School of Education & Human Development Education Outreach

School of Education & Human Development – Education Outreach

Teachers for Tomorrow

Advanced Academic Dual Credit Program

EDUC 201 ~ Teachers for

Tomorrow

4 hour undergraduate course

Briar Woods High School Syllabus

Adjunct Instructor: Diane Breinig

School: Briar Woods High School

Address: 22525 Belmont Ridge Rd., Ashburn, VA 20148

Adjunct phone: (703) 957-4400

Adjunct Email:

Program Purpose

In keeping with the challenge to increase the pool of highly qualified teachers, the purposes of the Virginia Teachers for Tomorrow Program are:

·  To identify, train, and nurture high school students interested in a teaching career;

·  To support the efforts of Virginia's school divisions to meet hiring targets by cultivating an effective "grow your own" recruitment program;

·  To create a high school curricular experience designed to foster student interest, understanding, and appreciation of the teaching profession; and

·  To attract students to teaching in critical shortage and high needs areas of the state.

Program Benefits

In an era of teacher shortages, school divisions can identify potential teachers within their own schools. The Virginia Teachers for Tomorrow Program is an excellent long-term recruitment strategy to increase the pool of candidates who will be able to fill critical shortage vacancies, increase the diversity of teacher applicants, and promote the hiring of local candidates who are more likely to remain within their school divisions. The program fosters respect for teachers and the teaching profession and provides high school role models for younger students.

Additional benefits for Virginia Teachers for Tomorrow candidates include:

·  An introduction to teaching and the teaching profession;

·  Opportunities to satisfy beginning teacher assessment requirements;

·  Potential dual enrollment credit;

·  Scholarship information;

·  Field trips;

·  Classroom observations;

·  Educational leadership opportunities;

·  Teaching experience before college;

·  Opportunities to make a difference in a student's life; and

·  Meaningful, creative, hands-on learning activities.

Course Objectives

·  Be able to communicate on educational issues intelligently to the general public.

·  View the school institution in its cultural, sociological, and historical context.

·  Assess technological innovations and their effects on instructional strategies.

·  Instructional design based on assessment data

·  grading practices and development of assessments and using the results of assessment to improve student performance

·  Explore the career possibilities in the school environment.

·  View the learners' perspectives within the institution and examine the variety of learners and how the curriculum meets their needs.

·  Explore school governance

·  Become familiar with law (state, federal, and school board policies) and ethics relative to teaching and students

·  Develop an understanding of the historical, philosophical, and sociological foundations underlying the role, and the development and organization of public education in the United States.

·  Gain an understanding of the legal status of teachers and students, including federal and state laws and regulations, school as an organization/culture, and contemporary issues in education.

·  Explore the historical, philosophical, and sociological foundations of the instructional design based on assessment data (the relationships among assessment, instruction, and monitoring student progress to include student performance measures in grading practices, the ability to construct and interpret valid assessments using a variety of formats in order to measure student attainment of essential skills in a standards-based environment, and the ability to analyze assessment data to make decisions about how to improve instruction and student performance).

Course Description:

First Semester – September , 2011 – January, 2012

Theme I/Unit I: Realizing My Powers (2-3 Week Unit)

·  • Culminating Activity – Realizing My Powers

·  Through the Eyes of a Friend

·  • Coat of Arms/Shield or Quilt Squares

·  • Scavenger Hunt

·  • Full Pot, According to Virginia Satir

·  • Dr. Purkey Reading

·  • Self-Esteem Fraud

·  • Culminating Activity - From Stories to Puppet Theatres

Theme I/Unit 2: Styles and Needs (5-6 Week Unit)

·  • Preferred Processing Styles

·  • Gardner's Multiple Intelligences

·  • Analytical and Global Learning Preferences

·  • Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs

·  • "A Wicket's Wad"

·  • The Acorn People by Ron Jones

·  • Learning Disabilities portrayed in F.A.T. City

·  • Walking in Somebody Else's Shoes

·  • Categories of Special Education

·  • Gathering Information about Special Education/Observations

·  • Focus on Seven Major Barriers to Learning

·  • English Language Learners

·  • Culminating Activity - Barriers Books

Theme II/Unit 3: Becoming a Teacher in Virginia (one-week unit)

·  • Why Become a Teacher?

·  •Steps to Licensure in Virginia

·  • Teacher Preparation Programs in Virginia

·  • Critical Shortage Areas in Virginia: Supply and Demand

·  • Culminating Activity: The Path to Teaching: A Life's Journey

Theme I/Unit 3: Growth and Development (6-7 Week Unit)

·  • Physical Development

·  • Cognitive Development

·  • Moral Development - Values Auction, Kohlberg's Theory, and "What To Do?"

·  • Social Development - Erikson

·  • The Importance of Language: Introducing Vygotsky

·  • Observing Play

·  • Play Day (Optional, but a very fun activity.)

·  • Making Manipulatives

·  • A Trip to the Toy Store (Homework)

·  • Cognitive Lab Experiment

·  • Observations of Children from Birth through Age Five: Pre-School Observation

·  • Culminating Activity: Cadet Preschool Model or Booklet

·  • The Hurried Child

·  • Observations of Elementary-Aged Children

·  • Culminating Activity: "What's a Parent To Do?"

·  • Observation of the Middle School Student

·  • Culminating Activity: Pre-Adolescent/Adolescent Literature

·  • Reporting on All Grown Up and No Place To Go

·  • Observations in the High School

·  • Proactive Parents of Troubled Teens

·  • Video: Teens: What Makes Them Tick?

·  • SEMESTER EXAM - Culminating Activity - Lifelines

Second Semester – February, 2012 – June, 2012

Theme III/Unit 1: Observation and Preparation (four-week unit)

·  • Being a Teacher Hollywood Style

·  •Caught in the Act

·  • The Good, the Bad, and the OH MY!

·  • Qualities of a Highly Effective Teacher

·  • Teachers: Yesterday and Today

·  • An Overview of Methodology: Silent Graffiti

·  • Groups: We Can Work It Out

·  • Questioning Techniques: "Bloom" -ing through Questions

·  • Lecture: More than a Monologue

·  • High Tech Teaching

·  • A Game: I Have ... Who Has ... for Educational Terms

·  • A Game: A Card Sort of Educational Terms

·  • Why Do We Assess?

·  • How Will We Know They Learned?

·  • Assessment for Learning ... Reaching All Students

·  • Brain-Based Learning

·  • Establishing Classroom Procedures

·  • Ready, Set, Go Teach

·  • Student-Created Lessons

·  • Working with Special Needs Students

·  • Improving Classroom Management

·  • Culminating Activity: Seven Gifts that Will Last a Lifetime

Theme III/Unit 2: Application and Field Experience (nine weeks)

·  • Field Experience

Theme II/Unit 1: History and Trends (2-week unit)

·  • Public Schools for All?

·  • Educating Diverse Students in Virginia Schools

·  • Changing Our Comfort Zone

·  • How Do We Know They’re All Learning?

·  • Virginia Standards of Learning - What Do They Mean to Me?

·  • Little Red School House and the Pony Express

·  • Culminating Activity: Educating Citizens for a Democracy

· 

Theme II/Unit 2: Structure and Governance (2-week unit)

·  • School Perfection

·  • The Many Faces of Education

·  • Get with the Program

·  • Governance of Schools

·  • In Another's Shoes: A Shadowing Activity

·  • The Local Scene

·  • Culminating Activity: Who Has the Voice?

Theme III/Unit 3: Analysis and Reflection (ongoing throughout the year during

·  observations and field experience)

·  • SAY, MAY AND FLAY Lessons and Curricula (use SOL lessons)

·  • Portfolio and End-of-Course Activities

·  • Observing Virginia Teaching Standards

Text: Virginia Teacher Cadet Teacher's Binder

Class Expectations and Teacher Support:

[Sample Text] I am looking forward to working with you and your student this school year. I will work hard to present this class in an interesting and exciting manner. All students are expected to be responsible, attend class regularly, be on time and participate in class activities and discussions in a positive manner. They are also expected to be respectful to all people and property in the classroom. The classroom has access to a mobile notebook lab and students will be given many opportunities to participate in online learning activities. Therefore, it is important that students follow the School Division Acceptable Use Policies when working with computers and other technology equipment. Students will be representing Shenandoah University and our school when they participate in observations and field experiences. Participation in these activities are critical to success in the program.

I will be available on most days after school and any other time that is pre-arranged by the student for additional help.

[SAMPLE TEXT]]

·  Students are expected to follow all Shenandoah University policies and guidelines

·  Students are expected to follow the School Division Acceptable Use Policies when working with technology

·  Students are expected to do their own assigned work.

·  Students are responsible for meeting all course requirements, observing due dates, and other course procedures.

·  Students are expected to abide by the expectations set forth in the School Division Code of Behavior and the High School Student Handbook.

·  Students are expected to be respectful of each other and the instructor.

·  Students may be responsible for helping straighten up the classroom and the materials they have used during class.

·  Students are expected to listen to others when sharing information.

·  Students are expected to check with the instructor concerning work missed when absent.

·  Students are expected to keep a notebook containing all work relating to the class.

·  Students are expected to participate in in-class field trips to the elementary school, middle school, high school, public library, etc.

·  Students are expected to participate in five hours of volunteer reading or other approved activities per marking period.

·  Students are expected to move quietly in the halls.

·  Students are expected to contact the course instructor via email or phone if they are absent on a day that the class is participating in observations or field experiences using the above email or phone number.

·  Students are expected to create a portfolio of their observations and field experiences.

Assessment Criteria

[SAMPLE TEXT] Grades will be determined using a weighted scale. Individual assignments will be awarded points based on how large the assignments are and how much time it takes to complete them. Additional grading information will follow. For example, a homework grade will be worth fewer points than a major writing assignment because it takes less time to complete. Based on this system, each quarter grade will be determined by the following categories:

90 % - Major Assignments as follows:

Classroom Application Projects

In Class Activities/Assignments

Instructional Presentations

Written Assignments

Computer Assessments

Cooperative Assignments

Observations and Field Experience Participation

Reflection Papers

Field Experience Portfolio

10% - Minor Assignment distributions are as follows:

Beginning Thoughts/Reflections

Homework

The student’s semester grade will be determined as follows: 1st quarter = 40%, the 2nd quarter = 40%, exam = 20%. The student’s final course grade will be determined by the average of the two semesters. The School Division Grading Scale will be converted to the Shenandoah University Grading Scale for four undergraduate college credits.

Loudoun County Public School s / Shenandoah University Grading Scale
A / = / 90-100 / A+ / = / 99-100
B+ / = / 87-89 / A / = / 90-98
B / = / 80-86 / B / = / 80-89
C+ / = / 77-79 / C / = / 70-79
C / = / 70-76 / F / = / Below 70
D+ / = / 67-69 / =
D / = / 60-66 / =
F / = / 59 & below / =

Add/Drop:

It is University policy that a student may drop or add a class the one week after the beginning of the term.

Course Policies:

Late Work

Late assignments will be accepted only by prior arrangement. Written assignments are planned in such a way as to maximize learning. These assignments will support class discussions and weekly assignments. The value of these assignments is reduced dramatically if they are not completed within a timely manner. All course assignments and tests are due as scheduled. Late coursework will not be accepted without prior arrangements. Missed tests/exams may not be completed at a later date/time.

Technology Requirement

Technology is an important tool for today's teachers. Virginia requires teachers to be competent with the use of technology. Competence in relevant technology will be incorporated in this course.

1.  Students are expected to use an SU email account.

2.  Students may be required to submit certain assignments electronically during the week in which they are due. Use Microsoft Word.

Learning Responsibility

This course is designed such that the professor is a facilitator of learning. Thus, the responsibility for learning course navigations systems and subject matter is a partnership requiring effort on the part of both the professor and student. Students are encouraged to be active, self-directed learners for whom the professor will work to facilitate such learning through course design, implementation and evaluation. To obtain the maximum benefit from this course, it is recommended that you study (not just read) the course assigned text chapters and other reading materials; take your own detailed notes from discussions and integrate this information with other resources; and ask questions on material presented in the text or class. Engagement in the course makes for more effective learning while creating a more enjoyable experience for both the student and instructor.

Foundation

This course supports Shenandoah University's Mission Statement as it serves to prepare individuals "to be critical, reflective thinkers and lifelong learners" desiring to make responsible and " committed contributions within the community, the nation and the world" through the completion of one of the courses that leads to teacher licensure in . Virginia. This course provides individuals who enroll with opportunities for scholarship, experiential learning and a practical wisdom for their professional endeavors in a K -12 special education classroom. "Self-reflection and personal development," understanding of diverse cultures and the cultivation of the growth of the children from their respective communities provides the cornerstone for the objectives of this course.