Urban schools are marked by social, cultural, policy, and economic disparities. Consequently, these schools manage higher rates of culturally and linguistically diverse students; poverty; teacher, student, and administrator mobility issues; arbitrary discipline practices; disproportionate special education placement; immigrants; and incommensurate resources. Such a plight creates an environment for which particular pedagogical tools, strategies, and resources are required to facilitate education. The Urban Education specialization provides prospective and in-service teachers with an understanding of social, cultural, policy, and economic inequities and equips them with the skills to negate them.
The M.Ed. is a 36-credit hour degree with 24 hours of electives designed to promote specialization selection. The Urban Education specialization is 12-credit hours of coursework that prepares students to effectively teach in urban schools. Students registered in this specialization will:
- Explore the historical context of urban education through the lens of education policy.
- Analyze legal mandates related to equity and excellence in urban schools.
- Investigate local and national changing demographics and its implications for policy and urban classrooms.
- Analyze societal biases that can lead to inequitable policy, and thereby classroom experiences.
- Examine how culturally responsive curricula increase student outcomes and enhance teacher-student relationships.
- Design classroom curricula that underscore the essence of students’ socio-cultural context.
- Employ meaningful classroom and behavior management approaches.