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MSED Teaching
Urban Adolescents (7-12)
Biology,
Chemistry, English, Math, Social Studies
Optional Extension in Middle Childhood (5-6) (6 credits)
Optional Extension in Bilingual Education (9 credits)
Noncredit
prerequirement. May be waived (0 credits)
| TAL
088 |
Textual
Strategies for Educators |
0
credit |
Tier
I: Diversity, Language and Literacies in Urban Education (6 credits)
| TAL
801 |
Issues
in Urban Education |
3
credits |
| TAL
099 |
Preparing
for the NYSTCE: A course for Educators |
0
credit |
| TAL
802 |
Language
and Literacy |
3
credits* |
Tier
II: Observation and Description of Urban Learners (9 credits)
| TAL
812 |
Lives
of Adolescents |
3
credits* |
| TAL
817 |
Teaching
Literacy 5-12 |
3
credits |
| TAL
830 |
Classroom
Inquiry I |
3
credits |
Tier
III: Inquiry of Urban Classrooms and Teaching Practices (15-21 credits)
|
Liberal
Arts & Science
|
(Bio,
Chem, Eng, Math, Soc Stds) |
6-12
credits |
| TAL
841 |
Curriculum
in the Secondary Classroom (A. Biology; B. Chemistry; C. English;
D. Math; E. Social Studies) |
3
credits |
| TAL
842 |
Teaching
Methods in the Secondary Classroom (A. Biology; B. Chemistry;
C. English; D. Math; E. Social Studies) |
3
credits |
| TAL
879 |
Special
Topics in Education (optional substitution) |
3
credits |
| TAL
880 |
Classroom
Inquiry II |
3
credits |
Tier
IV: Advanced Inquiry and Practice (4-6 credits)
| TAL
883A |
Student
Teaching: Adolescence |
3
credits** |
|
OR
|
|
|
| TAL
883B |
Internship/Student
Teaching for the Practicing Teacher: Adolescence |
1
credit*** |
| TAL
971 |
Final
Inquiry Seminar |
3
credits |
Requires a minimum of 18 credits in one Liberal Arts and Science
discipline for Admission. Additional coursework in LAS may be
required.
*Required only for students going for 1st initial certification
**Students in the non-certification program will take a different
course
*** May be waived for practicing teachers who hold initial cert
in another area
Optional
Extension in Middle Childhood (5-6) (6 credits)
The Middle Childhood extension is an optional extension certification
available to students pursuing the Adolescence Urban Education
program.
To qualify for a middle childhood extension to the Adolescence
certification, students in the Adolescence Urban Education program
must also take the following six credits prior to student teaching:
Students
also interested in the Bilingual Ed. Extension, take the following
additional courses
| TAL
823 |
Bilingualism
& Bilingual/Multicultural Education |
3
credits |
| TAL
862 |
ESL
Curriculum & Methodology: Teaching Literacy K-12 |
3 credits |
| TAL
866 |
Native
Language Teaching in the Bilingual Classroom |
3
credits |
Total Number
of Credits for Programs in Adolescence:
1st initial: 34-42 credits
2nd initial: 30-36 credits
Non-certification:
34-40 credits
1st initial with bilingual extension: 43-51 credits
2nd initial with bilingual extension: 34-40 credits
The Middle
Childhood extension is an optional extension certification available
to students pursuing the Adolescence Urban Education program.
To qualify for
a middle childhood extension to the Adolescence certification, students
in the Adolescence Urban Education program must also take the following
six credits prior to student teaching:
| TAL
811 |
Lives
of Children |
3
credits |
| TAL
843 |
Curriculum
in Middle School |
3
credits |
The Curriculum
course requires 30 hours of fieldwork and the Lives of Adolescents
course will require 20 hours of fieldwork, for a total of 50 hours
of fieldwork.
Teaching
and Learning 088 Textual Strategies for Educators Special
Fee: $200.00 Offered every semester
A course that focuses on improving school professionals
abilities to write academic essays and developing reading strategies
to be applied to the comprehension of complex texts in the fields
of Education. Students will be involved in writing, editing and
rewriting, as well as doing close reading of texts. Pass/Fail
only. Noncredit. back
Teaching
and Learning 099 Preparing for the NYSTCE: A course for
educators. Special Fee: $200.00. Offered every semester
A course that enhances the ability to read critically and write
serious essays, while deepening the liberal arts and education
knowledge base required for the LAST. Emphasis is also placed
on developing successful test-taking strategies. Required of all
students who have not passed the LAST upon admissions within the
first six credits. Pass/Fail only. Noncredit. back
Teaching
and Learning 801
Issues in Urban Education. Corequisite: TAL 088 or exemption
Using the School of Education KEEPS mission as a context, this
course examines the intersection of individuals, families, schools,
communities, and society as they exist and interact in urban settings.
Through readings and class discussion, students will examine schooling
from historical, philosophical, sociological, economic, and political
perspectives. Factors such as language, ability, socioeconomic
class, ethnicity, race, gender and sexuality will be introduced
through a critical perspective in order to understand how they
influence and shape urban education. Students will have the opportunity
to engage in field-based research related to issues studied. Fifteen
hours of fieldwork are required. Three credits. back
Teaching
and Learning 802 Language & Literacy. Prerequisites
or corequisites: TAL 099 or exemption and TAL 801 Offered every
semester
A course focusing on the relationship between oral language and
Literacy, highlighting the psycholinguistic and social foundations
of reading. Principles of first and second language acquisition,
dialectal differences, and the development of literacy in English
Language Learners and bilingual children will be addressed. Students
will be introduced to different philosophical approaches to teaching
reading and will explore the connection between reading and writing.
They will examine the cognitive and sociolinguistic processes
involved in making meaning from text, including the importance
of background knowledge, as well as processes underlying word
recognition. The role of multicultural literature for children
will be highlighted. Students will be introduced to a variety
of literacy resources, including children's libraries and relevant
websites. Three credits. back
Teaching
and Learning 811 Lives of Children. Prerequisites or
corequisites: TAL 099 or exemption and TAL 801 Offered every semester
A course focusing on the experience of childhood from infancy
to pre-adolescence using developmental, non-developmental, historical,
and cultural approaches. Students will consider different theories
of development as well as physical, cognitive, socio-emotional
and moral domains of development, with implications for learning
and socialization. Consideration will be given to the role of
culture, gender, disability, race, class, language, and sexual
orientation in the process of learning and development. The lives
of children with typical and atypical development will be explored
through observations and readings. Three credits. back
Teaching
and Learning 812 Lives of Adolescents. Prerequisites
or corequisites: TAL 099 or exemption Offered every Fall
A courses that focuses on the experience of pre-adolescents and
adolescents from diverse backgrounds with a range of abilities
using developmental, non-developmental, historical, and cultural
approaches. Theories of development will be studied as they apply
to the adolescent learner in families, communities, peer groups
and schools. Physical, cognitive, socio-emotional and moral domains
of development with implications for learning will be studied.
Throughout the course, attention will be given to ways in which
culture, gender, disability, race, class, language, ethnicity
and sexual orientation play a role in the process of learning
and development. The lives of adolescents with typical and atypical
development will be explored through observations and readings.
For students pursuing the middle childhood extension, 20 hours
of fieldwork at the middle school level will be required. Three
credits. back
Teaching
and Learning 817 Teaching Literacy: Grades 5-12. Prerequisite:
TAL 802 or equivalent Prerequisites or corequisites: TAL 099 or
exemption and TAL 801 Offered every Spring
A course that addresses the teaching of literacy at the middle
childhood and adolescent levels from a developmental perspective,
building upon the foundations of literacy established in early
childhood and childhood. Emphasis will be on the development of
fluent mature reading, including strategies for teaching vocabulary,
critical thinking, reading in the content areas, and study skills.
Various approaches to the teaching of writing will be presented,
and students will become familiar with a diverse range of multicultural
literature for middle-school children and adolescents. Practices
related to assessment and the organization of instruction will
be introduced. Strategies for adaptation of instruction for children
of diverse abilities and language backgrounds, will also be addressed.
Ten hours of fieldwork are required. Three credits. back
Teaching
and Learning 823 Bilingualism and Bilingual/Multicultural
Education. Prerequisites or corequisites: TAL 099 or exemption
and TAL 801 Offered every Fall
Introduction to the individual, social, cognitive and linguistic
nature of bilingualism, including second language acquisition,
sociology of language, and the relationship between language and
culture. Students will examine the socio-political, historical,
and legal foundations that have shaped bilingual and multicultural
education policies, program models, and teaching and assessment
practices. Issues pertaining to second language learners with
diverse learning needs will be addressed. Students will develop
an understanding of the distinction between language differences
and language disability. Ten hours of fieldwork required. Students
pursuing the bilingual extension will have an additional twenty
hours of fieldwork. Three credits. back
Teaching
and Learning 830 Classroom Inquiry I. Prerequisites
or corequisites: TAL 099 or exemption and TAL 801 Offered every
semester
The course aims to develop and improve aspects of teaching practice
through inquiring about students work with children and
adolescents in classrooms and other educational settings from
a phenomenological perspective. Through collaborative inquiry,
students will learn disciplined modes of observation and description
and a range of ways to document aspects of teaching and learning.
They will complete a child study including the collecting and
describing of the childs work and a Descriptive Review of
the Child. In addition, students will investigate the assumptions
about persons and knowledge-making underlying the phenomenological
modes of inquiry basic to the child study. Students will begin
to develop a conceptual understanding of the nature of inquiry,
documentation, evidence, questions, and knowledge. Thirty hours
of fieldwork are required. Three credits. back
Teaching
and Learning 841 Curriculum in the Secondary Classroom:
A. Biology; B. Chemistry; C. English; D. Math; E. Social Studies.
Prerequisite: TAL 830. Offered every Fall
A course with students as researchers of the secondary curriculum
in the students particular discipline. Students will become
familiar with NYS Learning Standards as well as ways to bring
enriching multicultural materials to their classroom instruction.
The use of literature, technology, audio-visual material, and
the resources of New York City will be highlighted so that students
can become resourceful teachers who understand curriculum design
and know how to access and utilize a range of materials for adolescents
of varying abilities and language backgrounds. Ten hours of fieldwork
are required. Three credits. back
Teaching
and Learning 842 Teaching Methods in the Secondary Classroom:
A. Biology; B. Chemistry; C. English; D. Math; E. Social Studies.
Prerequisite: TAL 830. Offered every Spring
A course in which students will actively learn about the practice
of teaching on the secondary level. Topics to be explored will
include lesson and unit planning, multicultural curriculum and
teaching, student-centered teaching strategies, project-based
classroom instruction, various methods of assessment, and classroom
management. Students will develop and implement unit plans to
meet NYS Learning Standards for adolescents of varying abilities
and language backgrounds. Ten hours of fieldwork are required.
Three credits. back
Teaching
and Learning 843 Curriculum in Middle School.
Offered every semester
A course in which students learn to create, evaluate, and implement
middle school curriculum by asking questions about language arts,
math, science, and social studies. Students will become familiar
with NYS Learning Standards and how to integrate these standards
into the curriculum they develop for diverse learners. In-depth
exploration of critical issues across subject areas will be emphasized.
Effective ways of teaching middle school learners will be explored.
Pedagogical approaches will include student centered teaching
and learning, group work, project-based learning, and authentic
modes of assessment. Students will explore how to select and adapt
appropriate materials for adolescents. Thirty hours of fieldwork
in middle school classrooms are required. Three credits. back
Teaching
and Learning 862 ESL Curriculum and Methodology: Teaching
Literacy K-12. Prerequisite: TAL 830 Offered every Spring
A study of different approaches to teaching ESL in an urban classroom
with a focus on all aspects of language and literacy, including
listening, speaking, reading, and writing, at different levels
of proficiency in English. Students will learn to develop literacy
through the content areas. They will also become familiar with
uses of technology in an ESL setting and with literacy and language
proficiency assessment. Students will learn how to help English
Language Learners of varying ability meet NYS Learning Standards
in literacy. Ten hours of fieldwork are required. Three credits.
back
Teaching
and Learning 866 Native Language Teaching in the Bilingual
Classroom. Prerequisite: TAL 830 Offered every Spring
An exploration of theories of literacy and related teaching practices
to develop native language reading, writing, speaking, and listening
skills, and to use native language in teaching the content areas
(mathematics, science, and social studies). Techniques of assessing
native literacy skills will be examined. Students will become
familiar with native language resources in the community through
evaluating culturally appropriate curricula, childrens literature
and media. Students will also analyze and strengthen their own
biliteracy skills. Twenty hours of fieldwork are required. Three
credits. back
Teaching
and Learning 879 Special Topics in Education. Prerequisite:
TAL 099 or exemption
An in-depth and intensive study of specific critical areas of
interest in education, as identified by faculty. With approval
of program faculty, students may apply a maximum of three credits
to their degree program. Ten hours of fieldwork may be required.
Three credits. back
Teaching
and Learning 880 Classroom Inquiry II. Prerequisite:
TAL 830 Offered every semester
A course that aims to develop and improve aspects of teaching
practice by deepening students understanding of inquiry,
documentation, evidence, questions, and knowledge as introduced
in Classroom Inquiry I. Students will extend their learning of
collaborative modes of classroom inquiry by formulating a question
and completing an inquiry into a school or classroom issue, a
curricular activity, or an aspect of their teaching practice.
Students will explore a range of literature related to the questions
being investigated. They will investigate and compare assumptions
about persons and knowledge-making underlying various modes of
inquiry through exposure to a range of research designs. Thirty
hours of fieldwork are required. Three credits. back
Teaching
and Learning 883A Student Teaching: Adolescence. Offered
every semester
Prepares reflective teachers who work to create excellent secondary
classrooms and schools for all urban students. Students participate
in every aspect of practice, including planning, implementation,
and assessment of curriculum and instruction. They immerse themselves
in the life of a school, recording and thinking about the purposes,
complexities, and consequences of what they do as teachers in
order to learn from their experiences. Students are supervised
by a university faculty member and a cooperating teacher in the
school and meet in regularly scheduled seminars. This three-credit
experience is for students pursuing first initial certification.
They student-teach a total of 75 days. Pass/Fail only. Three credits.
back
Teaching
and Learning 883B Internship/Student Teaching for the Practicing
Teacher: Adolescence
Prepares reflective secondary school teachers who work to create
excellent secondary classrooms and schools for all urban students.
Students participate in every aspect of practice, including planning,
implementation, and assessment of curriculum and instruction.
They immerse themselves in the life of a school, recording and
thinking about the purposes, complexities, and consequences of
what they do as teachers in order to learn from their experiences.
Students meet in regularly scheduled seminars and are mentored
by a cooperating teacher and supervised by a college faculty.
This one credit experience is for students pursuing second initial
certification who student teach a total of 20 days or for students
holding internship or titleernative certification. Pass/Fail only.
One credit. back
Teaching
and Learning 971 Final Inquiry Seminar:
A
seminar that uses knowledge and skills gained through the program
to write and present an in-depth inquiry project on an aspect
of the students’ teaching practice. Students will continue
the work begun in Classroom Inquiry I and II and design a project
that looks closely at a learner, a school or classroom issue,
or a curriculum activity. In this seminar students will share
their works in progress. Students will work together on issues
of documentation, literature review, methodology and writing.
Three credits.
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