On April 8, 2008 the Faculty Senate approved the new policy on earning a second baccalaureate degree at the College of Charleston. All students entering (or readmitted) to the College of Charleston in fall 2008, as well as current students who opt to use the 2008-09 catalog requirements to meet their degree requirements must fulfill the requirements of the second baccalaureate degree policy. The new policy can be found at our website: http://www.cofc.edu/~register/graduation.htm.
About the Program - Philosophy for the Secondary Education Programs
Teaching and learning are the keys to citizenship in the world today. They are the focus of the School of Education's conceptual framework and cause us to strive to meet our seven standards and eight dispositions. We desire that our secondary teacher candidates will become "premiere" students who will lead our 7 - 12 grade students into citizenship through public schooling. It is our job to ensure that our students become teachers who have a deep understanding of content, possess teaching and learning skills, and hold dispositions that are worthy of a professional.
We, the unit of faculty who teach future secondary teachers, strive to uphold subject-centered classrooms--places where ideas have such power that they become the great subjects that all want to study! In subject-centered classrooms, neither the teacher reigns supreme nor is the student perceived to do no wrong. Instead, all work together to create a picture that is vivid and real, where facts are not inert but alive. In this classroom, students puzzle over the subject to develop a clear picture about its nature and are encouraged by their teacher to ask, "What is happening here?" In Palmer's (1998) words, "This is why students describe great teachers as people who "bring to life" things that the students had never heard of, offering them an encounter with otherness that brings the student to life as well" (p. 120).
As faculty within the School of Education, we hold a professional ethic to help our students develop into excellent teachers. We honor the content, skills and dispositions that need to be learned and we honor the time that it takes to learn the content, skills and dispositions. This is why our Secondary Teacher Education Program contains the equivalent of two majors- a content major and minor in education (32 credit hours). Through the secondary program, we expect our students to learn how a practitioner in a content area and in education would question, investigate, generate data, analyze data, apply the data and share the results and conclusions with others. We agree with Palmer when he states, "Each discipline has inner logic so profound that every critical piece of it contains the information necessary to reconstruct the whole" (p. 23). In other words, we think each of the content areas has an internal consistency.
Recommended Course Schedule
Those of us who advise in the secondary
education program know how full your schedule is going to be if you are
going to graduate in four years. We recommend the following sequence for
the education component of your program. We also invite you to visit us
regularly for advising to make adjustments as needed. You will also need
to spend time with your content area advisor to ensure that your major's
requirements are met in a timely fashion.
| Program Year |
Fall |
Spring |
| Freshman |
- Required general education
courses
|
- Required general education
courses
- Content major courses
|
| Sophomore |
- Required general education
courses
- Content major courses
|
- Required general education
courses Content major courses
- EDFS 201- Intro. to
Education
|
| Junior |
- Content major courses EDFS 303- Human Growth and
Development
- EDFS 326 - Technology for
Teachers
|
- Content major courses EDFS 345 - Intro. to
Education of Exceptional Children and Youth
- EDFS 330- Classroom
Management
|
| Senior |
- Content major courses EDFS 455-Literacy and
Assessment (offered Fall only)
- EDFS 456-Teaching
Strategies in the Content Area (offered Fall only)
|
|
Program of Study Worksheets
The Faculty
To gather information about these highly
rewarding and exciting fields in secondary education, please contact any
of the following faculty for assistance and advising.
| Faculty |
Discipline
Phone Number |
Email |
Dr. Angela Cozart |
English
843-953-6353 |
|
Dr. Bob Perkins |
Social
Sciences
843-953-5554 |
|
Dr. Shawn Morrison |
Foreign
Languages
843-953-6743 |
|
Dr. mutindi ndunda |
Mathematics
843-953-8046 |
|
Dr. Meta Van Sickle |
Sciences
843-953-6357 |
|
Unit Wide Policy Statement on
External Relations and Field Experiences
PREAMBLE
The community of professionals who
prepare future teachers believes that teaching is a highly complex
profession. Teaching involves the weaving of extensive knowledge and
skills into on-going interactions that result in learning. The following
five sections: the field experience, relationship to the learning
settings, the students, the faculty, and clinical practice begin to
describe the series of associations needed to optimize effective
teaching based on College of Charleston, School of Education teaching
standards.
I. THE FIELD EXPERIENCE
Field experiences include opportunities
for the refinement and development of teaching knowledge and skills, as
well as opportunities to work with students of different ages and
cultures. Experiences in applied settings provide information for
reflection on practice. This reflection enables the student to clarify
his/her thinking about teaching by identifying the connections between
theory and practice. Field experiences are designed to assist in
learning about functioning in a variety of learning settings. These
experiences serve to develop an understanding of the politics, cultures,
and policies of the various learning settings and the integration of
these settings to the community.
Il. RELATIONSHIP TO LEARNING SETTINGS
The quality of the relationship that the
School of Education has with the agencies that provide practica settings
is critical to the effectiveness of field experience. Collegial
relations are sought in the belief that the preparation of teachers is a
broad based responsibility, resting in part with the college, and in
part with the professionals in the learning settings in which our
students work. To this end, practica programs must be mutually
beneficial to people in both settings.
III. TEACHER CANDIDATES
Teacher candidates are the primary
stakeholders in field experiences. They engage in a diverse array of
multidisciplinary, multicultural learning opportunities. They will have
the opportunity to:
1.) conduct reflective dialogue about
these experiences with peers, teachers, other field supervisors and
college faculty ,
2.) analyze the connections between
theory and practice,
3.) articulate contrasts and
comparisons across experiences,
4.) engage in collaborative
practices that embrace consensus-building, and
5.) extend the rigor of academic
study.
Teacher candidates will participate in
practica that take place in varied sites. They need to develop
understandings and practices in addressing the individual needs of the
learners across age, gender, ability levels, (including exceptionalities
or special needs), cultures and socioeconomic strata. Through these
varied field experiences, teacher candidates will also become familiar
with a broad array of learning settings. They will learn to navigate
various educational systems and shape a teaching model based on a belief
that teachers are contributors to their students and the community.
Over time and through multiple learning
settings, teacher candidates will come to an understanding of the
dynamic relationship between teaching and learning. They will become
knowledgeable about the complexity of classroom management and
leadership skills, the operation of school systems, and the issues
surrounding curriculum and instruction. Field experiences that include
reflective dialogue are vehicles through which the complexity of these
issues can be addressed.
IV. FACULTY
Faculty view experiences as an integral
part of teacher preparation. They take responsibility for providing
feedback to students and participating in dialogue to encourage student
reflection. They use field settings to provide data that help students
bridge theory and practice. The data that emerges will be derived by
faculty in the field because they are working and/or observing learning
settings to continually enhance the field experiences of the preservice
teacher. Reflection will be addressed by the students in situations in
which either faculty members, cooperating teachers, graduate students or
peers are involved in the process. A faculty member will be accountable
for the feedback and observations of each student and his/her
reflections in a field experience. As ambassadors for our College and
School, faculty become partners with principals, cooperating teachers
and other learning setting liaisons in the complex process of guiding
students as they become teachers.
V. CLINICAL PRACTICE
The clinical practice experience is the
culmination of the preservice preparation program. During this
experience, students demonstrate what they know related to the College
of Charleston teaching and learning standards. Assisting, Developing,
and Evaluating Professional Teaching (ADEPT), a state adopted assessment
system, provides a process and instrumentation to guide the student, the
supervisor, and the cooperating teacher in assessing the quality of the
student teacher's performance. The ADEPT standards are aligned to the
School of Education teaching and learning standards.
Secondary Field
Placement Procedures and Practices
The secondary practicum experience is
provided for pre-service teachers currently enrolled in EDFS 455 and 456
at the College of Charleston as a precursor to clinical practice. This
practicum of 50 hours in the public school classroom is designed to give
the pre-service teacher an opportunity to observe several inservice
teachers in action, to assist the inservice teacher in the daily
activities involved with teaching, and to prepare and teach a minimum of
three lessons approved and supervised by the inservice teacher. Through
these activities, the students are allowed to experience the classroom
from a teacher's perspective prior to engaging in clinical practice.
I. THE FIELD EXPERIENCE
The Secondary Program has three levels
of field experiences:
|
Level One
|
75 hours of field experience
must be completed; these hours are divided among EDFS 303, EDFS
326, and EDEE 330. Candidates are assigned to work with a
mentoring teacher in their content area at a local high school. |
|
Level Two
|
Candidates must complete 50
hours of field experience to be divided among EDFS 455 and
EDFS456. |
|
Level
Three
|
Clinical Practice - Teacher
Candidate will work the cooperating teachers' schedules for a
minimum of 14 weeks. |
A reflective journal must be
completed for each assignment. The journal must include the following:
1. teaching practices observed;
2. lesson plans used;
3. management/leadership of
students;
4. laboratory or classroom use and
safety, and;
5. your reaction to each of the
above.
The final journal entry should state
the patterns you observed the following:
1. teaching strategies;
2. how the teaching strategies
relate to the content;
3. what you thought was effective
and why;
4. how it made you feel;
5. how you perceived the way the
students felt, and;
6. what it means to your personal
teaching style and future classroom practices.
Il. RELATIONSHIP TO LEARNING SETTINGS
Because we value our partnerships with
the public schools and view these relationships as essential to the
growth and development of teacher candidates, the faculty at the College
of Charleston will make the initial contact with the schools and gain
permission to speak with the teachers who will be accepting the teacher
candidates into their classrooms. The faculty who teach EDFS 455 and 456
actively seek excellent teachers through the local school districts and
other resources (e.g. Charleston County Math and Science Hub, etc.) for
placement. To ensure the high quality of this final practicum placement,
the college faculty member will make the final selections for practicum
placements for the candidates.
The practicum placement information is
then forwarded to the clinical practice office so that the teacher
candidates will receive a placement for their clinical practice that is
different--diverse from their other placement(s) (e.g. rural, urban,
minority, grade level, etc.)
The teacher candidate in the
practicum experience is expected to:
1. recognize that s/he is a guest in
the school and classroom of the cooperating teacher.
2. understand that the authority for
classroom procedures and decisions are made by the cooperating
teacher.
3. volunteer to assist the inservice
teacher in daily classroom activities and to ask questions when
instructions are not clear.
4. demonstrate a professional manner
in punctuality, confidentiality, behavior, and dress.
5. adhere to these guidelines.
Failure to meet any of these expectations will result in the
termination of the practicum experience and loss of credit for the
courses for which the practicum is a part. Termination of the
practicum can originate from the professor, the inservice teacher,
or any other school personnel.
The teacher candidate activities
involved in the practicum are to:
1. obtain the telephone numbers of the
cooperating teacher.
2. complete 35-40 hours of
observation and participation in the assigned content specific
class*.
The remaining 10-15 hours will be
with an ESL teacher and will be placed by the EDFS 455 professor.
3. plan classroom visits at least
one a week in advance that meet with the approval of the cooperating
teacher. In the case that the student is unable to be in the
classroom at the scheduled time, the student will call the
cooperating teacher in advance.
4. record activities in a practicum
log according to the instructions of the profession in either EDFS
445 or 456 (see attached description).
5. prepare three typed lesson plans
according to the instructions of the professor in either EDFS 455 or
456 prior to teaching them in the classroom.
6. design the content and teaching
strategies for a minimum of the three lesson plans with the approval
of the inservice teacher.
7. teach the three lessons to the
class under the supervision of the inservice teacher; the lessons
may be taught to individuals, small groups, or the whole class. The
classroom teacher will determine to whom the lessons are taught.
III. TEACHER CANDIDATE
Because it is important to link theory
to practice, the teacher candidate is to perform in the practicum
setting as a professional. This means that all assignments and personal
comportment will be exemplary, timely, and show a depth of understanding
about their students, the content, and how and why to teach the content
effectively to the students. To this end, students will complete and
repeat all field placement assignments until all the criteria with
regard to excellent performance are met.
IV. FACULTY
Faculty in the secondary field placement
courses take responsibility for providing feedback to students and
participating in dialogue to encourage student reflection. They use
video tapes and journal entries from the field settings to provide data
that helps students bridge theory and practice. Comparisons of field
work across the program will be used to enhance the field experiences of
the preservice teacher. Reflection will be addressed by the students in
situations in which either faculty members, cooperating teachers,
graduate students or peers are involved in the process. A faculty member
will be accountable for the feedback and observations of each student in
a field experience. Public school teachers and principals have the
secondary faculty members' phone numbers so that continuous
communication between the supervising faculty about each student can be
thorough and meet all needs in an on-going manner.