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ARCHIVED 2012-2013 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Teacher Education Program
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Admission and retention policies in teacher education programs are based on the standards and guidelines of the State of North Carolina and the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE). Approved institutions must have established procedures for implementing decisions regarding admission to and retention in teacher education programs. The state and NCATE guidelines require continuous evaluation of students admitted to teacher education programs and states that those found unlikely to succeed as teachers should be withdrawn.
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Conceptual Framework for the Professional Education Program
The professional education program at Western Carolina University fulfills its mission by creating and nourishing a community of learners guided by knowledge, values, and experiences. The guiding principles of this community include the belief that the best educational decisions are made after adequate reflection and with careful consideration of the interests, experiences, and welfare of the persons affected by the decisions; appreciation of and respect for diversity; and the fostering of the responsible use of technology. Second Academic Concentration
A second academic concentration is an eighteen hour course of study in an academic discipline required of education students enrolled in a B.S.Ed. program in elementary education. The concentration areas available are the following: art, biology, , English, health promotion and wellness, history, mathematics, natural science, psychology, sociology, and Spanish. Second Academic Concentrations
(18 Hours must be completed for each concentration)
Please select one of the following: Students must choose either a 2D or 3D concentration:
2D Concentration includes
Plus an additional 9 hours chosen from:
Painting, drawing, printmaking, photography or book arts courses. 3D Concentration includes
Plus an additional 9 hours chosen from:
Ceramics or sculpture courses. Select 9 hours from:
- ENGL 240 - Research, Literary Criticism & British Literature Credits: (3).
- ENGL 241 - Formalism & American Literature Credits: (3)
- ENGL 242 - Cultural Studies & Non-Western World Literature Credits: (3)
- ENGL 333 - Introduction to Shakespeare Credits: (3)
- ENGL 350 - The Renaissance Credits: (3)
- ENGL 351 - The Beats, Radicals, and Avant-Garde Literature Credits: (3)
- ENGL 352 - The Journey in Literature Credits: (3)
- ENGL 353 - Stories Retold Credits: (3)
- ENGL 366 - Literature of American Immigration Credits: (3)
- ENGL 367 - Appalachian Literature Credits: (3)
- ENGL 368 - Film Genres Credits: (3, R6)
- ENGL 378 - Motion Picture Histories Credits: (3)
- ENGL 390 - The Bible as Literature Credits: (3)
- ENGL 394 - Film Adaptation Credits: (3, R6)
- ENGL 411 - History of the English Language Credits: (3)
- ENGL 420 - Chaucer and His Age Credits: (3)
- ENGL 421 - Fairy Tale Literature Credits: (3)
- ENGL 430 - English Literature of the Renaissance Credits: (3)
- ENGL 431 - Shakespeare and His Age Credits: (3)
- ENGL 440 - Milton and His Age Credits: (3)
- ENGL 441 - The Age of Pope, Swift, and Johnson Credits: (3)
- ENGL 450 - Major Writers Credits: (3, R6)
- ENGL 451 - Nineteenth-Century British Writers Credits: (3)
- ENGL 463 - Contemporary Literature Credits: (3)
- ENGL 464 - Native American Literature Credits: (3)
- ENGL 465 - Topics in African American Literature Credits: (3)
- ENGL 469 - Directors/Screenwriters/Stars Credits: 3, R6
- ENGL 470 - Twentieth-Century and Contemporary Postcolonial Literature Credits: (3)
- ENGL 471 - Studies in Poetry Credits: (3)
- ENGL 472 - Studies in Fiction Credits: (3)
- ENGL 473 - Studies in Drama Credits: (3)
- ENGL 475 - Modernism Credits: (3)
- ENGL 477 - Literature and Gender Credits: (3)
- ENGL 478 - Film Theory Credits: (3)
- ENGL 479 - Studies in Literature Credits: (3, R6)
- ENGL 480 - Studies in English Credits: (1-3, R6)
- ENGL 496 - Seminar in World Literature Credits: (3)
3. Health Promotion and Wellness Hours: 18
Additional courses:
Select 6 hours from: Note:
Selecting HEAL 250 and or PE 255 will result in 19 hours in the SAC. Students may take either SM 213 or HSCC 150. Additional courses:
Select 12 hours of junior-senior level history courses. Students majoring in middle grades education must also complete:
Elective courses:
The following elective courses or other courses approved by the Head of the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science to complete a minimum of 18 hours. 6. Natural Science Hours: 18
Additional courses:
Select 2 hours from any AST, BIOL, CHEM, GEOL, or PHYS course not counted for Liberal Studies. Additional Courses:
Select any 15 hours of PSY courses. Additional courses:
Select 15 hours from any 200-level and above sociology course. Additional courses:
Select 3 additional hours from upper level Spanish courses. Course Requirements in the Program
The teacher education program requires a professional education sequence of twenty-three (23) to thirty (30) semester hours in courses pertinent to teaching in specific licensure areas and at various levels. All courses in the sequence except internship/student teaching and the internship/student-teaching seminar must be completed before admission to internship or student teaching. The courses in the sequence are determined by the student’s major: Birth-Kindergarten (30 hours)
Elementary and Middle Grades (24 hours)
Special Education (27 hours)
English Education (27 hours)
Mathematics Education (24 hours)
Science Education (23 hours)
Social Science Education (27 hours)
Special Subjects Teaching (K-12):
Health and Physical Education (27 hours)
Music Education (24 hours)
Spanish Education (26 hours)
Admission to the Teacher Education Program
Acceptance and registration in a department do not guarantee admission to the teacher education program in that department. A student is not officially in a teacher education program until approved by the Professional Education Council. The applicant’s fitness for teaching in the chosen area is determined on the basis of demonstrated academic ability and other personal characteristics conducive to effective teaching. A student may be considered suitable in one area and unsuitable in another. Students with speech defects that will interfere with successful teaching may be required to take corrective therapy.
Students who plan to receive a degree in education or a license through Western Carolina University must apply for and be officially admitted to a teacher education program. Admission to teacher education requires an application that should be completed during the semester in which the student is enrolled in EDCI 201 (BK 250 for BK majors) a prerequisite to all other courses in the professional education sequence that may be taken before being fully admitted to teacher education. Applications are available online in the Teacher Education Handbook http:///thehandbook.wcu or http://www.wcu.edu/3120.asp.
Visit the department’s website at http://www.wcu.edu/3036.asp for additional information. Admission Criteria
All requirements for admission to teacher education should be met by the end of the semester the student is enrolled in EDCI 201 (BK 250 for BK majors). The following criteria are minimum requirements for admission:
- Completed at least 30 hours (which can also include transfer hours);
- Earned a C (2.0) or higher grade in EDCI 201 ( BK 250 for BK majors), ENGL 101. NOTE: Earning a C (2.0) or higher grade in ENGL 202 is required before beginning Internship 1 or student teaching);
- Earned (and then maintain) a minimum cumulative GPA of 2.5 (2.75 for students in Birth-Kindergarten, Elementary Education, Health and Physical Education, and Middle Education);
- Achieved the minimum required scores on the SAT, ACT or Pre-Professional Skills Test Praxis I (Reading, Writing, Mathematics);
- Complete the M5-336 Dispositions Scale via TaskStream;
- Complete the Professional Beliefs About Diversity Scale via TaskStream;
- Submitted the application for Admission to Teacher Education.
Applicants already holding non-teacher education degrees and/or seeking a teaching license must meet all of the above requirements except they are not required to take the PPST. (Applicants to the B-K program without a teaching license must earn minimum scores on the PPST). They must have had a minimum cumulative GPA of 2.75 at the time of graduation. Applicants with non-teaching degrees from accredited institutions without cumulative GPA of at least 2.5 have two options:
- The student is eligible to apply for admission to a licensure-only or a second-degree program no sooner than three calendar years after receipt of the baccalaureate degree.
Or
- The student is eligible to apply with passing scores on Praxis I tests and one of the following:
- a GPA of 3.0 in the major field of study;
- a GPA of 3.0 on all work completed in the senior year; or
- a GPA of 3.0 on a minimum of 15 semester hours of course work (relative to licensure) completed during the preceding five years.
Students must have maintained satisfactory conduct and citizenship records which are in keeping with the ethics of the teaching profession. A student who is readmitted to the university after dismissal, suspension, or expulsion will not be readmitted to the teacher education program the first term after returning. Applicants with a record of legal offenses may not be eligible for admission to teacher education.
Applications for admission to teacher education are considered and acted upon by the Professional Education Council. Continuation in the Teacher Education Program
The requirements for continuing in the program are (1) a GPA of at least 2.5 on hours attempted (2.75 for students in Birth-Kindergarten, Elementary Education, Health and Physical Education, and Middle Grades Education), (2) behavior which adheres to the code of ethics of the profession, and (3) satisfactory participation in the required professional laboratory program that is prerequisite to student teaching. An evaluation of each field experience assignment will become a part of the student’s professional record.
If a student fails two courses or any one course in the professional education sequence twice, the student is withdrawn from teacher education. Clinical and Field Experience for Professional Education
The teacher education program requires field experiences in conjunction with several courses in addition to the intern/student-teaching requirement. Students are expected to make their own arrangements for transportation and housing and absorb the costs related to field experiences and internship or student teaching. Each program has different requirements, and students should discuss costs with the program head prior to applying for admission to the teacher education program. The goal of professional education clinical and field experiences is to help teacher education students learn to teach all of their pupils to achieve at high levels of performance. Although each field experience requirement has its own specific purpose and placement procedures, the strategies to achieve this goal are stated below:
- Field experience placements are made so that students have the opportunity to work with qualified educators in successful programs.
- Field experience placements are made so that students have the opportunity to work with diverse learners. Teacher education students are required to complete one field experience in a diverse setting, as defined by the College of Education and Allied Professions. Students who do not complete one of the early field experience requirements in a diverse setting must be placed in a diverse setting for the internship or student teaching semester.
- Field experiences placements are made in collaboration with B-12 school personnel.
- Field experience placements are made to facilitate appropriate supervision of students.
- There may be times where the student can combine early field experience placements to meet multiple course requirements. This is approved for no more than two classes.
Admission to Student Teaching/Internship
Students apply to the director of field experiences early in the semester prior to the semester in which student teaching/internship is to be done. The requirements for admission to student teaching/internship are: (1) completion of at least 39 of 42 hours required for Liberal Studies, (2) enrollment in the professional education sequence for at least two semesters, (3) completion of at least ninety hours in a teacher education curriculum, (4) a GPA of 2.5 or above, both at the beginning of the term immediately preceding the student teaching/internship term and at the time of enrollment in student teaching/internship (2.75 GPA required for birth-kindergarten, elementary education, health and physical education, and middle grades majors), (5) completion of at least two-thirds of the major, (6) completion of all records designated by the director of field experiences, (7) completion of the applicable professional education sequence except for student teaching/internship and the student teaching/internship seminar, (8) completion of an approved SBI background check, (9) completion of student teaching/internship application including recommendation by adviser and department head, and (10) all other requirements from the school placement as applicable. Continuation in Student Teaching/Internship
To continue in student teaching/internship, students must maintain satisfactory professional conduct and adhere to the policies and regulations of the school to which they are assigned. When recommended by the director of field experiences and approved by the dean, students failing to perform at a satisfactory level may be removed from student teaching/internship. Removal from a school placement is considered a failed internship. The Office of Field Experiences under no obligation place the student in another setting. Removal from a school placement will result in a grade no higher than a D. Requirements for Teacher Licensure
To be eligible for an initial or “A” level North Carolina teacher license, a student must (1) complete one of the approved teacher-education programs, (2) achieve a minimum grade of C (2.0) in internship or student teaching, (3) receive a public school recommendation indicating that student teaching was successful, (4) receive a satisfactory recommendation by meeting all competencies on the Certification of Teaching Capacity document completed after internship/student teaching, (5) complete application for licensure and file with the licensure specialist of the College of Education and Allied Professions, (6) achieve the minimum score on the PRAXIS II test if applicable, (7) receive a professional recommendation for Initial ”A” level license by the dean of the College of Education and Allied Professions, and (8) pay the license fee required by the Department of Public Education for the issuance of a teacher license. North Carolina Teaching Fellows
North Carolina Teaching Fellows must complete requirements in addition to those for regular teacher education students. |
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