Education
ED 102 2
Credits
Orientation to Alaska Native Education
(Cross-listed with ANS 102)
A seminar in issues related to Alaska Native and rural
education. Through weekly meetings held both on campus and in Fairbanks
schools, students examine and discuss issues with Alaska Native educators on
topics related specifically to rural and urban Alaska Native education. Issues
include: Native ways of knowing, local control, curriculum development for
small/multi-graded/rural schools, cultural differences in teaching and
learning, and bilingual programs. (Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.)
(2 + 0) Offered Fall, Spring
ED 110 1
Credit
Becoming a Teacher in the 21st Century
Series of seminars focusing on current national educational policies
and practices. Includes exploration of teaching as a profession. Presented in
the Alaska context, seminars include opportunity for interaction with Alaska
teachers, student teachers and interns. (Graded pass/fail.) (1 + 0)
Offered Fall, Spring
ED 201 3
Credits
Introduction to Education
Introduction to the profession of education and specifically,
the field of teaching. Review of social, political, cultural and historical
factors that influence education and schools at the national and Alaska state level.
Field experience required. (Prerequisites: ED 110 and ENGL 111X with a C or
better; sophomore standing or permission of instructor.) (3 + 0)
Offered Fall, Spring
ED 204 3
Credits
Literature for Children
Examination of effective uses of literature to promote
learning. Critical analysis of authors, illustrators and content of children's
literature representative of multiple genres and diverse peoples and
perspectives--including Alaska literature. Review of criteria for book
selection and application of review process to books selected by students based
on professional recommendations and reviews. Field experience required.
(Prerequisite: ED 201.) (3 + 0) Offered Fall, Spring
ED 237ABCD .5
- 2 Credits
Technology Tools for Teachers
Designed to equip pre-service teachers with the necessary
technology skills to be successful in their pre-service programs. Successful
challenge or completion of all modules is a prerequisite for ED 429.
Graded Pass/Fail. Each module may be repeated once. Each module will require approximately
six hours of direct instruction and four to eight hours of lab work. ED
237A--Mac OS/Windows: File systems, system configuration, computer
management. ED 237B--Publishing: Word processing, graphics and page
layout. ED 237C--Presentations/Graphical Organizers: PowerPoint,
Inspiration. ED 237D--Spreadsheets/Databases: databases (Appleworks,
Access) and spreadsheets (Excel). (.5-2 + 2-4)
Offered Fall, Spring As Demand Warrants
ED 245 3
Credits
Child Development
(Cross-listed with PSY 245)
A study of the physical, cultural, emotional, cognitive and
social aspects of a child's development from the prenatal period through early
adolescence. Focus on developmental theories including Erickson, Gardner,
Gilligan, Kagen, Sternberg, Vygotsky and other contemporary theories of child
and adolescent development. (Prerequisite: PSY 101 or permission of
instructor.) (3 + 0) Offered Fall, Spring
ED 099, 299 1-3
Credits
Practicum in Education
Individualized work experience. Credit is variable from 1 to
3 credits, depending upon the quality and quantity of the work experience.
Credit may be earned in most disciplines and programs.
ED 237ABCD .5-2
Credits
Technology Tools for Teachers
Designed to equip pre-service teachers with the necessary
technology skills to be successful in their pre-service programs. Successful
challenge or completion of all modules is a prerequisite for ED 429. Graded
Pass/Fail. Each module may be repeated once. Each module will require
approximately 6 hours of direct instruction and 4-8 hours of lab work. ED
237A--Graphical Organizers: Creating outlines and diagrams, concept maps,
exporting to other applications (requires Inspiration). ED
237B--Publishing: Word processing, tables, outlines, lists, graphics,
writing tools, page layout (requires Microsoft Word). ED
237C--Presentations: Creating and managing slides, adding media objects,
animation. (requires Microsoft PowerPoint). ED 237D--Spreadsheets and Databases:
Creating and sorting databases, creating and formatting spreadsheets, making
charts, using formulas and functions (requires Microsoft Excel).
(.5-2 + 2-4) Offered Fall, Spring, As Demand Warrants
ED 303W, O 3
Credits
Language Acquisition
(Cross-listed with LING 303W, O)
Theories of the acquisition and development of first and
second languages, including consideration of biological and sociocultural
factors. Survey of traditional and contemporary theories, and implications for
pedagogy and public policy. (Prerequisites: COMM 131X or 141X; ENGL 111X; ENGL
211X or ENGL 213X or permission of instructor. Recommended: LING 101. Next
offered: 2008-09.) (3 + 0) Offered Alternate Spring
ED 309 3
Credits
Elementary School Music Methods
(Cross-listed with MUED 309)
Principles, procedures and materials for teaching music to
children at the elementary level. (Next offered: 2008-09.) (3 + 0)
Offered Alternate Fall
ED 310 2
Credits
Art, Music and Drama in Elementary Classrooms
Exploration and application, in the classroom, of theory,
practice, methods and materials used in teaching in and through visual art, music
and drama. Concurrent internship required. (Prerequisites: Admission to the
Internship Year.) (1 + 2) Offered Spring
ED 327 2
Credits
Physical and Health Education for Elementary Teachers
Introduction and application of the relationship between
physical fitness and good health in a school setting. Includes introducing
students to fundamental movement activities and games. Includes incorporating
health curriculum and first aid procedures into practices and policies, and
issues specific to the Alaska context. Concurrent internship required.
(Prerequisites: Admission to the Internship Year.) (1 + 2) Offered
Spring
ED 330 3
Credits
Assessment of Learning
Review and examination of the range of traditional and
alternative assessment and evaluation approaches used in educational contexts.
Focus is on developing assessment practices and policies that are appropriate
for the diverse student population in Alaska's rural and urban schools. Field
experience required. (Prerequisites: ED 201 and a mathematics baccalaureate
core course; or permission of instructor.) (3 + 0) Offered Fall,
Spring
ED 345 3
Credits
Sociology of Education (s)
(Cross-listed with SOC 345)
Theoretical perspectives on various dimensions of the
relationship between education and society, including the institutional context
for schooling, the impact of schooling on social stratification and social
organization within the school and classroom. Special attention given to issues
of equity and contemporary education reform efforts. (Prerequisite: SOC 100X or
permission of instructor. Next offered: 2007-08.) (3 + 0) Offered
Alternate Fall
ED 350 3
Credits
Communication in Cross-Cultural Classrooms
Interdisciplinary examination of communication and language
in cross-cultural educational contexts, including language, literacy and
interethnic communication related to classrooms in Alaska. (Prerequisite: ED
201.) (3 + 0) Offered Fall, Spring
ED 370 1
Credit
Issues in Alaska Bilingual and Multicultural Education
(Cross-listed with ANS 370)
Current issues related to Alaska bilingual and multicultural
education. Students must attend all three days of the annual Alaska Bilingual/Multicultural
Education and Equity Conference and write a paper reflecting on how they will
use information gained from the conference in their own multicultural education
context. Course may be repeated for credit since the content of the conference
changes each year. (Prerequisites: Prior course work at the lower-division
level.) (1 + 0) Offered As Demand Warrants
ED 380 3
Credits
Cultural Influences in Education
Interdisciplinary study of the educational problems, concerns
and successes in a variety of cultural contexts. Social, cultural and psychological
factors inherent in the educational process and how they are affected by a
multicultural setting. Attention given to curriculum improvement and teaching
strategies appropriate for the multicultural classroom and school.
(Prerequisite: Junior standing.) (3 + 0) Offered As Demand Warrants
ED 385 3
Credits
International Perspectives on Education
A comparative analysis of the influences of changing
political, social and economic conditions and relationships with other countries
in the world on U.S. and Alaska education policies. Examination of school
systems in several industrialized and developing countries with focus on
understanding Alaska's educational system within the context of this wider
global community. (Prerequisite: Junior standing.) (3 + 0) Offered As
Demand Warrants
ED 410W 3
Credits
Foundations of Literacy Development
Language, reading and writing development examined in
children of varying ages and within a range of social and cultural contexts,
with emphasis on a developmental approach to literacy development in school and
home settings. Introduction to best practices in research-based methods for
teaching and learning of reading and writing. Field experience required.
(Prerequisite: ED 201, 204 and ENGL 111X, ENGL 211X or ENGL 213X, laptop
computer required.) (3 + 0) Offered Fall, Spring
ED 411 3
Credits
Reading, Writing, Language Arts: Methods and Curriculum
Development
Study and application in the classroom of best practices from
research-based strategies for the teaching and learning of reading, writing and
language arts concepts. Includes content and methods for students in elementary
classrooms with diverse populations. Requires development and classroom
implementation of integrated reading and writing unit. Concurrent internship
required. (Prerequisites: Admission to the Internship Year.) (3 + 0)
Offered Fall
ED 412W 3
Credits
Integrated Social Studies and Language Arts:
Methods and Curriculum Development
Study and application in the classroom of best practices from
research-based strategies for the teaching and learning of social studies
concepts, content and methods integrated with language arts for students in
elementary classrooms with diverse populations. Requires development and
classroom implementation of integrated social studies and language arts unit.
Concurrent internship required. (Prerequisites: Admission to the Internship
Year; ENGL 111X; ENGL 211X or ENGL 213X or permission of instructor.)
(3 + 0) Offered Fall
ED 420 3
Credits
Alaska Native Education (s)
(Cross-listed with ANS 420)
School systems historically serving Native people, current
efforts toward local control and the cross-cultural nature of this education.
Field experience required. (Prerequisite: ANTH 242 or permission of
instructor.) (3 + 0) Offered Fall
ED 429 3
Credits
Teaching with Technology
Participants will examine multiple strategies for the effective
use of computers and related technologies in the classroom. Emphasis will be on
the use of mainstream cross-platform productivity applications to develop
understanding of the schemes for using databases, spreadsheets, page layouts,
digital video, presentations and graphical organizers in transformed
instructional settings. Students must have access to Word, PowerPoint, Excel
and Inspiration. (Prerequisite: ED 237 or passing the equivalent competency
test, or permission of the instructor, laptop computer required)
(3 + 0) Offered Fall, Spring
ED 440 3
Credits
Gender and Education (s)
(Stacked with ED 640 and cross-listed with WMS 440)
Educational practices and processes and their relation to the
changing situation of women in society. Examination of schools as sites of
pervasive gender socialization and discrimination as well as offering new
possibilities for liberation. Topics include social construction of gender,
patterns of access and achievements, gender as an organizing principle in
schools and classrooms, and feminist agendas and strategies for change.
(Prerequisite: Junior standing. Next offered: 2007-08.) (3 + 0)
Offered Alternate Spring
ED 449 3
Credits
Elementary Art Methods
(Stacked with ED 649)
Methodologies of instruction and assessment in art education
at the elementary level. Focus is on the knowledge and tools necessary to
become excellent elementary art educators. Students will be expected to
construct lessons reflecting theory and practice that are developmentally
appropriate for elementary level students of all ages. Particular attention
will be given to using and understanding the National Standards for Art
Education, Alaska Content/Performance standards, and key curriculum documents
in an elementary context. (Prerequisite: Admission to the K-12 Art
post-baccalaureate licensure program; or M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction
option for post-baccalaureate students.) (3 + 0) Offered Spring
ED 450 3
Credits
Education and Cultural Transmission
Education as a process for transmitting culture with
examination of issues related to cultural transmission in a multicultural environment.
Emphasis on dynamics of cultural change. (Prerequisite: Junior standing.)
(3 + 0) Offered As Demand Warrants
ED 451 1-9
Credits
Practicum in Education
Practical application of general ideas and techniques
addressed in methods courses in which the student is currently enrolled or
previously completed. (Prerequisite: Permission of Office of Practical
Experiences.) Offered Fall, Spring
ED 452O 3-15
Credits
Elementary Internship
(Cross-listed with ART 458O)
Supervised teaching in elementary schools approved by the
School of Education. Students should expect to be involved in the school setting
for some or all of the school day (depending on number of credits taken) for
the entire university semester. The School of Education may limit enrollment,
determine assignments and cancel the registration of students doing
unsatisfactory work. Candidates serving internships are charged $150 fee per
semester. (Prerequisites: COMM 131X or 141X; and successful completion of
methods practicum and methods course work with a C or better.
Post-baccalaureate students must be admitted to the Art K-12 licensure program.
Passing Praxis scores.) (1 + 0 + 42) Offered Fall, Spring
ED 453O 3-15
Credits
Secondary Internship
(Cross-listed with ART 459O)
Supervised teaching in secondary schools approved by the
School of Education. Students should expect to be involved in the school setting
for some or all of the school day (depending upon the number of credits taken)
for the entire university semester. The School of Education may limit
enrollment, determine assignments and cancel the registration of students doing
unsatisfactory work. Candidates serving internships are charged a $150 fee per
semester. (Prerequisites: COMM 131X or 141X; and successful completion of
methods practicum and methods course work with a C or better.
Post-baccalaureate students must be admitted to K-12 Art Licensure program.
Passing Praxis I scores.) (1 + 0 + 42) Offered Fall, Spring
ED 454O 15
Credits
Student Teaching K-12
Supervised teaching in both elementary and secondary schools
approved by the department of education. Open only to Music and P.E. majors
seeking K-12 certification or to graduate students seeking K-12 small school
certification. Students should expect to be involved in the school setting for
the entire school day for the entire university semester. The department may
limit enrollment, determine assignments and cancel the registration of students
doing unsatisfactory work. Candidates serving internships are charged a $150
fee per semester. (Prerequisites: COMM 131X or 141X; and successful completion
of methods practicum and methods course work with a C or better. Passing Praxis
scores. For bachelor of music students, see B.M. degree requirements.)
(1 + 0 + 42) Offered Fall, Spring
ED 456 3
Credits
Orientation to Teaching in Rural Alaska
Needs of rural schools, their environments and the recipients
of school services with special attention given to cross-cultural educational
issues. (Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.) (2 + 3) Offered
Summer, As Demand Warrants
ED 461 3
Credits
Native Ways of Knowing (h)
(Cross-listed with ANS 461)
Focus on how culture and worldview shape who we are and
influence the way we come to know the world around us. Emphasis on Alaska
Native knowledge systems and ways of knowing. (Prerequisite: Junior standing.)
(3 + 0) Offered Spring
ED 462 3
Credits
Alaskan Environmental Education
(Cross-listed with NRM 462)
Utilization of the environment inside and outside the formal
classroom in all subject areas. Curriculum materials (K-12), interpretive and
audiovisual aids, problem solving and applications to situations from the
public schools to summer campus, short courses and workshops for individuals of
any age. (Prerequisite: Junior standing.) (3 + 0) Offered As Demand
Warrants
ED 465 3
Credits
Working with FAS/FAE Children
For families of children with FAS/FAE and
professionals--teachers, social workers and health workers who deal with
these children. Guest speakers, interviews and reading materials. Project is
the development of activities to use with these children with FAS/FAE. Access
to work in a school setting required. (Not available on Fairbanks campus.)
(2 + 4) Offered Fall
ED 466 3
Credits
Internship and Collaborative Student Teaching
Supervised internship for students in the first half of a
year-long professional internship in elementary teacher education. Includes
immersion in planning and teaching. Course work is integrated into the
internship experience. Interns are assessed in relationship to UAF/Alaska state
and national standards. Candidates serving internships are charged a $150 fee
per semester. (Prerequisites: Admission to the Internship Year.) (Graded
pass/fail.) (1 + 0 + 25) Offered Fall
ED 467 1
Credit
Synthesizing the Standards I
For student interns participating in the first half of the
professional internship year. Interns use the UAF/Alaska Teacher Standards as
the basis for examining field- and course-based experiences and activities
during the internship year. Includes collection and analysis of selected
artifacts to document and provide evidence of professional development and
achievement relative to educational standards. Interns present portfolio for
midyear assessment. Concurrent internship required. (Prerequisites: Admission
to the Internship Year.) (1 + 0) Offered Fall
ED 468O 6
Credits
Internship and Student Teaching
For student interns participating in the second half of the
year-long professional elementary teacher education internship. Interns must
spend at least four days per week in the classroom, one month full-time in the
classroom including at least three weeks of full responsibility for the
classroom. Builds on ED 466 requirements with continued assessment based on
UAF/Alaska State and National Standards. Candidates serving internships are
charged a $150 fee per semester. (Prerequisites: COMM 131X or 141X; Admission
to the Internship Year. Graded pass/fail.) (1 + 0 + 40)
Offered Spring
ED 469 2
Credits
Synthesizing the Standards II
For student interns participating in the second half of the
professional internship year. Interns use the UAF/Alaska Teacher Standards as a
basis for examining field- and course-based experiences and activities during
the internship year. Includes collection and analysis of selected artifacts to
document and provide evidence of professional development and achievement
relative to educational standards. Interns formally present completed
portfolios for reviews and evaluations. Concurrent internship required.
(Prerequisite: Admission to the Internship Year.) (2 + 0) Offered
Spring
ED 477W, O 12
Credits
Knowledge and Skills for Alaska Rural Educators
Supervised rural internship for post-baccalaureate students.
Close work with a mentor teacher and university partner to develop and
implement an individual licensure plan. Student must be accepted to the Center
for Rural Educator Preparation Partnerships program. Interns should expect to
enroll in this course for two consecutive semesters and be involved in the
local school setting for the entire school day during the entire UAF semester.
(Prerequisites: COMM 131X or 141X; ENGL 111X; ENGL 211X or ENGL 213X and
permission to enroll from the Center for Rural Educator Preparation Partnerships.)
Offered Fall, Spring
ED 478 2
Credits
Math Methods and Curriculum Development
(Stacked with ED 678)
Study and application in the classroom of best practices from
research-based strategies for the teaching and learning of mathematical
concepts, content and methods for students in elementary classrooms with
diverse populations. Requires development and classroom implementation of
mathematics unit. Concurrent internship required. (Prerequisites: Admission to
the Internship Year.) (2 + 0) Offered Fall
ED 479 2
Credits
Science Methods and Curriculum Development
(Stacked with ED 688)
Study and application in the classroom of the best practices
from research-based strategies for the teaching and learning of science
concepts, content and methods for students in elementary classrooms with
diverse populations. Requires development and classroom implementation of
science unit. Classroom internship required. (Prerequisites: Admission to the
professional internship year; concurrent enrollment in other internship year
courses and Alaska passing scores for three Praxis I Exams.)
(2 + 0) Offered Spring
ED 486O/2 3
Credits
Media Literacy (h)
Promotes critical thinking skills that empower people to make
independent judgments and informed decisions in response to information
conveyed through the channels of mass communications. Emphasis on developing
students and others into critical viewers, listeners and readers of media.
(Prerequisite: COMM 131X or 141X; Junior standing, laptop computer.)
(3 + 0) Offered Alternate Fall, Spring
ED 601 3
Credits
Introduction to Applied Social Science Research
Review of the most common educational research paradigms,
data gathering techniques and analytical tools used in the study of human behavior
and educational institutions. Attention will be given to collaborative research
models, with a focus on the translation of research results into practical
application. (3 + 0) Offered As Demand Warrants
ED 603 3
Credits
Field Study Research Methods
(Cross-listed with CCS 603)
Focus on techniques for conducting both quantitative and
qualitative field research. Particular emphasis on considerations for conducting
field research in cross-cultural settings. (Prerequisite: ED 601.)
(3 + 0) Offered Spring, Summer, As Demand Warrants
ED 610 3
Credits
Education and Cultural Processes
(Cross-listed with CCS 610)
Advanced study of the function of education as a cultural
process and its relation to other aspects of a cultural system. Students will
be required to prepare a study in which they examine some aspect of education
in a particular cultural context. Also available via Independent Learning.
(3 + 0) Offered As Demand Warrants
ED 611 3
Credits
Culture, Cognition and Knowledge Acquisition
(Cross-listed with CCS 611)
An examination of the relationship between learning, thinking
and perception in multicultural contexts. Particular emphasis will be on the
implications of these relationships for schooling. Content will focus on
cultural influences on perception, conceptual processes, learning, memory and
problem solving. Content will also reflect concern for practical teaching
problems. (Recommended: ED 610.) (3 + 0) Offered Fall
ED 612 3
Credits
Foundations of Education
Introduces a range of philosophical thought with emphasis on
schooling in the cross-cultural context and on issues of social justice and
quality in education. Students will explore the interplay between cultural
processes and various philosophical positions adopted by educators in the
design and practice of pedagogy, learn the history of public school education
in the U.S. and Alaska and analyze the policies affecting public school
education today. (3 + 0) Offered Fall
ED 613 3
Credits
Alaska Standards for Culturally Responsive Schools
(Cross-listed with CCS 613)
Guidelines, rationale and resources for adapting educational
policies, programs and practices to better address the cultural well-being of
the students and communities they serve. Content will be grounded in the Alaska
Standards for Culturally Responsive Schools, including standards for students,
teachers, curriculum, schools and communities. (3 + 0) Offered As
Demand Warrants
ED 616 3
Credits
Education and Socioeconomic Change
An examination of social change processes, particularly in
relation to the deliberate development of new institutions and resulting forms
of new consciousness. Emphasis is placed on the role of education and schooling
in this development dynamic. Also available via Independent Learning.
(3 + 0) Offered As Demand Warrants
ED 618 3
Credits
Higher Education: Basic Understanding
Historical and philosophical foundations of higher education,
both in America and abroad. Examination of curriculum development, instruction,
administration and inter-institutional cooperation, with emphasis on trends and
innovations in higher education. (3 + 0) Offered As Demand Warrants
ED 620 3
Credits
Language, Literacy and Learning
The relationships among language, culture and thinking as
issues of literacy and learning. Specific areas of emphasis include linguistic
relativity, discourse, role of context in communications, variant language
learning strategies and styles, speech community, open and closed linguistic
systems, cognitive styles, and literacy as a cultural and cognitive phenomenon.
(3 + 0) Offered Fall
ED 621 3
Credits
Cultural Aspects of Language Acquisition
(Cross-listed with LING 621)
An expanded view of the ways in which individuals become
socialized into particular patterns of first and second language and literacy.
The ongoing acquisition of both oral and written language(s) from early
childhood through adult life. Topics will include: the cultural dimensions of
language development; the relationship between communication and culture;
bilingualism; and the role of language in the transmission of sociocultural
knowledge. (3 + 0) Offered Spring, Alternate Summer, As Demand
Warrants
ED 624 3
Credits
Foundations of Education in Alaska: From Segregation to
Standards
Review of major Alaska educational reform efforts as a means
of understanding historical and current state, national and international
policies and practices related to development of curriculum, pedagogy and
assessment that respond to the needs and interests of culturally and
linguistically diverse populations. Examination of Alaska Quality Schools
Initiative reform effort with focus on use of Alaska Standards for Culturally
Responsive Schools. (Prerequisites: Admission to the Internship Year or
permission of instructor and a laptop computer.) (3 + 0) Offered
Summer, As Demand Warrants
ED 625 3
Credits
Exceptional Learners and Child Development: Individual and
Cultural Characteristics
Foundation for understanding, identifying and teaching to
developmental abilities of children and early adolescents. Human development
examined in context of cognition, personality, social behavior, language and
physical development with focus on understanding and using cross-cultural
influences specific to Alaska. Emphasis on development of children with
exceptional abilities. Design, develop and modify curriculum and instruction to
developmentally and culturally appropriate approaches. Theory is applied to
practice in practicum. (Prerequisites: Admission to the Internship Year or
permission of instructor.) (3 + 0) Offered Summer, As Demand Warrants
ED 626 3
Credits
Teaching Reading, Writing and Language Arts
Examination of the nature and process of reading and writing
for elementary students and focus on process of developing a language arts
program. Includes acquisition and role of language in this process. Examination
and evaluation of materials and methods of teaching language arts, including
those used in some Alaska districts. Examination and evaluation of children's
literature. Practicum with application of language arts concepts.
(Prerequisites: Admission to the Internship Year or permission of instructor.)
(3 + 0) Offered Summer, As Demand Warrants
ED 630 3
Credits
Curriculum Development
Basic definition of curriculum. Includes the present need for
curriculum improvement, criteria for selection of broad goals, types of curriculum
frameworks and consideration of the organization of specific learning
experiences as part of the curriculum structure. (3 + 0) Offered
Fall, Summer, As Demand Warrants
ED 631 3
Credits
Small Schools Curriculum Design
Salient issues involved with the development of effective
programs of instruction in small schools, including foundational design, conceptual
models, organizational strategies, technical skills, current issues and trends,
and their implications and application to the environment of rural Alaska. Also
available via Independent Learning. (3 + 0) Offered Fall
ED 635 3
Credits
Strategies for Cooperating/Mentor Teachers
Study of effective teaching using alternative strategies
appropriate to differing goals. Consideration will also be given to teaming
with and/or supervising interns as a technique for improving instruction.
Course may be repeated for credit as readings and topics change. (Prerequisite:
Licensed teacher employed in a school district.) (3 + 0) Offered As
Demand Warrants
ED 636 3
Credits
Improvement of Elementary Teaching
Emphasis on improvement of elementary teaching through
professional development in which mentor teachers read, reflect and collaborate
with one another and with university faculty to develop new approaches for
their own professional development as well as developing and refining
strategies that contribute to the preparation of student interns who can
successfully demonstrate competence in the Alaska Teacher Standards and the
Alaska Standards for Culturally Responsive Schools. Course may be repeated for
credit as readings and topics change. (3 + 0) Offered As Demand
Warrants
ED 640 3
Credits
Gender and Education
(Stacked with ED 440 and WMS 440)
Educational practices and processes and their relation to the
changing situation of women in society. Schools will be examined as sites of
pervasive gender socialization and discrimination as well as offering new
possibilities for liberation. Topics include the social construction of gender,
patterns of access and achievement, gender as an organizing principle in
schools and classrooms, and feminist agendas and strategies for change. (Next
offered: 2007-08.) (3 + 0) Offered Alternate Spring
ED 642 3
Credits
Portfolio Preparation: Integrating Theory and Practice
Continued systematic collection of selected work, and final
preparation and presentation of required portfolios that document and provide
evidence of professional development and achievement as beginning teachers
relative to Alaska Teacher Standards and Alaska Student Content Standards, integrated
with the Alaska Standards for Culturally Responsive Schools. Processes and products
involved in portfolio preparation serve as basis for goal setting and
assessment by interns, peers, mentors and university faculty. Portfolios must
provide tangible evidence of the range of knowledge, dispositions and skills
that the intern possesses. Technology focus: utilization of technology to
prepare portfolios. Addresses Alaska Teacher Standards. (Prerequisites:
Admission to the post-baccalaureate elementary or secondary licensure program,
or permission of instructor.) (2 + 0 + 3) Offered Spring
ED 643 3
Credits
Classroom Research
Emphasis on providing teachers with classroom research skill
and techniques for improving instruction. Includes basic educational research
concepts, methods and application, and their impact on policy and practice.
(1 + 6) Offered As Demand Warrants
ED 645 3
Credits
Small Schools Institute
A forum for experienced elementary and secondary rural school
teachers. Discussions and seminars held with university and guest faculty,
whose fields of expertise have direct applicability to small school concerns,
will provide an environment for participants to share and refine different
interethnic communication styles, culturally congruent teaching methodologies
and curricula, and contextual understandings of the Native pupil's world.
(Prerequisite: Recent rural Alaskan small schools teaching experience.)
(2 + 3) Offered As Demand Warrants
ED 649 3
Credits
Elementary Art Methods
(Stacked with ED 449)
Methodologies of instruction and assessment in art education
at the elementary level. Focus is on the knowledge and tools necessary to
become excellent elementary art educators. Students will be expected to
construct lessons reflecting theory and practice that are developmentally
appropriate for elementary level students of all ages. Particular attention
will be given to using and understanding the National Standards for Art
Education, Alaska Content/Performance standards and key curriculum documents in
an elementary context. (Prerequisite: Admission to the K-12 Art
post-baccalaureate licensure program; or M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction
option for post-baccalaureate students.) (3 + 0) Offered Spring
ED 659 3
Credits
Multimedia Tools for Teachers
Emerging technologies and software applications in education.
The use of multimedia in designing teaching/learning experiences will be
emphasized. Students will develop a multimedia classroom presentation and will
demonstrate knowledge of Internet resources. (1 + 6) Offered Summer,
As Demand Warrants
ED 660 3
Credits
Educational Administration in Cultural Perspective
Issues related to the social organization and socio-political
context of schools, administrative and institutional change processes and the
changing role of administrators in education, using a cross-cultural framework
for analysis. (3 + 0) Offered As Demand Warrants
ED 669 3
Credits
Reading, Language and Culture
Introduction to the foundations of psycholinguistic and
sociolinguistic theories as they relate to oral and written language acquisition
and development. Focus on issues of language and literacy education practices
in the Alaska context. Topics include bi-lingual and bi-literacy education,
school and community languages and literacies, and culturally responsive
pedagogy. Emphasis on teachers/students developing the skills and dispositions
to become researchers of culture, language and literacy in their communities.
(3 + 0) Offered Fall As Demand Warrants
ED 670 3
Credits
Developing Reading: ECE-12
Literacy from early childhood through grade 12. Emphasis on
developmental aspects of literacy, underlying social and cognitive processes,
and the pedagogical implications to teachers. Enrollment restriction: Student
must hold a Type A teaching certificate and be admitted to the Master of
Education in Reading program or permission of instructor. (3 + 0)
Offered Fall
ED 671 3
Credits
Reading and Cognition
Theory and process of reading cognition, particularly the
relationship between reading and thinking. Exploration of issues related to the
meaning of text and the development of comprehension. Review of literature
concerning research and theory about reading processes. Enrollment restriction:
Student must hold a Type A teaching certificate and be admitted to the Master
of Education in Reading program, or permission of instructor. (3 + 0)
Offered Spring
ED 672 3
Credits
Literature and Reading: Supporting Readers at All Levels
Read, analyze and design ways to use literature to support
readers at all levels. Includes critical and personal response to literature,
knowledge of a wide range of appropriate reading material, classroom
applications and interdisciplinary study using children's literature. Enrollment
restriction: Student must hold a Type A teaching certificate and be admitted to
the Master of Education in Reading program, or permission of instructor.
(3 + 0) Offered Summer, As Demand Warrants
ED 673 3
Credits
Reading and Literacy in the Content Area
Development of knowledge of reading strategies that support
literacy in the content areas/disciplines. Emphasis on interrelated processes
of writing, reading, listening and speaking in the literacy development of
students across the content areas. Special attention to use of technology as a
tool to enhance content area literacy. Exploration of the role of teacher as
researcher. Enrollment restriction: Student must hold a Type A teaching
certificate and be admitted to the Master of Education in Reading program, or
permission of instructor. (3 + 0) Offered Summer, As Demand Warrants
ED 678 2
Credits
Math Methods and Curriculum Development
(Stacked with ED 478)
Study and application in the classroom of best practices from
research-based strategies for the teaching and learning of mathematical
concepts, content and methods for students in elementary classrooms with
diverse populations. Requires development and classroom implementation of
mathematics unit. Concurrent internship required. (Prerequisites: Admission to
the post-baccalaureate elementary licensure program and graduate standing; or
permission of instructor.) (2 + 0) Offered Fall
ED 680 3
Credits
Comparative Education
(Cross-listed with NORS 680)
Analysis of international systems of public education. Issues
addressed include social context, ethnicity, gender, ideology, international
power, level of development, current issues and problems, and efforts toward
reform. (3 + 0) Offered As Demand Warrants
ED 681 3
Credits
Place Based Education
An examination of the relationship between local landscape
and community, and the development of human perception. Emphasis on the
importance of the development of ecologically appropriate community-based
educational programs in rural and urban schools. Priority placed on
project-centered programs lending themselves to experimental learning
opportunities. Includes literature review, discussion, curriculum exploration
and design, and on-site community exploration of active place-based educational
programs. (3 + 0) Offered Spring
ED 683 3
Credits
Instruction and Assessment in Reading I
Teaching and assessment of reading using a variety of
strategies, reading research and proven effective research-based practices for
a broad range of students, including those with special needs. Immersion in a
language approach to the teaching of reading that focuses on the interrelated
nature of reading, writing, speaking and listening. Includes strategies for
instruction, school-wide literacy programs, multiple assessments and ways to
communicate results of assessments. Addresses alignment of instruction with the
Alaska standards for English/language and arts/reading. Introduction to a
psycho-sociolinguistic approach to developing reading that focuses on the
cognitive processes, and the cultural and social factors which contribute to
variation in regard to assessment. Enrollment restriction: Student must hold a
Type A teaching certificate and be admitted to the Masters of Education in
Reading program, or permission of instructor. (3 + 0) Offered Fall
ED 684 3
Credits
Instruction and Assessment in Reading II
Teaching and assessment of reading with a focus on the
reading behaviors of individual students and effective practices associated
with developing students' skills. Emphasis on understanding reading
difficulties, the analysis and use of information from reading assessments, the
development of individual instructional plans and communication of meaningful
data to multiple audiences. Immersion in a psycho-sociolinguistic approach to
developing reading that focuses on cognitive processes and social factors which
contribute to variations in reading ability. Enrollment restriction: Student
must hold a Type A teaching certificate and be admitted to the Master of
Education in Reading program, or permission of instructor.) (3 + 0)
Offered Spring
ED 686 3
Credits
Assessment and Testing in K-12 Public Schools
Designed to provide students with a basic knowledge of
assessment in K-12 public schools. Students will be required to gain a basic
understanding of assessment in Alaska and to gain the confidence to interpret,
analyze and discuss various, multiple and alternative assessments common in the
U.S. public school system, as well as standardized tests. Issues surrounding
the history of educational accountability, content standards, instructional
objectives and the goals of K-12 curriculum will be discussed. (Prerequisite:
Admittance to the Master of Education program, or permission of instructor.
Recommended: Successful completion of ED 630, ED 601 and ED 612.)
(3 + 0) Offered Spring
ED 687 3
Credits
Alaska: Resources, People and Perspectives
Introduces a broad range of essential Alaska information for
educators including information on history, geography, literature, economics
and politics. (3 + 0) Offered Spring
ED 688 2
Credits
Science Methods and Curriculum Development
(Stacked with ED 479)
Study and application in the classroom of the best practices
from research-based strategies for the teaching and learning of science
concepts, content and methods for students in elementary classrooms with
diverse populations. Requires development and classroom implementation of
science unit. Classroom internship required. (Prerequisites: Admission to the
professional internship year; concurrent enrollment in other internship year
courses and Alaska passing scores for three Praxis I Exams.)
(2 + 0) Offered Spring
ED 689 3
Credits
Proseminar in Applied Educational Research
Application of social science and educational research
methods to the description and analysis of the student's research topic. The
research topic chosen will be the substance of each student's literature review
and synthesizing paper. Conceptually integrated with ED 698 (to be taken a
subsequent semester), where the final master's project is completed. Completion
and approval of the synthesizing paper, by the committee, is required for
successful completion of this course. (Prerequisites: Acceptance into an M.Ed.
degree program; completion of all required core courses; and at least nine
credits in the area of concentration.) (3 + 0) Offered As Demand
Warrants
ED 690 3
Credits
Seminar in Cross-Cultural Studies
(Cross-listed with CCS 690)
Investigation of current issues in cross-cultural contexts.
Opportunity for students to synthesize prior graduate studies and research. Seminar
is taken near the terminus of a graduate program. (3 + 0) Offered
Spring, Summer, As Demand Warrants
ED 691 3
Credits
Contemporary Issues in Education
A critical overview of the current status of the field of
education. Students will participate in a thorough investigation of select problems,
trends and issues that presently characterize the institution of public
education. Seminar sessions will focus on student research regarding the
development, present impact and potential implications of each topic discussed.
(3 + 0) Offered As Demand Warrants