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KEEPS: THE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION’S
MISSION STATEMENT
The KEEPS mission statement of Long Island University’s
Brooklyn Campus addresses one of the most important questions
in urban education today: How can urban educators be expertly
prepared to meet the rising standards? A strength of the School
of Education is that many of its future and practicing educators
are themselves urban dwellers, immigrants, or members of ethnolinguistic
and racial minorities. Thus, many of its educators bring to the
University the experiential knowledge of urban and minority communities
essential to educate the children and families in those communities. The
KEEPS mission is designed to help all urban educators meet rising
academic standards, while also meeting performance standards
that are based on the experiences and life of urban schools and
their children.
KEEPS MISSION IN BRIEF
KEEPS: The desired qualities of LIU/Brooklyn Educators
To carry on the important mission of the Brooklyn Campus
School of Education,
we value:
KNOWLEDGE and intellectual inquisitiveness about children,
schools and the world.
ENQUIRY, or the collective discipline of observation, reflection,
and non-judgmental description of children and their school work, as well as
descriptive inquiry of teaching and professional practice.
EMPATHY that rests on the human uniqueness and capacity to
develop, as well as responsiveness to the needs and interests of urban learners
and communities.
PLURALISM and attention to differences and to inclusion of
all in the learning community of schools and the wider community.
SOCIAL COMMITMENT and the building of a just and democratic
society.
KEEPS MISSION IN DEPTH
KNOWLEDGE and intellectual inquisitiveness about children,
schools and the world.
Brooklyn Campus educators are intellectually rooted in the liberal
arts, sciences, and pedagogy. We value knowing about the world,
its people, languages and cultures, its natural and physical
aspects, and its texts. We attach special importance to how to
use that knowledge to teach others and work with urban children
and adolescents in schools.
The curriculum of the School of Education advances this value
by deepening the understanding acquired in liberal arts and sciences
general education and major courses and contextualizing that
knowledge through the world of schools and that of their clients
-- families, in particular children and adolescents, as well
as teachers and other school professionals. Foundational courses
are interdisciplinary, attempting to deepen the multifaceted
knowledge needed in the acts of teaching and learning, as well
as spurring the dynamic and simultaneous use of interdisciplinary
knowledge required in educating children.
Brooklyn Campus educators are interested in reading closely and
writing carefully and extensively, and they understand that in
doing so, they are constructing and developing their
own knowledge about texts and the world, about the students with
whom they work and the communities from which they come,
about schools and classrooms. Varied modes of writings and discussing
are used throughout the curriculum to generate deep knowledge
of academic texts, children and learners, teaching practice,
and one another. Technology is used to increase connections and
interrelatedness and thus support the construction of knowledge.
We value knowledge constructed over time and thus collect our
work and that of the students with whom we work longitudinally.
We actively use our collections of work to deepen reflection
and generate knowledge. We're responsible thinkers, capable of
reflecting on our own work, forming our own opinions, and using
our knowledge to act independently in socially responsible ways.
ENQUIRY or the collective discipline of observation,
reflection, and non-judgmental description of children and their
school work, as well as descriptive inquiry of teaching and professional
practice.
Brooklyn Campus educators value being active inquirers, curious
about social and natural phenomena, able to imagine, and to invent.
We're seriously reflective, and take time to study, reflect on
words and texts, observe, research, collect work. We observe
learners and their work closely and are able to describe them
accurately while withholding judgment. We also value description
and reflective review of our own teaching practice. We attach
great importance to our ability as a group to inquire collectively
into these matters and to include the voices of all members of
the learning community, regardless of rank or function. We value
acknowledging the range of attitudes, beliefs, experiences, knowledge
and lenses of the group involved in the collective inquiry, and
we look for the common threads as community is shaped. We use
our collective inquiry to shape community and to create knowledge
as a base for action, review, and constant regeneration and transformation.
The School of Education's curriculum includes specific courses
that develop the foundational discipline of collective descriptive
inquiry as it applies to children, classrooms, and schools, and
it provides ample opportunity to practice descriptive inquiry
both in college classrooms and in schools. We read the best literature
available, supporting the development of educators' habits of
being active inquirers, remaining "wide awake" in
the words of Maxine Greene, being attentive to differences, and
being able to withhold judgment. This creates an inclusive space
with an expanded range of possibilities, enabling our capacity
both to act and to transform.
Brooklyn Campus educators are comfortable with inquiry and persevere
with questions. We extend what learners bring by asking
questions that widen their horizons of knowledge and experiences.
We set up and construct learning contexts that stimulate active
learning and the learner's curiosity, inquisitiveness and imagination.
The Learning Center for Educators and Families (LCEF) provides
experiences working with children and teachers in curriculum-related
tasks, imagining, inventing, and investigating. LCEF also provides
opportunities to conduct observations of student practice and
to carry out research on the learning and development of children,
adolescents and adults.
EMPATHY that rests on the human uniqueness and capacity to
develop, as well as responsiveness to the needs and interests of urban learners
and communities.
Brooklyn Campus educators know that no two students are identical,
as each person comes with his or her own world of experiences
and beliefs, innate talents and learned skills. We believe in
the potential of all students and seek to help students build
on their strengths and abilities. We are deeply committed to
the idea that all learners are capable of reaching their own
unique potential. As empathic and caring educators, we are interested
in attending to each individual student. To accomplish the goal
of helping individual students grow, we seek to understand the
unique perspectives and backgrounds of our students and their
social context, and work within their frames of reference to
help them accomplish what they seek.
The curriculum of the School of Education uses collective inquiry,
collaborative group work, and interactive dialogue journals to
create a caring community of learners. From the very beginning,
the curriculum includes field-based practices with individual
children and families, building up the close familiarity that
is required for empathy. The curriculum also develops students'
ethnographic skills to study communities and to build transcultural
understanding and empathy.
PLURALISM and attention to differences and to inclusion of
all in the learning community of schools and in the wider community.
Brooklyn Campus educators value the sociocultural and sociolinguistic
pluralism of a global world, and especially of New York City's
children and communities. We strive to acquire the different
experiential knowledge that diverse communities have, to find
commonalities in the human experience, and to shape a transcultural
learning context, a third space, that is inclusive of differences.
We attach importance to understanding the sociohistorical and
sociocultural contexts of diverse groups, most especially of
African-American and Latino communities, groups who are historically
underrepresented in the U.S. overall, and yet overrepresented
in Brooklyn schools, and we use this knowledge in teaching. We
also value ethnographic processes of observation and participation
that enable us to gain understanding of the complex and dynamic
pluralism of communities.
The curriculum of the School of Education advances this value
by recognizing ethnic, racial, gender, language, and ability
differences, and by framing issues of child development, language
and literacies, and teaching and learning within sociocultural
and sociohistorical contexts. All courses in the School of Education's
curriculum pay particular attention to the education of learners
with disabilities and those who are bilingual, bidialectal, or
learning English. While developing knowledge of specific skills
and approaches needed to educate different groups of learners,
for different purposes, and in different contexts, we also develop
strategies for inclusion of all learners.
SOCIAL COMMITMENT and the building of a just and democratic
society.
Brooklyn Campus educators are committed to making sure that all
students, regardless of race, class, gender, language, sexual
orientation or abilities, receive equitable educational services.
We value the importance of inclusion in education and the merits
of children from diverse educational and ethnic backgrounds learning
together. We understand the relationship between our educational
and social roles, as we advocate for children and learners and
the transformation of classrooms and schools, toward the building
of a better and more just world.
The School of Education's curriculum has strong field-based practices
and develops democratic plural communities of learners and educators
who are actively engaged in the transformation of urban schools
and classrooms. The curriculum prepares educators for social
action, empowering them to transform practices, curricula, and
schools, so as to build a more just world.
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