Earth Science Adolescence Education, Grades 7-12
Applicants are generally expected to have the equivalent of an undergraduate major in geology or related earth science. The applicant’s undergraduate work must be acceptable to the Geological Sciences Department in Harpur College, as well as to the School of Education. Students without appropriate undergraduate preparation may be admitted with the stipulation that they take additional coursework in geology or the cognate sciences.
Minimum Requirements for Degree (courses are subject to change)
Education Courses - 20 credits
| LTRC 519. |
Adolescent Learners and Literacy for the Content Areas |
4 credits |
| SEC 500. |
Foundations of Secondary Education |
4 credits |
| SEC 501. |
Special Education for Content Area Teachers |
2 credits |
| SEC 502. |
English as a Second Language for Content Area Teachers |
2 credits |
| SEC 593. |
Philosophical and Theoretical Foundations in the Pedagogy of Science |
4 credits |
| SEC 594. |
Curriculum and Teaching in Science |
4 credits |
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Subject-Area Courses - 12 credits
12 credits in Geological Sciences courses
Supervised Student Teaching - 8 credits
SEC 590/591. Pre-service Practicum in Teaching I and II - 8 credits
NOTE:
For information about
this program please
contact Dr.
Thomas O'Brien (program
coordinator).
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A Word About the 100-Hour Fieldwork Requirement for Pre-Service Students
The New York State Education Department recently mandated that students seeking their first teaching certification must have 100 hours of field experience linked to coursework before undertaking student teaching. In addition, students must have the opportunity to visit high-needs classrooms in urban, suburban and rural districts. The designated high-needs districts in our BOCES region are Binghamton, Johnson City and Harpursville; students must spend time in one of these districts (primarily Binghamton) during their field experiences and/or student teaching.
Our school designed these experiences to be valuable and meaningful. We believe that purposeful fieldwork will help you become a stronger teacher.
Although the school will try to accommodate students with extenuating circumstances, we cannot waive the 100-hour requirement. And, although prior teaching experience is valuable, it cannot count toward meeting the new 100-hour requirement.
If
you have any questions, comments
or concerns about field
experience, contact
Tami Mann, senior staff assistant
in the School of Education
at 607-777-5322 or tmann@binghamton.edu.
See
also: Field
Experience: What You
Need to Know