Education, Minor
Â鶹ÊÓƵÏÂÔØ's minor in education develops reflective individuals committed to service, inquiry and value-centered learning who want to add to their education background and develop leadership qualities that include risk-taking, civic responsibility and ethical character.
An education minor is a valuable asset in several careers related to education and schooling. Students who minor in education at Â鶹ÊÓƵÏÂÔØ are prepared to implement educational programs consistent with their areas of expertise.
Â鶹ÊÓƵÏÂÔØ's School of Education provides a well-rounded liberal arts background to enhance students' educational experiences. The main objective of Â鶹ÊÓƵÏÂÔØ's education programs is to prepare dedicated, reflective scholar-practitioners who exhibit the knowledge, skills and dispositions embedded in the school's conceptual framework. The shared values that guide Â鶹ÊÓƵÏÂÔØ's School of Education include social justice, cura personalis (care for the whole person), excellence, integrity, and trust and respect.Â
Program Highlights
- Students enter a tight-knit community of faculty and peers committed to innovative learning, diversity and the intellectual ideas of the Jesuit tradition.
- Students are prepared to practice cura personalis — care for the whole person — and work for social justice in their communities.
- Students will graduate prepared to collaborate with families, build classroom communities, have high expectations for all students and advocate for social change.
Â鶹ÊÓƵÏÂÔØ's minor in education utilizes the strengths of its B.A. in Education by engaging interested students in the five compass themes of identity, purpose, context, inquiry and praxis. Students who choose to minor in education at Â鶹ÊÓƵÏÂÔØ are often interested in entering educational settings from birth to 12th grade as occupational therapists; physical therapists; speech, language and hearing specialists, athletic trainers; or as content specialists who may be planning to teach in schools where certification is not required (private or Catholic schools). Our teacher learning community seminars (TLCs) are purposely designed to engage all these experiences to build robust learning communities for students.
Code | Title | Credits |
---|---|---|
·¡¶Ù±«°äÌý1010 | Introduction to Teaching: Sense of Identity | 1 |
·¡¶Ù±«°äÌý1015 | Teacher Learning Community Seminar (Phase I) * | 1 |
·¡¶Ù±«°äÌý1020 | Introduction to Teaching: Sense of Purpose | 1 |
·¡¶Ù±«°äÌý1025 | Teacher Learning Community Seminar with Field Experience (Phase I) * | 2 |
·¡¶Ù±«°äÌý1030 | Introduction to Teaching: Sense of Context | 1 |
·¡¶Ù±«°äÌý1040 | Introduction to Teaching: Sense of Inquiry | 1 |
·¡¶Ù±«°äÌý1050 | Introduction to Teaching: Sense of Praxis | 1 |
·¡¶Ù±«°äÌý1100 | Reimagining School and Society | 2 |
·¡¶Ù±«°äÌý1200 | Growth, Development, and Learning | 3 |
·¡¶Ù±«°äÌý1300 | Exceptional Learners | 3 |
·¡¶Ù±«°äÌý2015 | Teacher Learning Community Seminar (Phase II) * | 1 |
·¡¶Ù±«°äÌý2150 | Environments for Learning 1: Space and Classroom Design | 1 |
Total Credits | 18 |
- *
Teacher Learning Community Seminars (TLCs) are co-requisite courses to all education courses and allow for repeatable registration. Education minors must repeat enrollment in ·¡¶Ù±«°äÌý1015 Teacher Learning Community Seminar (Phase I) (1 cr) until the minor coursework is completed, or a maximum of five earned credit hours is reached. Â
Continuation Standards
Students must maintain a minimum grade point average of 2.00 for acceptance and continuation. Courses must be completed with no grade lower than a "C." A grade of "C-" does not satisfy the requirement.Â
For additional admission questions, please contact:
Â鶹ÊÓƵÏÂÔØ School of Education
314-977-3292
slued@slu.edu