summer day camps
    • Conduct other educational programs for youth and adults
    • Assist with daily operation of the Interpretive Center
    • Assist with special programs and events
    • Must be available to work occasional weekends and evenings

    Qualifications:

    Excellent communication skills, Experience working with children, Knowledge of area flora and fauna, College-level coursework in Natural Resources, Education or related field preferred, Ability to work outdoors in all conditions

    This is a part-time seasonal position (approx. 30 hours/week) available from May 27 through July 31. 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.

    Review of applications will begin February 27, 2015. Applications may be accepted after that date only if space allows. 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.

    Looking for an internship? Check with your college or university department about receiving internship credit for these positions.

                  

    Campground Naturalist                                                                                                                                       

    Main Duties:

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

     

    Qualifications:

    Excellent communication skills, Experience working with the public, including children, Knowledge of area flora and fauna, Experience in Environmental or Outdoor Education desirable, Bachelor’s degree in Natural Resources, Education or related field a plus but not required, Ability to work outdoors in all conditions and with minimal supervision

    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.

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

    Call for Proposals

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

    [Proposal Submission Deadline: February 6, 2015]

    Summary

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

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

    Details

    Illinois Learning Sciences Design Laboratory

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

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

    Lightning Symposium

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

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

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

    Symposium Themes and Grand Challenges

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

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

    Proposal Submission

    Deadline: February 6, 2015 @ 5:00 PM

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

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

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

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

    Registration to Attend the Symposium

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

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

  • Conducting Research in the Schools: Perspectives from the Districts

    Conducting Research in the Schools:
    Perspectives from the Districts
      
    A seminar sponsored by the Bureau of Educational Research

    Thursday, January 29, 2015
    12:00 PM – 1:00 PM
    College of Education, Room 242

    Research conducted by our faculty and students within Unit 4 and District 116 is cutting edge, impactful and grounded in the basic tenet of making a difference in the academic lives of the next generation. For University of Illinois faculty and students, placement in a local district may be the catalyst for advocacy, participation in policy creation or analysis, or the driving force in the development of new programs, curriculum or evaluation methods. In this 50 minute presentation, Dr. Wiegand and Dr. Owen will provide a district superintendent’s perspective on the benefits of education research in their respective districts, the complex challenges they face in juxtaposing district priorities with school research project placements and will discuss “rules of the road” for researchers interfacing with district personnel. If you have questions about who to approach in Unit 4 or District 116, when to approach them, and how the College of Education, Coordinator of School – University Research Relations enters into the overall process please plan to join us for this informative presentation.

    A 10 minute Q & A period will be reserved for researcher questions following the presentation.

    A light lunch will be provided. 

    PRESENTERS: 
    Dr. Donald D. Owen
    Superintendent, Urbana School District 116

    Dr. Don Owen has served as superintendent since January 2012.  Owen has been with the Urbana School District since 1989, and has served as the Assistant Superintendent for Curriculum and Instruction since 2007. He previously worked as a site coordinator for the After School Child Care program at Wiley Elementary School, taught history at Urbana Middle School, and coordinated grant-based programs in the school district.

    Dr. Judy Wiegand
    Superintendent, Champaign Unit 4 School District

    Dr. Wiegand is the Superintendent of the Champaign Unit 4 School District.  She began her career with Unit 4 in 1987 as a special education teacher. Since that time she has also served as Dean of Students, Assistant Principal and Principal of Centennial High School, Director of Secondary Education, Assessment, and Professional Development and Assistant Superintendent for Achievement and Pupil Services. Dr. Wiegand earned her Doctorate in Education and Organizational Leadership from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 2003.

     

  • University Primary School "Birds & Flight" Project Exhibit

    Please enjoy University Primary School's exhibit featuring the "Birds & Flight" project this Wednesday, January 21-Friday, January 23 in the College of Education first and third floor lounges. University practicum and volunteer students from Elementary, Early Childhood, and Special Education, Speech-Hearing Science and The Autism Program supported children alongside Uni Primary faculty during this semester-long inquiry. Audiences interested in collaborative learning, The Project Approach, assessment, students and teachers as researchers, and/or early childhood and elementary school curriculum development are encouraged to spend time viewing the discoveries and documentation.

  • University Primary School 2015-2016 Enrollment Begins

    University Primary School is now accepting enrollment applications for the 2015-2016 academic year. University Primary School is the University of Illinois, College of Education lab school, serving children preschool through fifth grade in a Reggio Emilia, project-based curriculum. For more information, visit the school website: http://education.illinois.edu/ups or call 217-333-3996. University Primary School is located on campus at 51 Gerty Drive, Champaign in the Children's Research Center building. Children must be 3 years old on or before September 1st to enroll in the preschool classroom and 5 years old on or before September 1st to enroll in kindergarten.

    Families applying to the school should attend the Community Open House on Thursday February 19 between 9:00 a.m.-12:00p.m. for preschool and 9:00 a.m.- 3:00 p.m. for grades K-5; children are encouraged to visit at this time. Families may also choose to schedule a site visit outside of the Open House time. An informational meeting for prospective families will be held at the school Tuesday, February 24 from 6:00-7:30 p.m. Enrollment applications may be downloaded from the website or picked up at the school office. Applications submitted by March 20, 2015 will be given first consideration for enrollment.

  • Cyberlearning 2015 is next week!

    Cyberlearning 2015 is next week! The event is being held by the Center for Innovative Research in Cyberlearning on January 27th and 28th. The complete program is available online at http://circlcenter.org/events/cyberlearning-2015/. In-person registration is now closed but several exciting keynotes and talks are being webcast! Register for virtual participation at http://learningtimesevents.org/circl2015/.

  • Register Now for the 6th Annual CoEGSC!

    Registration is now open for the 6th Annual CoEGSC From Research to Praxis: Scholarship Today for the Society of Tomorrow - Friday, March 13th, 2015

    Registration is FREE and includes reception with CoE Distinguished Alumni, light breakfast, lunch, and access to all workshops and panels

    Go here https://conferences.education.illinois.edu/index.php/gsc2015/CoEGSC  to create an account and register

    Contact Alisha Johnson adjohns2@illinois.edu with questions

     

  • Job Announcement for Visiting Assistant Professor

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