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Courses
of Instruction
EDU 100W: GROWING UP JIM CROW
This writing-intensive course will introduce students to
how a generation of white and black southerners learned race and
racism in the Age of Jim Crow.
Students will analyze films and
videos as complex texts that can be viewed through multiple and
intersecting lenses. From the perspectives of black
and white southerners, students will examine oral histories,
literary narratives, and visual representations of numerous topics:
“Jim Crow” schooling, white supremacy, disenfranchisement, lynching,
rape, resistance, interracial harmony, and desegregation. Students
will be introduced to various approaches to writing for critical
engagement and for college success. The course fulfills the “W”
requirement and is limited to sixteen first year students.
ENG
101W: SCHOOL AND SOCIETY IN THE NOVEL
First-year
writing-intensive seminar on educational themes in selected novels.
Texts will represent
public and private settings at the secondary and post-secondary
levels. Open only
to first-year students.
EDU 121: HISTORY OF EDUCATIONAL THEORY &
PRACTICE
Traces historical development and underlying philosophies of educational
institutions and practices in the United States; considers current
roles and functions of the school in relation to other social institutions
such as state and church.
EDU 221: CONTEMPORARY EDUCATIONAL THEORY
& PRACTICE
This is an
introductory course on contemporary educational theory and practice. Using
theoretical autobiography as a tool, students will build an understanding
of major social theories that have shaped their thinking about educational
problems. In addition, students will construct and reconstruct their own
theoretical perspective to educational trends and debates in the United
States. We will read the primary works of major social and educational
theorists, such as Paulo Freire, Pierre Bourdieu, bell hooks, and Peter
McLaren. The course requires the completion of a three-part theoretical
autobiography, 15 "structured" contact hours in a classroom (public or
private school), and a midterm and final review.
EDU 240: READING, 'RITING,
& RACE
A critical examination of competing explanations and
impassioned debates over the racial achievement gap in the United
States, with a focus on the education of African-Americans from
slavery to the 21st century. This course will also
explore how gender and class complicate race-specific solutions to
the racial achievement gap.
EDU
242:
EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY AND TEACHING EXCEPTIONALITIES
Psychology of learning as it relates to teaching. Focus on contemporary
theories of learning, retention, transfer, motivation, educational
assessment, and adolescent psychology, and their particular application
to classroom teaching. Includes special emphasis on teaching exceptional
students and appropriate clinical experiences in educational institutions.
Prerequisite: Psychology 101. It is strongly recommended that students
who are earning teaching licensure take this course in the spring
term of their junior year.
EDU
243:
ADOLESCENT DEVELOPMENT
An in-depth examination of specific theories, concepts, and methods
related to the period of adolescence.
Students will explore a wide range of topics including: cognitive
development, moral development, identity formation, gender role, social
relationships, and the effects of culture on adolescent development.
Prerequisite: Psychology 101
EDU
250:
MULTICULTURAL EDUCATION
This course will examine the critical issues related to diversifying
today’s educational system.
Specific topics will be discussed relating to curricular content
and assessment techniques along with broad topics related to the educational
system’s role in preparing its citizens to live and work in a global
society. This course
views the multicultural education as encompassing teachers, parents,
students, administrators, employees, employers, and society at large.
The main purpose of this course is captured in the following
statement by Guild (1994): “Ensuring success for the diverse population that schools serve
calls for continual reexamination of traditional assumptions,
expectations, and biases.”
EDU 260: SOCIAL DIVERSITY &
INEQUALITY IN EDUCATION This course focuses
on issues of social diversity, social inequality, and social justice in
education. It is designed to integrate cognitive development with the
experiential aspects of social learning. Students will be encouraged to
link new learning with their personal and social reality through
structured writing assignments, cooperative learning activities, and
critical experiential learning.
EDU
300:
SEMINAR: SPECIAL TOPICS IN EDUCATION
Individual research on topics
requested by students under conditions specified in a written contract
arranged no later than the end of the first week of the term in which
credit is to be authorized. Contract must include project title, summary
statement of project objectives and proposed activities, preliminary
bibliography, specific evaluation criteria and techniques, and schedule of
conferences with the instructor. Prerequisite: Approval of the department
chair and acceptance of contract by the faculty sponsor of the
department.
EDU
301:
INDEPENDENT STUDY IN EDUCATION
Areas of study vary according to educational objectives and preferences
of interested students. Includes experiences in school settings (public
or private) and any level (elementary or secondary) for any subject.
The independent study is under the direction and supervision of a
faculty member who has approved a written contract arranged no later
than the first week of the term. Prerequisite: Approval of the instructor.
EDU
302:
FIELD PLACEMENT IN EDUCATION
An Independent Study for students completing
the Interdisciplinary Concentration in Education.
Areas of study and experience vary
according to educational objectives and preferences of interested
students. Requires approximately eighty hours in a public or private
school and the production of a portfolio, which will serve to synthesize
the courses completed for the concentration. The independent study is
under the direction and supervision of a faculty member who has approved a
written contract arranged no later than the first week of the term.
Prerequisite: Approval of the
instructor.
EDU
400:
ORGANIZATION FOR TEACHING
Procedures for effective organization and presentation of subject
matter in particular academic disciplines at the high-school level.
Approximately one- third of this course is taken under the direct
supervision of one or more Davidson College professors in the academic
discipline of anticipated licensure. Includes work in teaching of
reading in the content areas. Requires appropriate clinical experiences
in schools. Prerequisite: Approval of instructor.
EDU
410,
411: INTERNSHIP IN TEACHING
Ten to twelve weeks of full-time involvement in the secondary school
spent in observing, classroom teaching, and other tasks appropriate
to accomplished professional teaching.
Close classroom supervision by the local secondary school and
Davidson professors. Prerequisite:
Approval of college committee on teacher education.
EDU
420:
SEMINAR IN SECONDARY EDUCATION
Function of the secondary school, nature of the secondary student,
and secondary school curriculum. Emphasis on diagnostic and remedial
procedures for secondary students. Discussion includes evaluation
and shared experiences resulting from the internship experience. Prerequisite:
Approval of instructor.

"Poverty
and ignorance have affected the black man just as they affected the
white man. But the day is breaking, and education will bring the complete
light."
Booker T. Washington (1856-1915)
Davidson
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2008 Department of Education, Davidson College, Davidson, NC
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