300
Candidates complete 50 hours of field experience practice in a community or educational setting. This field experience will focus on developing candidates’ knowledge and skills related to planning and delivering instructional supports and service for students with disabilities. In addition to their field work, candidates meet on campus with their University coach to further their knowledge and development related to the focus of this field experience. The designated mentor and University coach will conduct performance assessments of the candidate during this experience.
1
Prerequisites
2.75 GPA; Consent of Education Advisor
This course explores the similarities and differences in human development and the characteristics between and among individuals with and without ELN (exceptional learning needs). Pre-service candidates will understand how exceptional conditions can impact an individual's learning and behavior including the impact on their families. An understanding of these learning differences and their possible interactions provide the foundation upon which individualized instruction is designed to provide meaningful and challenging learning for individuals with ELN.
3
Assistive Technology (AT) hardware and software supports students with disabilities to improve their learning skills in the general education curriculum. This course will provide opportunities to learn about various assistive technologies and strategies to enhance the learning success of all students. Candidates will engage in identifying students’ academic needs, facilitating their learning with AT devices and assessing their achievements. Candidates will design, develop, implement and evaluate AT projects for students with a variety of learning needs.
1
This course is designed to explore the goals of multicultural education and aid candidates in developing their own understanding of teaching from a multicultural perspective. Candidates also acquire an understanding of the importance and process of linking home, neighborhood and community contexts to school and classroom contexts in an effort to promote a bias free learning environment.
1
Prerequisites
2.75 GPA; Consent of Education Advisor
This course provides an overview of classroom and behavior management theories and strategies. The course emphasizes the knowledge and skills needed to create effective behavior management and intervention projects for students, especially those with behavior problems. Emphasis will be on use of positive behavior support systems. Candidates will examine behavioral principles, procedures and assessment methods necessary for effective programming and are expected to apply skills developed in the course by developing both a classroom management and behavior intervention project to avoid or overcome communication roadblocks and improve a student's problem behavior. Through case analysis, role-playing, cooperative learning, use of technology and field experience, candidates will learn how to apply principles of classroom management to actual teaching situations.
2
This course engages participants in the development of curriculum, instruction and assessment for students with disabilities in literature, social studies, mathematics and science classes at the middle and secondary levels. Participants will gain both a theoretical and practical skill-set in research-based strategies that are demonstrated to support the learning of students with disabilities in core content areas. A universal design for learning framework will be used to guide participants in designing curriculum and instruction that is accessible and effective for all learners. Candidates will develop skills that will allow them to integrate curriculum across subject areas, create effective instructional interventions and effectively collaborate with other professionals providing academic and behavioral support to students with individual learning needs.
3
This course is designed to prepare
teachers to support students with disabilities who have high support needs in
their transitions throughout the school system, with an emphasis on transition
from high school to post-school adult life. Participants will learn about
the laws that shape transition services, the fundamentals involved in
transition planning, the development of written transition plans, resources
necessary to affect smooth transitions and current issues and best
practices. Emphasis will be placed on student and family involvement in
transition planning, team planning, preparatory curricula, inter-agency
coordination, community resources, advocacy and systems change
strategies. In addition this course will focus on how to design,
implement and evaluate effective teaching and learning experiences for
students with high support needs from an inclusive education stance.
Content will focus on using varied assessment measures, developing daily and
weekly schedules, planning and implementing systematic instruction from a
universal design perspective, evaluating student learning, facilitating
inclusive education and teaching academic and social skills along with other
life domain skill areas (community, recreation/leisure and vocational).
3
Prerequisites
2.75 GPA; Consent of Education Advisor
This course focuses on the development of science and wellness methods and instructional strategies for P-12 students. The course emphasizes how to develop science concepts, use problem-solving strategies and create or use appropriate materials. Current issues in science education, NSTA Standards, CEC Standards and the Illinois Learning Standards are explored. Methods of differentiating instruction and assessment to meet the individual needs of students are also examined.
3
This course focuses on the
development of mathematics methods and instructional strategies for P-12
students. The course emphasizes how to
develop mathematical concepts, use problem-solving strategies and create or
use appropriate materials. Current
issues in mathematics education, NCTM Standards, CEC Standards and the
Illinois Learning Standards are explored. Methods of differentiating
instruction and assessment to meet the needs of all students including ELL,
struggling learners and already proficient learners are included. The candidate will learn how to create or use
mathematics manipulatives, literature books and technology to teach these
concepts. Candidates will be evaluated
on their ability to successfully plan and implement strategies taught in this
course.
3
This course addresses theory- and research-based practices for developing disciplinary literacy and implementing effective reading and language arts instruction across the content areas. Of particular emphasis is the role of reading, writing, listening, speaking and visual representation in student learning across the curriculum. Effective practices for teaching and supporting student writing, reading comprehension and verbal and visual expression and interpretation will be explored with a wide range of informational texts and media.
3
This course focuses on research-based instructional strategies, technology, resources, national (NCSS) curriculum standards, Illinois State Standards and Common Core Standards. The emphasis of this course is on understanding and using the interrelationships among history, geography, economics, politics, sociology, anthropology, psychology and archeology to develop in students an appreciation and responsibility toward citizenship, multiculturalism and a democratic society. In addition, this course includes planning and organizing for instruction, material selection and evaluation in social studies and multicultural education. Methods of differentiating instruction and assessment to meet the individual needs of all students.
3
This course is designed to provide pre-service teacher candidates with the knowledge, skills and foundational underpinnings that are required to identify and instruct exceptional learners in inclusive classroom settings, including students identified as having learning disabilities, emotional-behavioral challenges and/or other disability support needs as described in the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act. Course content and assessments will focus on the characteristics of exceptional learners, the processes for identifying exceptional learners for appropriate services, collaboration with parents and professional colleagues and research-based approaches for designing inclusive classroom settings and instructional/behavioral/assessment strategies and supports for exceptional learners. This course includes a five-hour field experience.
3
This course introduces teacher candidates to the assessment of students who may be or already are identified as eligible for special education supports and services. The course content addresses both formal and informal assessment tools and their administration and interpretation as related to classroom needs. Candidates learn about standardized assessments, multi-tiered systems of support (MTSS), curriculum-based assessment and measurement, task analysis, functional behavior assessment, and how to generate teacher-designed tests. Candidates will design formative and summative assessments as well as have the opportunity to interpret educational assessment findings and summarize the results for an educational assessment report.
3
This course is designed to provide participants
with the knowledge and skills needed to build and maintain meaningful
collaborative partnerships for inclusive education. Participants will
gain an understanding of family and community systems, as well as learn methods
for building and sustaining partnerships and trust with these critical
stakeholders. Course topics will also include theories and strategies for
effective co-teaching relationships and other collaborative endeavors focused
on providing inclusion education for all students.
1
This course is designed for intensive investigation and/or study of special education law and policy. Since the passage of the Education of All Handicapped Children Act of 1975 (94-142), and its reauthorization, IDEA 1990, 1994 and 1997, the rights of students with disabilities have expanded. LEA's, SEA's and parents have frequently been in conflict over these rights. To provide effective educational leadership in a complex society, the professional must understand what the law requires; understand how to exercise wisely the discretion of the law and understand how legal disputes can be shaped to advance policy objectives.
1
This course provides an introduction to Autism, one of thirteen special education eligibility categories defined in the Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act. Participants will gain an understanding about the IDEIA definition of autism, how students are determined eligible for supports and services under this categorical label, and, in general, what those supports and services can look like in practice. The information will be shared from a strengths-based non-medicalized disability studies stance.
1
This course explores curriculum design using Understanding by Design (UbD), Differentiated Instruction (DI), and Universal Design for Learning (UDL). UbD addresses the need for content standards and answers the question: "what do we teach and why". DI looks at the how and where we teach our students, focusing on the best practices for each learner. Languages, culture, gender, economic disparity, motivation, disability, personal interests and learning styles as well as home environments are explored. UDL is a learning theory that strives to ensure that the learning environment, including curriculum, assessment and teaching and learning tools promote learning and remove barriers to learning.
3