Required Courses for All Humanities Secondary Education Concentrations
All Humanities concentrations (English, French, Spanish and History) require the following courses for completion of the degree program.
EDCI 3136: Secondary School Reading in Content Subjects
The content and focus of the course is the use of reading strategies exclusively in
the content areas of science and mathematics. This course is required for students
pursuing secondary science or mathematics teaching certificates. Secondary School
Reading in Content Subjects enables students to be perceived as and educated to be
both subject specialists and teachers of reading.
Science and mathematics teachers have historically focused on content acquisition
rather than the competencies required to enable content acquisition. The purpose of
literacy is to increase the learning of critical content. In this course, science
and mathematics teachers must shift their thinking about curriculum design and delivery,
moving away from simply covering the available content to instead focusing on organizing
curriculum experiences around compelling critical content and then developing plans
and teaching routines which ensure that all students master that content.
One of the goals of an educational system is to help students become more strategic
readers. A reading program that implements successful comprehension instruction increases
students’ interest and success in reading, providing students the intrinsic motivation
needed for continual learning. Learning to read and reading to learn are interrelated
processes that lifelong learners use to refine and expand what they currently know
and believe about the world.
EDCI: 4005 Student Teaching
An underlying philosophy of the GeauxTeach program is that with extensive, individualized,
and ongoing coaching, pre-service teachers’ skills will improve at an accelerated
rate. The GeauxTeach Student Teaching program is an important part of this coaching.
In addition to the mentoring provided by the classroom teacher to which the apprentice
teachers are assigned, trained observers with considerable teaching experience observe
and provide extensive feedback. Because apprentice teachers have taught at various
levels in previous GeauxTeach courses, they assume teaching responsibilities quickly
in their final semester as a student. Student teachers concentrate on teaching lessons
each week in which they demonstrate competency of the particular state standards.
The purpose of Student Teaching is to offer GeauxTeach students a culminating experience
that provides them with the tools needed for their first teaching jobs. Students are
immersed in the expectations, process¬es, and rewards of teaching. When making placements,
each student teacher’s characteristics and abilities as well as the cooperating teacher’s
teaching and mentoring styles are taken into consideration. The hope is that the complementary
strengths of the GeauxTeach student teacher and cooperating teacher will generate
a synergism that benefits both people professionally.
Student Teaching reinforces and augments teaching strategies that students have developed
through their coursework and field experiences. The program also attempts to fill
in any gaps in students’ professional development. In particular, Student Teaching
focuses on classroom management and time management strategies, parent/teacher communication
strategies, school culture and school dynamics that make up an effective middle school
and high school system, legal and logistical issues in teaching, the final portfolio,
and state certification examinations.