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College of Education conceptual framework
Teaching Excellence in teaching embodies the use of best practices to improve student learning in diverse P-12 classrooms as well as at the university level. Within the learning community in the College of Education, faculty employ best practices in the preparation of teachers, counselors, and leaders. The ideas and activities that constitute best practices include the use of a variety of tools and strategies to address the needs of diverse learners and the extensive integration of technology to enhance teaching and learning. Faculty model best practices for candidates who then apply similar ideas and activities in P-12 schools and classrooms. Teachers collaborate within communities of learning as they continually seek feedback from peers, mentors, and students and reflect upon the efficacy of their practice. Leaders support and contribute to excellence in teaching by creating and maintaining safe, civil, healthy, and intellectually stimulating school environments that promote high levels of P-12 student learning. Counselors improve student learning by promoting the academic, career, and social development of students. These efforts by teachers, counselors, and leaders lead to accomplished P-12 teaching and improved learning for all students in all school settings. Scholarship Scholarship is systematized knowledge that is accurate, authoritative, relevant, and thorough. Scholarship combines theoretical knowledge with practical applications. Scholars operate within communities of learning as peers, collaborators, mentors, and leaders who construct, critically examine, and reflect upon knowledge and skills. Scholars seek out and explore multiple viewpoints, embracing diversity as it enriches their intellectual lives and positively impacts their professional performance. Scholars actively engage in a lifelong learning process, continually acquiring, integrating, refining, and applying knowledge and skills to achieve excellence in teaching and to improve P-16 student learning. Professionalism Professionalism comprises a body of knowledge, a set of beliefs, an array of actions or behaviors, and ethical standards that members of a profession agree are the core of their practice. The professional educator demonstrates in-depth knowledge of a field of study and strives to meet its highest standards as represented by the Interstate New Teacher Assessment and Support Consortium (INTASC) Principles, the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards (NBPTS) Core Propositions, the Council for the Accreditation of Counseling and Related Programs (CACREP) School Standards, the American School Counselor Association (ASCA) Standards, the Interstate School Leaders Licensure Consortium (ISLLC) Standards, the Standards for Advanced Programs in Educational Leadership (SAPEL), and/or specialty association standards. The professional educator is an active member in the learned societies and professional organizations that set the code of ethics and performance standards for their field. Ultimately, the professional educator is a scholar who models professionalism for students and fosters the development of the knowledge, skills, and dispositions in students which allow them to acquire, integrate, refine, and apply knowledge meaningfully throughout their lives. |
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Last Updated: 8/18/08