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COLLEGE OF EDUCATION Fall 2010 THE Blackboard THE Blackboard COLLEGE OF EDUCATION College dedicates center honoring Michael, Jane Sullivan A state-of-the-art student center located within the College of Education named in honor of former U.S. Ambassador and Wyoming Gov. Mike Sullivan, his wife Jane, and the Sullivan family was formally dedicated in January. “The Sullivan family has been a good friend of the University of Wyoming for many years, and I’m very pleased that this new student center honors their many contributions,” says UW President Tom Buchanan. “It reflects well upon the commitment of the Sullivans to UW and the education of our students. And it is one of the most visually appealing locations we have on campus. Our students will enjoy it tremendously.” The Sullivan Family Student Center will serve as a hub for student activities and is a further renovation and improvement to the UW College of Education Annex that was remodeled in recent years in order to accommodate the development of technologically enhanced model classrooms. The center was created by a gift from Mickey and Jeanne Klein of Austin, Texas, who are friends of UW and of the Sullivans. This gift was doubled by the Wyoming Legislature’s state matching program. “The College of Education is delighted to dedicate this unique space for education students to gather in honor of the Sullivan family,” says Dean Kay Persichitte. “The Sullivan Family Student Center is a one-of-a-kind architectural and artistic wonder. Education students and the university community are grateful for the generosity of the donors and proud of this student center. The legacy of the Sullivan family in supporting the College of Education at UW runs very deep and is greatly appreciated.” The Sullivan family has made tremendous contributions to the university and the future of education in Wyoming. For example, through his office, Gov. Sullivan has had a great impact. His grandfather, father, and uncle all served on the university Board of Trustees. Debra Beck, editor College of Education Dept. 3374 1000 E. University Ave. Laramie, WY 82071 e-mail: [email protected] ed.uwyo.edu continued p. 2 Donors Mickey and Jeanne Klein (first and second from left) and honorees Jane and Michael Sullivan take a break during the January dedication of the Sullivan Family Student Center. Thanks to the Kleins’ generosity, College of Education students now have a comfortable, convenient place to meet and study between classes.

description

Electronic version of spring 2011 edition of University of Wyoming College of Education newsletter for alumni and friends, The Blackboard

Transcript of Spring 2011 Blackboard

Page 1: Spring 2011 Blackboard

COLLEGE OF EDUCATION Fall 2010

THE

BlackboardTHE

BlackboardCollege of eduCation

College dedicates center honoringMichael, Jane Sullivan

A state-of-the-art student center located within the College of Education named in honor of former U.S. Ambassador and Wyoming Gov. Mike

Sullivan, his wife Jane, and the Sullivan family was formally dedicated in January. “The Sullivan family has been a good friend of the University of Wyoming for many years, and I’m very pleased that this new student center honors their many contributions,” says UW President Tom Buchanan. “It reflects well upon the commitment of the Sullivans to UW and the education of our students. And it is one of the most visually appealing locations we have on campus. Our students will enjoy it tremendously.” The Sullivan Family Student Center will serve as a hub for student activities and is a further renovation and improvement to the UW College of Education Annex that was remodeled in recent years in order to accommodate the development of technologically enhanced model classrooms. The center was created by a gift from Mickey and Jeanne Klein of Austin, Texas, who are friends of UW and of the Sullivans. This gift was doubled by the Wyoming Legislature’s state matching program. “The College of Education is delighted to dedicate this unique space for education students to gather in honor of the Sullivan family,” says Dean Kay Persichitte. “The Sullivan Family Student Center is a one-of-a-kind architectural and artistic wonder. Education students and the university community are grateful for the generosity of the donors and proud of this student center. The legacy of the Sullivan family in supporting the College of Education at UW runs very deep and is greatly appreciated.” The Sullivan family has made tremendous contributions to the university and the future of education in Wyoming. For example, through his office, Gov. Sullivan has had a great impact. His grandfather, father, and uncle all served on the university Board of Trustees.

Debra Beck, editorCollege of Education

Dept. 33741000 E. University Ave.

Laramie, WY 82071e-mail: [email protected]

ed.uwyo.edu

continued p. 2

Donors Mickey and Jeanne Klein (first and second from left) and h o n o r e e s J a n e a n d M i c h a e l Sullivan take a break during the January dedication of the Sullivan Family Student Center. Thanks to the Kleins’ generosity, College of Education students now have a comfortable, convenient place to meet and study between classes.

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Dean Kay Persichitte

Rising to the challenges for studentsBy Dean Kay Persichitte

“Jane and I are thrilled with the opportunity to be involved with the University of Wyoming  and the  College of Education in enhancing the educational environment at the campus in Laramie,” says Gov. Sullivan. “The Sullivan Family Student Center represents a family legacy of four generations of association with, and education by, one of Wyoming’s most important and beloved institutions. We are deeply honored and particularly grateful for the friendship and generosity of Jeanne and Mickey Klein who have made this remarkable space possible. Nothing is more important to the future of the state of Wyoming than educating its young people,  and we are  confident this center will  contribute to that mission for many generations to come.” Speaking at the dedication ceremony were UW President Tom Buchanan; College of Education Dean Kay Persichitte; Paul Lewis, partner in the firm of Lewis.Tsurumaki.Lewis Architects; and Mike and Jane Sullivan. The recent renovation has created a cultural hub for the College of Education - a comfortable gathering place where students can meet, hold informal study groups, and receive important announcements. “On many occasions, contributors want to focus their giving to honor individuals they greatly admire,” says Ben Blalock, president of the UW Foundation. “Such is the case in the Klein’s recognition of the Sullivans. Wyoming’s university is the fortunate beneficiary of the special relationship these couples enjoy.” The gathering space is enclosed by bamboo millwork feature walls and a two-story white raised-relief map of the state of Wyoming. It is furnished with round tables and cherry red modern seating. Ceiling lighting combines naturalistic sinuous fixtures with geometric yellow and orange shades and an exhibition of historic photos line the walls. These elements combine to create a unique space, one of the most visually appealing on campus. The center was designed by Lewis.Tsurumaki.Lewis (LTL Architects), an award-winning architecture firm led by partners Paul Lewis, Marc Tsurumaki and David J. Lewis. The New York-based firm engages in a diverse range of work-from large-scale academic and cultural buildings to interiors and speculative research projects-and has completed academic, institutional, residential and hospitality projects throughout the United States. LTL Architects received the 2007 National Design Award for Interior Design from the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum and was selected as one of six American architectural firms featured in the U.S. Pavilion at the 2004 Venice Architecture Biennale. Their work is in the permanent collections of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and the Heinz Architectural Center at the Carnegie Museum of Art. The building contractor was Elk Ridge Builders & Design of Laramie.

Center dedication from p. 1

Dear Faculty, Staff, and Friends of the College, To say i t has been a challenging year for all who work in “education” would be an understatement. We have been besieged by one report after another that minimizes the contributions of teachers, administrators, and other school personnel at every level. The list of criticisms seems unending. I will argue that the majority of those casting stones were, themselves, educated by the current teaching force with reasonably solid outcomes if public profile is any measure of the quality of their education. Such arguments waste our time, though…and time is our most valuable commodity when it comes to assuring that every student in every classroom at every level of our educational system has access to a quality education. We believe that our work in preparing new personnel for schools is essential to both the economic and the political health of Wyoming communities and this nation. Our communities cannot flourish without productive citizens and our nation cannot flourish without deep commitment to basic democratic principles by all who work in “education.” Neither is possible when our children are not deeply and broadly educated. We believe that the work of teaching and learning is largely a social construct so we must focus on helping College of Education graduates know how to build relationships with broadly diverse students and communities and to understand why they must do so if students are to learn. This, of course, cannot happen without the primary foundation of knowing the specific content that must be learned and how to teach it. We have initiated significant discussions this year about the next steps we will take to strengthen the preparation of our preservice teachers. There is a renewed focus on how we are supporting and measuring the final developmental stage of our preservice teachers: student teaching. Our participation with 20 other states in a national pilot of the Teacher Performance Assessment

continued p. 3

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(TPA) shines the light on both novice teaching practice and student learning. This is a great opportunity for us to use TPA data for the formative assessment of our student teachers and to document the effect of these student teachers on the learning of their students. The TPA model requires significant partnership with the mentor teachers in our public schools and leverages their practitioner expertise with the contemporary theoretical and research expertise of my faculty. We believe that great outcomes for our children are possible when high expectations are set and met for teachers and students. We have undertaken serious discussions about specific strategies to strengthen our graduate programs, as well. Our graduate programs run the gamut from specialty endorsements that augment an initial teaching license to master’s and doctoral degree programs that prepare the next generation of community college and university faculty. We are talking about the purpose of each of our graduate programs, the target audiences, and the expected performance outcomes for each. Discussions are robust about research “on schools” versus research on “teaching and learning.” We believe we have a responsibility to contribute to the professional development of all practitioners in Wyoming and our graduate programs are one element of that effort. Expect to see some programmatic changes next year and in 2012-13 across undergraduate and graduate programs in the college as we challenge each other to improve the learning and performance of our students. John Dewey said, “It requires troublesome work to undertake the alteration of old beliefs.” Some have argued that we are in the midst of a “sea change” for public education. If that is the case, there are a multitude of old beliefs about the UW College of Education that must be altered. Regardless, I’ll close this note to you all by saying that the UW College of Education is a healthy and proactive place. We are perpetually in a state of reflection to identify strengths, weaknesses, and implement strategies to bridge the gaps. The faculty, staff, and students in this college acknowledge the challenges of public education in the 21st century but they rise to the challenge again and again. We wish you and yours a wonderful Wyoming spring and summer!

Challenges for students from p. 2

Though the University of Wyoming College of Education has long offered play courses and training

opportunities for graduate students and mental health practitioners, recent recognition by a national accrediting body is raising visibility – and expectations - for the new Rocky Mountain Center of Play Therapy Studies. The Association for Play Therapy (APT) has awarded “Approved Center of Play Therapy Education” status to UW’s program, housed in the College of Education’s Department of Professional Studies. Kara Carnes-Holt, assistant professor of counselor education, will serve as the center’s first director when it opens in May. UW is now one of only 14 approved play therapy centers in the country. Faculty members in UW’s counselor education graduate programs have offered two required courses in play therapy for several years. They also coordinate the biennial Wyoming Institute for Play Therapy, a summer workshop focused on training mental health providers with information and skills. Achieving “approved” status through the APT was a logical next step, according to Carnes-Holt. “To be an approved center of play therapy education takes it to another level,” she says. “It sends a clear message that this is an aspect of the counselor education program that we’re really committed to – in research, in training, in supervision.” Centers receiving the APT designation must commit to a rigorous schedule of offering required coursework in play therapy, professional development programs for mental health practitioners, and a strong tradition of research and publication. Many of the core elements already are in place. For example, UW’s counselor education graduate programs require that all students take two courses, “Introduction to Play Therapy” and “Counseling Children and Adolescents,” that are electives in other counseling programs. The Wyoming Institute for Play Therapy represents another foundational component of programming required for APT center status. It provides an opportunity for accessible professional development on play therapy for practitioners from a wide range of disciplines that serve children. The work of the Rocky Mountain Center of Play Therapy Studies enjoys external support from the John P. Ellbogen Excellence in Early Childhood Education Fund. Carnes-Holt credits fellow counselor education faculty member Michael Morgan for his work in creating and sustaining those core elements of the play

continued p.19

New play therapy center receives national group approval

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Research exploring the impacts of skyrocketing enrollments of English language learners (ELLs) in

Wyoming schools on teacher capacity to address student needs appropriately recently received a major financial boost from the 2010-12 Mary Ellbogen Garland Early Career Fellowship. Jenna Shim, an assistant professor in the UW Department of Educational Studies, is the latest recipient of the fellowship, funded by an endowment established by Garland’s father, Jack Ellbogen, in 2000. Jack Ellbogen created the fellowship in honor of his daughter’s commitment to community service and philanthropy. Shim has begun multi-year research in select Wyoming school districts, to describe how teachers are coping with recent surges of ELLs in their classrooms. Recent reports showing that Wyoming has the fastest-growing population of English language learners in the nation add to the intensity of the need for this work. The National Center for Educational Statistics showed that the number of ELL population in the state of Wyoming has more than doubled in the decade between 1995-2005 (NCES, 2006), which made the state of Wyoming one of the states in the nation with the greatest ELL student population growth between those years. This trend continues to persist.

Research on English language learners receives Garland Fellowship support “When I came here, I saw a great need for teachers to be able to address the needs of English language learners,” Shim says. “The number of English language learners in the state is dramatically increasing, whereas the population of teachers remains predominantly homogeneous. Most English language learning students and their teachers live in different worlds, and teachers do not fully understand or appreciate their students’ experiential realities.” Where ELL population sizes once allowed a district to dedicate English as a second language (ESL)-certified teachers to provide additional academic support for non-native speakers, the recent growth now means that most teachers are, or will be, interacting with this student group. “Working with English language learners is no longer a choice for teachers,” Shim says. “All teachers are going to have them in their classrooms. All teachers must be equipped or educated to be able to work with ELLs, because it’s not a limited population.” A major focus of Shim’s research will be exploring teachers’ perceptions about teaching ELL learners and comparing them with their classroom activity. “Teachers’ beliefs and assumptions directly influence their practices,” she says. “In this research, I want to start out by investigating mainstream teachers’ understanding of the needs of the ELL population in Wyoming. I also want

Jenna Shim (left) discusses her research on English language learners with Mary Garland. Shim is the 2010-12 recipient of the college’s Mary Ellbogen Garland Early Career Fellowship. Mary’s father, John P. Ellbogen, established the fund in honor of his daughter’s commitment to community service and philanthropy.

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to contribute to uncover how these teachers are actually responding pedagogically, culturally, linguistically and socially to the needs of ELL students.” Shim’s research will take her to classrooms around the state, where she will interview teachers and observe classroom interactions. Garland Fellowship funding will support Shim’s data collection trips around the state. “The fellowship provides a great opportunity to secure the resources I need to travel to rural school districts – like Jackson, Rawlins, Casper and Gillette – so that I can work with the teachers and observe classrooms,” Shim says. “This award will allow me to do the work that I think is needed in the state right now.” Beyond identifying gaps between teachers’ articulated beliefs and instructional practices, Shim also hopes to bring what is learned back to the classrooms to “be able to work with teachers to develop more responsive pedagogy that would help ELLs succeed in schools and beyond.” Jenna has a basic framework entering this project but knows that, like any qualitative research, what she discovers in the field may yield new or different directions to explore. “You begin with these understandings and these theories, then you go into a classroom and realize that there are all of these unanticipated issues and questions that need to be addressed and answered,” Shim says. As an instructor of preservice teachers, Shim will be able to share findings with future educators and enhance her ongoing efforts to help prepare them for the multicultural mix of students they will encounter in their classrooms. In the process, she hopes to add new layers of understanding about the need to address the diverse needs of the children they will teach and equip them with additional tools to help those students succeed. “The question isn’t just about how you teach words in English, it’s about what kind of changes should be made to deep educational structures and assumptions so that they (ELLs) can be successful academically and socially,” Shim says. Jenna will draw upon her findings in another role: as the coordinator of UW’s English as a Second Language Endorsement Program. One potential question to explore, in the current research or the next phase of Shim’s academic work: how completion of the ESL certification impacts teachers’ classroom strategies and interactions. A comparison between ESL program graduates and teachers who have not completed the program also is likely. Shim brings multiple layers to this research and to her approach to teaching undergraduates at UW. One of those layers draws upon her experiences as an English language learner. Jenna moved to California at age 10 with her parents from Korea. Her father is Korean; her mother is half Korean and half Japanese. Shim has experienced the same kinds of assimilation difficulties that many ELL students encounter. Not only is it impossible to separate her background from her scholarly activity, it also helps her to discuss the challenges English language learners face in a different way with her College of Education students.

Garland Fellowship from p.4

Four educators will represent the Wyoming School-University Partnership at the July 18-21 National

Network for Educational Renewal summer symposium. They include Emma Chaput, assistant professor of biology at Western Wyoming Community College; Ana Houseal, outreach science educator with the UW Science and Mathematics Teaching Center; Cammy Rowley, Casper College education and early childhood instructor; and Victoria Simpson, College of Education literacy education doctoral student. This year’s group is distinguished by two community college faculty, one in teacher education and the other in arts and science. A distinct feature of the symposium is that planners honor the NNER’s tripartite mission by inviting a mix of arts and sciences, K-12, and teacher education participants. The Wyoming contingent will join about 25 others from NNER settings across the nation for intense study about the NNER’s Agenda for Education in a Democracy, cross-level discussions, and a “democracy walk,” a kind of focused ethnography conducted by small groups. Convened in Seattle, the week-long symposium is under the guidance of Ann Foster, executive director of the NNER, along with members of the NNER’s Governing Council. According to Foster, the symposium is central

Partnership sends four to 2011 NNER Symposium

continued p 9

Francisco Rios and Page Fenton Hughes take a break during the 2010 NNER Summer Symposium. (Photo courtesy of Paige Fenton Hughes)

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Jennifer Heater - Hoffman Scholarship

Staci Reed & Alysha Warner - Hilton Scholarship

T he College of Education awarded $232,654 to 140 undergraduate

and graduate students for the 2010-11 academic year and honored them at a fall banquet. Following is the list of recipients for each scholarship.

Undergraduate Scholarships

Grace Thorson Brown Scholarship Kimberly BockLindy Watt

Martha “Marty” Brown Scholarship Cheryl Kilgore

Mark Carson Trust Jared BoardmanTenae Mascarenas

Edna Pendleton Cash Scholarship John Volpe

Charlotte Cossairt Scholarship Jessica Wilhelmsen

Mary M. & David H. Crum Scholarship Troy CorsonElizabeth Fauber

Virginia Davis Scholarship Leroy Wilson

Delta Kappa Gamma Upsilon Chapter Recruitment Grant

Whitney SturmanJames Durkee Scholarship

Megan DirksBrice McIntosh

College of Education Scholarship Brian EardleyRyan “Levi” Wille

Leah and Ken Griffin ScholarshipChad GibbsMadison Wilkes

Frank R. and Dorothy M. Gruden Scholarship in Education for Sophomores

John ScottFrank R. and Dorothy M. Gruden Scholarship in Education for Juniors

Emily DambyFrank R. and Dorothy M. Gruden Scholarship in Education for Seniors

Wendy BoardmanJessie Mae Halsted Scholarship

Cori ApplehansOla A. Hammond Scholarship

Katharina Bohr-BureshErnest and Helen Hilton Scholarship

Staci ReedJamie SummersAlysha Warner

Suzanne P. Hoffman Memorial Scholarship

Jennifer HeaterHonor a Teacher Scholarship

Jessica ChandlerDalli CrossSydney FancherAmanda Fay

Rachel KeyesAlexis LunbergKathryn SlothowerCinnamon SmithJacob TolhurstPayton Vigil

James and Dorothy Hook Scholarship Amy Irish

Mildred Petrie Scholarship Jill CurryAngela HernandezPaul Lincoln Alicia RuetzChanda Spears

Margaret Smith Powell Scholarship Travis HounshellReeves Family Scholarship Mikaela Morgan

Mary Mead Steinhour Scholarship Michael Thomas

Paul Stock Foundation Scholarship in Education

Jacob StutheitJade Stutheit

Jane and Michael J. Sullivan Wyoming Teacher’s Scholarship

Sarah CollinsSusannah MalarkeyJosie PaisleyWhitney Wilking

Superior Student in Education Scholarship

Jamie MyersStaci Reed

Gordon and Reta Mae Tate Scholarship Shannon Brooks

Janice Thiel Scholarship Albert Stickert

George and Grace Shively Tupper Scholarship

Adelle SimonAltamae Wynecoop Van Sant Merit Scholarship

Whitney MillsLinda and Ron Vosika Scholarship

Kaydee OveryLaurence and Mathilda Walker Scholarship

Lisa SmithLura O. Wirick Scholarship

Amber Barrett

College awards scholarships to 140 students

Sean McGrathSonalva McIntoshJackie Westover

Wendy C. Jacobson Scholarship Lara Basye

Kilzer Memorial Scholarship Cheryl Kilgore

Orla V. Lamb Scholarship Sharon DeWittJessica McClure

Everett Lantz Scholarship Julianne Blaha

The Ruth Linder Scholarship Mark Fleming

Emma Jean Mader Scholarship Lonna Holt

Robert and Jacqueline Malonek Scholarship in Education

Tina AlvarezJessica BurkeKelsey GiesenhagenKatelyn HargroveShawna MandrosThomas MilliganBryce Strampe

Josephine J. McCue Scholarship

Cyera CollensJared Krysl

Keiji G. and Shirley S. Okano Memorial Scholarship

Emilee ScholtzBryce Cushman

Harriet Knight Orr Scholarship

Kaleb Brinkerhoff

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James Zancanella Scholarship Tyler Lay

Graduate Scholarships and Awards

Clarence Jayne Scholarship Jacquelyn Walker

Patricia B. Ferris-Hawley Scholarship Amanda AnnisAnnemari BradinHauva Manookin

Evelyn Milam Scholarship Sara IselinHolly LeonardKatrina Romine

Lyle Miller Scholarship Guilherme Zavaschi

Arden White Scholarship Carrie Corrigan-MakiDustin GiesenhagenChristina Prypchan

Russell I. Hammond Scholarship Ahmed Al-Asfour

Maurice Wear Scholarship Carrie Ellison

Ivan Willey Scholarship Nicole Rapp

Rex R. Anderson and Florence Vedder Anderson Memorial Scholarship in the Science and Mathematics Teaching Center

Emmy CoxbillMary Beth CripsJulia FaulknerPamela FrazierDave HunzieJakub KocyanJamie LitvinoffDax McCartyLee McCoyKelli PedersonJoe PriceTheresa ProduitSarah Ramsey-WaltersPaula RichardsElizabeth Smith Jefferson “David” StacyVictoria Winters

Elizabeth Horsch Endowment Scholarship

Katie BerryTimothy BrownMegan Holland

Sigrid See Endowment Scholarship Michael AagardMaryellen AmenChristina Bekken

Maggie BellShauna BrucknerTamika DavisRebecca FavingerMatthew GordonTodd HickmanKory HokansonRobert ReeceWendy SmithAngie Varca

Elnora Brooks Memorial Scholarship Hailey Ellingham

Margaret “Peggy” Cooney Scholarship Nikki Baldwin

Rotary District 5440 Literacy Scholarship Darla BusboomTheresa Logsdon

Other Scholarships and Awards

Leona and Jeanette Heptner Scholarship Nikki BaldwinMichael BishopHoi Yuen ChanChristie FritzCheryl GipfertTroy KavanaghHauva ManookinMayra MendozaKatrina RomineKera Wenzel

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Lindy Watt - Grace Brown Scholarship

Cheryl Kilgore - Marty Brown Scholarship (with Sarah Brown) Dustin Giesenhagen - White Scholarship

Alexis Lunberg, Rachel Keyes, Jessica Chandler,Payton Vigil & Kathryn Slothower

- Honor a Teacher Scholarship

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UW College of Education & Unit Program Completers 2004-10

Program Name 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10

Art Education (K-12) 11 4 4 2 8 4

Early Childhood [Birth - 5] Add-On Endorsement

Initial program start

2 4

8 10 11

Early Childhood [Birth - 8] Add-On Endorsement 7 13 26 6 6 3

Early Childhood Special Education Add-On Endorsement 2 3 6 13 20 11

Elementary Education 154 175 150 131 138 139

English as a Second Language Add-On Endorsement 30 28 25 23 14 18

Music Education 12 9 10 15 13 10

Middle Grades Mathematics Add-On Endorsement*

[enrolled (MSNS degrees completed)]

16 19 13 (2) 2 1 9

Middle Grades Science Add-On Endorsement*

[enrolled (MSNS degrees completed)]

18 (5) 16 (1) 17 (1) 6 9 5

Teachers of American Indian Children Add-On Endorsement (first completers 2008-09)

N/A N/A N/A N/A 3 6

Certification of Literacy leading to a Wyoming Reading Add-On Endorsement

11 22 17 16 13 5

School Counseling – Master’s 12 5 0 1 0 0

School Principal – Endorsement 16 17 11 18 17 19

School Principal – Master’s 10 7 5 25 9 7

Secondary Agricultural Education 5 6 4 2 5 3

Secondary English Education 14 13 6 18 17 8

Secondary Mathematics Education 12 15 14 18 19 19

Secondary Modern Languages Education (Total) 2 5 3 0 3 1

French 0 0 1 0 0 0

German 0 0 0 0 0 0

Spanish 2 5 2 0 3 1

Secondary Science Education (Total) 8 6 8 18 6 12

Biology 5 4 5 11 4 9

Chemistry 2 1 1 7 0 1

Earth/Space Science 1 1 1 0 2 2

Physics 0 0 1 0 0 0

Secondary Social Studies Education 29 26 18 25 23 28

Secondary Technical Education

(Cohorts begin every other year, therefore the majority of graduates are after completion of the second year)

1

(exception granted)

3 0 6 1 7

Special Education - Bachelor’s

(program sunsetted effective fall 2006)

24 10 10 1 0 0

Special Education - Master’s 5 3 5 22 15 15

Superintendent – Doctoral 2 4 0 9 2 6

Curriculum & Instruction Option - Master’s 11 18 13 18 20 29

Curriculum & Instruction Option – Ph.D. & Ed.D. 6 9 3 4 4 3

*enrollment numbers are not mutually exclusive across academic years

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Supported by a $10,000 gift from the Qwest Foundation, the Wyoming School-University   Partnership is deepening

and broadening its statewide Lost in Transition initiative. The initiative focuses on the five Hathaway Success curriculum areas: English/language arts, life sciences, mathematics, social studies, and world languages, and specific ways to improve success as students make the difficult jump from high school to college- and university-level work. To do that, the Partnership brings together faculty from high school, community college, and university levels to examine student work, share learning expectations, and better understand how students can succeed. One goal of each meeting is to create an even playing field for candid sharing and important professional relationship-building. Faculty from three content areas have met so far this winter and spring:  mathematics, life sciences, and English/language arts.

Mathematics, Riverton During a working dinner followed by an intense morning, nearly 60 mathematics faculty representing all three levels focused on college algebra, a course offered by faculty at each level.  High school faculty were taken aback by the different approaches to teaching the course, starting with class size and level of student responsibility.  Bernie Schnorenberg, mathematics consultant for the Wyoming Department of Education, helped the group understand implications and challenges of the recently adopted Common Core Standards for Mathematics.

Life Sciences, Douglas Meeting for the sixth time, 47 life sciences faculty focused on higher level thinking skills, guided by Bloom’s taxonomy.  Faculty brought examples of assignments for small group work focused on assessment. Over the

Wyoming School – University partnership hosts Lost in Transition meetings

coming year, the group plans to communicate and collaborate, reporting out successes and challenges. The group’s next meeting is already on the calendar: Feb. 23, 2012.

Teaching Writing in Wyoming, Casper Undeterred by a late winter snow storm and treacherous roads, 40 faculty (about two-thirds of the registrants) convened in Casper for a Sunday working dinner at the Firerock Steakhouse and all-day Monday meeting. Brent Pickett, UW-Casper College Center associate dean, led a dinner discussion about civility. The next day, participants focused on examples of student writing that illustrate higher order thinking skills. Participants also spent some time understanding the Common Core Curriculum for English/language arts. Go to www.uwyo.edu/wsup for information about the Lost in Transitions initiative, including upcoming meetings for social studies and world languages, or contact Audrey Kleinsasser at [email protected]

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NNER, continued from page 5

to deepening understanding about the NNER and its work. The symposium will provide opportunities to meet with colleagues from across the NNER, discuss issues pertinent to the health of public schools, universities, and communities, and to study and interact with NNER leaders committed to advancing the Agenda for Education in a Democracy. When they return to their home settings, symposium participants are better equipped to be leaders and facilitators of democratic practices in their classrooms, educational institutions, and in their communities. In depth study opportunities based in Seattle and elsewhere have been available through the NNER for more than 15 years. Many of the Partnership’s key leaders have participated in year-long leadership institutes and week-long symposia. They include Kay Persichitte, College of Education dean; Audrey Shalinsky, College of Arts and Sciences associate dean; Dave Barker, Partnership governing board president; and governing board members and school

district superintendents Craig Beck, Paige Fenton Hughes, Kathy Hitt, Ray Schulte, and Brian Recht. Last year’s symposium participants included Fenton Hughes and College of Education faculty members Francisco Rios and Kevin Roxas. Rios was a facilitator for one of the group’s discussions. Audrey Kleinsasser, Partnership director, helped facilitate the 2001-2002 year-long institute. The Wyoming School-University Partnership supports participation by paying each participant’s $750 registration fee. Lodging and travel are provided by a sponsoring institution or the participant. A founding member of the NNER, the Wyoming School-University Partnership has been a member since 1986. For more information about the NNER go to NNERPartnerships.org/ or contact Ann Foster at [email protected] To learn more about the Wyoming work, go to www.uwyo.edu/wsup or contact Audrey Kleinsasser, [email protected].

Valerie Harris, Central Wyoming College (far right), listens to mathematics colleagues Shannon Zavorka and Kira Heater, Laramie County Community College, as they discuss the Mathematics Common Core Curriculum expectations.

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Sullivan Family Student Center Planning Team

The Col lege of Educat ion thanks the following planning

team members, who provided their wisdom and expertise over many months to ensure that the Sullivan Family Student Center would be a welcoming and comfortable space for all who will use and enjoy it.

Ted Brummond UW Photo ServiceAlan Buss UW Department of Elementary

and Early Childhood EducationLydia Dambekalns UW Department of Secondary

EducationMichael Day UW Department of Professional

StudiesJennifer Lebsack College of Education Dean’s OfficeAllen Trent UW Department of Educational

Studies

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Joseph Stepans receives NSTA Presidential Citation

The National Science Teachers Association (NSTA) recently awarded retired UW College of Education emeritus faculty member Joseph Stepans its

Presidential Citation. The citation recognizes Joseph’s “extraordinary contributions to science education, and equally as important, in recognition of all teachers whose values, achievements and aspirations he represents.” The citation notes that, “Leadership, innovation, and professionalism epitomize Joseph Stepans’ journey and have inspired the efforts of thousands of other teachers to whom we entrust the development of our next generation.” Joseph Stepans’ career focused on teaching science and mathematics – and the educators who would do the same. He taught both subjects at the secondary level. He also taught undegraduate- and graduate-level courses in both topics for the College of Education during his career here. In addition to preparing generations of science and mathematics educators via his for-credit courses, Joseph also was known for the professional development workshops, especially the WyTRIAD model, targeting teachers and administrators. Joseph is a longtime, active member of the NSTA, the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, the School Science and Mathematics Association and the Northern Rocky Mountain Educational Research Association.

Among his many awards were the Wyoming Science Teachers Association Service to Science Education Award and the Sublette County School District Teacher of the Year Award.

Joseph Stepans

National group recognizes counseling faculty member’s dissertation

Kara Carnes-Holt, University of Wyoming assistant professor of professional studies, recently learned that

she has been named the 2011 recipient of the Association for Humanistic Counseling’s Outstanding Humanistic Dissertation Award. The AHC recognized Carnes-Holt at a breakfast event held in conjunction the 2011 American Counseling Association conference in New Orleans in March. Carnes-Holt had an opportunity to present a summary of her findings at that event. Carnes-Holt joined the UW College of Education faculty in August. She received her Ph.D. in counseling from the University of North Texas. Her research focuses on incorporating play therapy with at-risk populations, specifically in adoptive and foster care settings, and the expressive arts within the counseling process. Following is an abstract of her dissertation:Child-Parent Relationship Therapy (CPRT) with Adoptive

Families: Effects on Child Behavior, Parent-Child Relationship Stress, and Parental Empathy

Abstract This randomized controlled study is a preliminary investigation on the effects of Child-Parent Relationship Therapy (CPRT) with 61 adoptive parents (Landreth & Bratton, 2006). The participants in this study identified themselves as the following: 54 European American, 3 Black American, 3 Hispanic/Latino, and 1 individual who chose not to select an ethnicity on the demographics form.  The study included 22 couples, 1 female partnered dyad, and 15 individual

mothers.  The CPRT is a structured, time l imited approach that trains caregivers t o b e a n a c t i v e p a r t i c i p a n t a s a therapeutic change agent in their child’s life. Results from a two (group) by two (measures) split plot ANOVA indicated that adoptive parents who participated in 10 weeks of CPRT reported statistically significant decreases in chi ld behavior problems and parent child-relationship stress.  Statistically significant increases in parent empathy were also reported by raters blinded to the study.   CPRT demonstrated a moderate to large treatment effect on reducing children’s behavior problems and parent-child relationship stress.  In addition, CPRT demonstrated a large treatment effect on increasing parental empathy. The results of the study provide preliminary support for CPRT as a responsive intervention for adoptive parents and their children.

Kara Carnes-Holt

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While most of Wyoming’s school principals responding to a recent College of Education survey indicated a

strong desire for professional development that supports their on-the-job effectiveness, the types and levels of assistance requested by women vary significantly from those of their male colleagues. “Women principals said that they wanted more mentorship in most areas than did male principals, at all experience levels,” educational leadership faculty member Heather Duncan, the survey author, reports. While women’s mean responses for all professional development topics listed in the survey were higher than the men, Duncan found statistically significant differences in three need areas: creating a collegial faculty, working with diff icult students, and sustaining personal motivation. Those differences carried across experience levels, from beginning principals (zero to three years on the job) to very experienced principals (more than 16 years on the job). Across the board, women respondents ranked these topics higher than the men. The survey’s original purpose w a s t o i d e n t i f y p ro fe s s i o n a l development needs of all Wyoming school principals. The survey went to 274 school leaders; 187 responses (68.3 percent) were returned. The gender breakdown of respondents (29.7 percent female, 70.3 percent male) reflected the demographics of the state’s principals (31 percent female, 69 percent male). Because the survey wasn’t originally intended to explore gender differences – or identify motivations for participants’ responses – Duncan is unable to identify explanations from her existing data. Some potential answers may exist within related research. For example, other studies show that differences could be explained by different approaches to handling conflict between men and women. “The literature suggests that women want to get to the bottom of things,” Duncan says of general themes within published research, “whereas men will listen to the problem and try to fix it, and then it’s gone.” To understand the potential differences between men and women principals – and to contribute to the scholarly

Principal survey: Gender differences in professional development needs

discussion on the topic - Duncan plans a follow-up study. She plans to interview 15 female and 15 male principals in Wyoming, sampling across experience levels, to also illuminate any differences that may be grounded in how long one has been on the job. That qualitative research is expected to shed light on the “why” questions raised by the survey.

T h e n e e d fo r p ro fe s s i o n a l development in areas related to interpersonal dynamics is a strong one for most principals, regardless of gender, according to Duncan. “Principals’ days are filled with the most unexpected events, like an angry parent coming to see them or a student who brings a knife to school,” she says. “These are the critical incidents over which there is no prediction. These are the things that fill principals’ days and cause the most stress.” “They want to do the best for everyone, but to diffuse situations that are emotional is a skill,” she adds. “It’s a skill that can be developed. Some people can do it instinctively, but the majority cannot.” The gender differences uncovered in her survey resonated for Duncan, a former high school principal.

Interpersonal issues were a constant part of her daily life as a building administrator. Conflict resolution was of particular concern. “Conflict bothered me,” she says. “I really wanted to resolve it in a manner that was satisfactory to parents, to students and to the staff.” She also dealt with challenges to her authority that appeared to be tied to her gender. “They would say things to me that they might not say to a male principal,” Heather recalls. Lack of support was another issue that Duncan faced. “When I became the principal at this high school, I was the first female principal in the district,” she says. “It was very much an old boys club. They had informal mentoring between them; but as the only female principal, I was largely outside of that.” “My learning in the principalship was really by trial and error,” she says.

Heather Duncan

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College of Education annual fund

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N10bb 15

L acy Grott of Cheyenne has always known that she wanted to teach elementary school. Her dad

taught math, and her sister teaches high school English.   “When I was a little kid, I had a white board,” Lacy says. “I used to play school and boss all the other kids around.” However, even though Lacy is a hard-working student, she doesn’t test well.   She took the ACT five times but did not score high enough to qualify for a Hathaway scholarship. In desperation, she called the UW College of Education, and they were able to award her an Altamae Wynecoop Van Sant Merit Scholarship. The woman who established the scholarship, Altamae Van Sant, was an elementary school teacher. She and her family homesteaded near Gillette in 1913. Coming to UW as a nontraditional student, Altamae received her

Supporting educators of promise via bequests

bachelor’s and master’s in elementary education in the early 1960s.  Then she taught school at Department of Defense military bases worldwide, including Turkey, Ethiopia, Guam, and Spain. After 21 years, she retired to Laramie. When Altamae established the scholarship, she wanted to support promise, not the highest GPA, since those students generally win financial assistance. Applicants for the scholarship are high school seniors who will be majoring in elementary education and who have potential for success, and they must submit letters of recommendation from a high school teacher and a parent. So Lacy is exactly the type of person the scholarship was intended for—a student who may not receive the highest marks but who shows the most promise.  And that promise

continued p. 19

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Become a fan on Facebook!http://www.facebook.com/WyoCollegeOfEd

David Lemire (Ed S, ‘89) works as a school psychologist and behavior consultant for the Klamath Falls City Schools in Klamath Falls, Oregon. He is also the student counselor and graduate advisor at the American College of Applied Science (a virtual college located in Crescent City, Fla). He was recently invited to sit on the Board of Directors for the Oregon Association of Talented and Gifted Children, representing childrens and parents in the Southwest region of the state. He is a regular contributor to the Masters Advocate, the journal of the North American Masters in Psychology. He just completed an online course in American History from Rio Salado College in Arizona, which makes the forty-eighth college or university he has attended and now can be certified to teach in Idaho. Roy L. Rummler (EdD ‘74) has authored a new book: Grin Tails for Children Ages 6 to 106, Vol. I. The book offers

Submissions to the Alumni Bulletin Board may be sent via e-mail — [email protected] — , fax (307-766-6668) or mail — Debra Beck, UW College of Education, 1000 E. University Ave., Dept. 3374, Laramie, WY 82071.

Alumni Bulletin Board

humorous versions of some classics, i.e. Ginger Ella, Big Red Riding Hood, The Three Little Chickens. This is a fun book for adults and children and is the first of several planned volumes. This is Rummler’s third book. D. Ray Reutzel (PhD, ’77) is the first scholar in literacy education to be inducted into the Reading Hall of Fame (RHF) from any state west of the Mississippi except California, Washington, Texas and Arizona.  There have only been 91 scholars in the U.S. and an additional 25 internationally (total 116) inducted into the RHF since its founding in 1973. To be inducted, one must be nominated by a current member or members of the RHF. Then one must be elected by the members of the RHF.  This is the highest international recognition a scholar in literacy can receive from peer scholars in the field.  

Former University of Wyoming students are rediscovering old friendships and keeping up with

their alma mater via WyoAlumni, a new online community and social networking tool to connect people at UW with alumni, friends, and donors.

Social networking community links UWyo alumni

• Lookupoldfriendsandmakenewacquaintances• Readupdatesfrommembersofyourgraduatingclass• Chatandparticipateinthreadeddiscussions• Postphotosforotherstosee• Joinonlinecollegeandaffinitygroups• Networkforyourjoborwiththepeopleyouserve• Arrangeavisittocampusorgetinvolved

The WyoAlumni community address is http://wyoalumni.uwyo.edu. For log-in help, or to confirm your credentials, contact the UW Foundation at 1-888-831-7795 or [email protected].

WyoAlumni provides enhanced social and career networking with fellow alumni, opportunities to stay up to date on UW and College of Education news and activities, and an interactive alumni directory. Through WyoAlumni, you can:

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UW’s Kappa Delta Pi chapter continued two community service traditions in March. Members celebrated Reading is Fun Week and Dr. Seuss’s birthday with a special Saturday story time at the Albany County Library. Kaylea Weyrich, Mallory Mayer and John Beitler greeted children and their parents (top rightphoto). Kasey Rasmussen - and two shelled friends - shared Seuss’s Yertle the Turtle with several children, while clubmates read other stories by the author and played games with participants. The honorary also braved the icy waters of Huck Finn Pond for the 2011 Jackalope Jump (bottom photo), afundraising event benefitting Special Olympics of Wyoming.

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Sweetwater student teachers: look back, plan ahead

After completing midterm evaluations and setting goals for the second half of the semester, student teachers in Sweetwater Districts 1 and 2 unwind with pizza and collegiality.

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was fulfilled, as Lacy is graduating on time with a near-4.0 grade point average.   “Here I am, graduating in four years with really good grades, I was the president of the College of Education Ambassadors, I’ve gotten multiple scholarships—top of my class,” Lacy says, “and yet I didn’t receive any money through the Hathaway Scholarship. The Van Sant scholarship meant a lot to me.”  In 2007, Lacy was able to meet Altamae at the College of Education Scholarship Banquet. “What was so nice about her was that she was so interested in me. She asked a million questions,” Grott says. “She was so caring and understanding of what I was doing.”

About bequests: A charitable bequest is a gift to the University of Wyoming through your will or revocable living trust. Bequests can enable donors to make more significant gifts than they would have been able to during their lifetime. These gifts are critical to the future success of UW because of the students, faculty, and programs that they support.  With a bequest, you get the satisfaction of knowing that, by planning for your future, you’ve helped countless others plan for theirs. For more indepth information, feel free to request a no-cost Guide to Planned Giving brochure by contacting Tracy Richardson, director of planned giving, at (307) 766-3934 or [email protected].

therapy program. Morgan established and taught the “Introduction to Play Therapy” course and has played a lead role in coordinating the Wyoming Institute for Play Therapy. The continued strong support from faculty will help make this center a success, she says. While the institute represents the cornerstone of post-graduate professional development, Carnes-Holt says, plans for the program go further. “Our goal, ultimately, is to develop a post-master’s certificate program under the center,” she says. A certificate would expand UW’s capacity to provide advanced professional development opportunities for the state’s mental health practitioners. Location of an APT-approved center in Wyoming is particularly critical for the Rocky Mountain region, according to Carnes-Holt. “In rural areas, research shows that there is a higher need for mental health services, there are fewer mental health providers in rural settings, and they don’t have opportunities to get to training that would allow them to become specialized in a particular areas,” she says, especially for services targeting children and families.

UW’s program has the potential to model effective program delivery for all rural areas. College of Education Dean Kay Persichitte welcomes news of the APT designation for UW’s new center. “At a time in our history with such emphasis on testing, measuring student achievement, and focus on children meeting ‘learning standards,’ this national recognition of our faculty research and teaching around play and play therapy is a great reminder that education of our children takes many forms,” she says. “I am excited about the future of this work in the College of Education.” Department of Professional Studies head Kent Becker notes the importance of the designation to advancing the college’s counselor education programs’ reach in Wyoming and beyond. “Being designated as an Approved Center of Play Therapy Education puts us in an elite league,” Becker says. “This designation directly supports our academic goals our commitment to research, instruction and training in play therapy.   Dr. Kara Carnes-Holt’s and Dr. Michael Morgan’s leadership in the area of play therapy continues to open doors for our program, department and students.”

Play therapy from p. 3

Bequests from p. 15

Lacy Grott

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