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    Oct 15, 2024  
2017 - 2018 Catalog of Courses 
    
2017 - 2018 Catalog of Courses [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Graduate Teacher Education Programs


Dean of School of Education: Richard Fulton
Email: fulton_r@fortlewis.edu
 
 Associate Dean and Professor: Kristine Greer
Associate Professors: Chiara Cannella, Elizabeth Dorman, Richard Fulton, and Suzanne Null
Assistant Professors: Jill Choate, Di Ann Ryter, Lorien I Chambers Schuldt, and Kay Phelps

Fort Lewis College has been meeting regional needs for professional educator preparation and development for more than 100 years. The graduate Teacher Education programs, which complement our undergraduate preparation and licensure programs, continue this tradition.

The Master of Arts in Education: Teacher Leadership  is a two-year program with significant development in the fundamentals of action research, as well as the critical Teacher Leader competencies included in the Teacher Leadership Certificate .  These competencies are in technology, culturally responsive teaching, assessment, instructional coaching, differential instruction, and leadership.  The master’s degree culminating research project prepares students to design data-based improvements in the practices and policies in their programs, buildings, or districts.  The Teacher Leadership degree and certificate were designed to align with the Teacher Leadership Model Standards and developed in collaboration with teacher leaders, principals, and superintendents in area schools.  Students are admitted into the programs in cohorts, every other year, on the odd year (e.g., 2017, 2019, 2021). The programs are taught year-round in the fall, spring, and summer semesters. To meet the needs of working adults, the programs are designed so students can attend half-time. Courses are taught in a hybrid format, with on-campus class sessions complemented by learning activities using a learning management system.

The Master of Arts in Education: Teacher Licensure  is a two-year program that provides the courses and experiences necessary to apply for a Colorado teaching licensure and develop the knowledge and skills to excel in their chosen area of expertise.  The first semester of the first year will include exposure to a variety of diverse field placements (e.g. middle school, high school, charter schools, Title I, culturally diverse schools in the Four Corners region). The second semester of the first year will be full-time in one school setting that best fits the student’s career interests.  The second year of the program will focus on supporting candidates in their first year of full-time teaching and developing an action research project, which is the hallmark competency of a graduate-trained educator. Students are admitted into the Teacher Licensure program in cohorts, each Fall.  This program is taught year-round in the fall, spring, and summer semesters. Students are expected to be full-time students during the first year of attendance, but will be able to complete the second year while attending half-time.

Departmental Policies

Academic Progress Standards

To be eligible to continue in a graduate Teacher Education program, students must meet the cumulative grade point average and cumulative pace standards that apply to all Graduate Studies programs as well as qualitative standards established by the department. Department faculty may refer a student to the Graduate Professional Education Review Committee for failing to act in a professional and ethical manner; failure to follow an academic plan; or failure to make satisfactory progress on a summative portfolio or research project. The most serious outcome of this review process would be a department petition to the Post-Baccalaureate and Graduate Academic Standards Committee for a student to be academically disqualified.

Access to School Setting

Students must have access to a P-12 school setting to achieve course and program learning outcomes in a graduate Teacher Education program.  .

Applicants to the Master of Arts in Education: Teacher Licensure program must furnish background check information and a properly completed and readable set of fingerprints. State and National background checks use files of the Colorado and Federal Bureau of Investigation. To continue in the program, students will be subsequently required to establish research access to a school setting, as described below.

Applicants to the Master of Arts in Education: Teacher Leadership and Teacher Leadership Certificate programs are required to establish research access to a school setting as part of the admission process. This access must be re-established prior to the beginning of each fall and spring semester by completing a form available on the department website and submitting it to the Graduate Program Manager. Degree-seeking-students who cannot establish access to a school setting will not be eligible to take coursework that semester. This policy also applies to non-degree-seeking students enrolled in any course required in the Teacher Leadership programs.

Continuous Registration

Students in a graduate Teacher Education program are required to be continuously enrolled in the fall, spring, and summer semesters from their semester of matriculation to their semester of graduation. Students who fail to continuously enroll may be required to seek re-admission to the program and join a new cohort.

Graduate Research Mentor

Master’s degree students are assigned a Graduate Research Mentor in addition to an academic advisor. The Graduate Research Mentor will advise the student on the completion of the Teacher Leadership Culminating Research Project or Teacher Licensure Capstone Project.  The faculty member who will serve as a student’s Graduate Research Mentor will be selected after clarification of the student’s research interest in ED 600 .

Technology Requirements

Students who do not use a campus computer lab to complete their work will need to have access to their own computer and Internet Service Provider. High-speed access is recommended, as there may be files or online programs that will not work well on a dial-up connection. Technology requirements are subject to change and may differ depending on the course. Students are responsible for reviewing the technology requirements on the department website and on each course syllabus.Students are responsible for reviewing the technology requirements on the department website and on each course syllabus.

Graduate Teacher Education Programs