Graduate Course Descriptions

The following directory lists the graduate courses which the University expects to offer, although the University in no way guarantees that all such courses will be offered in any given academic year, and reserves the right to alter the list if conditions warrant. Click on the links below for a list of courses in that subject area. You may then click “View Classes” to see scheduled classes for individual courses.

5015. Teacher Leadership and Organizations

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Teachers' role in providing leadership that extends beyond the walls of the individual classroom and includes collaboration with other adults.

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5085. Capstone Project in Sport Management

1.00 - 6.00 credits

Prerequisites: Open only to students in Sport Management who have completed all coursework toward the degree and are in the final semester; instructor consent required.

Grading Basis: Graded

Students develop and present a semester-long research project in an area of sport management.

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5091. Internship

6.00 credits | May be repeated for a total of 24 credits.

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

The application and implementation in a work situation of theories and practices related to the student's area of specialization.

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5092. Practicum: Administrative Field Experience

1.00 - 6.00 credits | May be repeated for a total of 12 credits.

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Provides an opportunity for educators who wish to become administrators of educational organizations to become familiar with the functions and tasks that certified administrators perform. Intended primarily for Sixth-Year students.

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5094. Seminar

3.00 credits | May be repeated for a total of 12 credits.

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Analysis of the issues and research in the field of education. Open primarily to Master's and Sixth-Year students.

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5099. Independent Study in Education

1.00 - 3.00 credits | May be repeated for a total of 15 credits.

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Students requesting this course should have a significant background in education and should present to the instructor problems, well-defined and well laid out for investigation, which hold special interest for them and which will be pursued on the plan of advanced study.

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5102. Foundations of Assessment in Higher Education and Student Affairs

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: Open only to Higher Education and Student Affairs M.A. students; department consent required.

Grading Basis: Graded

An introduction to research and evaluation methods in higher education institutions, and to the practice of assessment in Student Affairs. Focus on conceptualization and design, literature reviews, and ethical considerations in assessment. Open to HESA students only.

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5103. Assessment Practice in Higher Education and Student Affairs

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: EDLR 5102; open only to Higher Education and Student Affairs M.A. students; instructor consent required.

Grading Basis: Graded

Implementation of assessment and evaluation designs to address problems in higher education institutions. Focus on data collection and analysis, and communicating findings for improving policy and practice. Open to HESA students only.

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5105. Structured Dialogue in Student Affairs

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: Open only to Higher Education and Student Affairs M.A. students; instructor consent required.

Grading Basis: Graded

Explore basic approaches to intragroup and intergroup dynamics and implications for personal and educational development of students and student affairs professionals.

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5107. Organization, Leadership, and Administration in Higher Education and Student Affairs

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: Open only to Higher Education and Student Affairs M.A. students; instructor consent required.

Grading Basis: Graded

This course explores organization and administration in higher education and student affairs with a focus on managing institutional resources.

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5108. Transformational Leadership in Higher Education

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: Open only to Higher Education and Student Affairs M.A. students; instructor consent required.

Grading Basis: Graded

This course will focus on leadership theory and research within the higher education context and the role leaders have in organizational transformation. A particular emphasis will be on the role of social, political, and organizational factors that shape institutional leadership within current and future trends of higher education.

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5113. College and University Environments

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: Open to students enrolled in the Higher Education and Student Affairs master's degree program.

Grading Basis: Graded

Seminar designed to explore various institutional types, missions, and cultures including private liberal arts colleges, community colleges, comprehensive, research-extensive and special purpose universities. Primary emphasis is on the effect of institutional structure on higher education and student affairs administration.

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5114. Access to Higher Education

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Provides students with an opportunity to examine and discuss research on individual, institutional, and political factors that are known to impact participation in higher education. Particular attention is given to stratification in higher education including but not limited to the historical and legal context of access; points of access; pathways to higher education; state and federal policies; and college affordability. In addition to learning and discussing various topics related to college access, students in the course will engage in indirect or direct service around college access in the local community.

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5117. College Student Development: Theory and Practice

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: Open only to Higher Education and Student Affairs M.A. students; instructor consent required.

Grading Basis: Graded

This course examines a range of theories related to student learning, growth, and development during the college years. While the course explores the historical, philosophical, and theoretical foundations of student development theory related to student affairs practice, it focuses on theories from constructivist, critical, and poststructural paradigms.

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5118. Seminar in Higher Education

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: Open to students enrolled in the Higher Education and Student Affairs master's degree program.

Grading Basis: Graded

Seminar designed to promote the integration of the core curriculum and practitioner experiences of the Master's degree program in Higher Education and Student Affairs and to prepare students for transition to professional positions within student affairs upon graduation.

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5119. Legal Issues and Decision Making in Higher Education and Student Affairs

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: Open only to Higher Education and Student Affairs M.A. students; instructor consent required.

Grading Basis: Graded

This foundational course examines key components related to the intersections of legal aspects, ethics, and decision-making within the work of higher education/student affairs professionals. This course examines several federal higher education laws and guidelines and how higher education/student affairs professionals use decision making to implement those mandates in their practice.

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5122. Foundations of Higher Education and Student Affairs

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: Open only to Higher Education and Student Affairs M.A. students; instructor consent required.

Grading Basis: Graded

This course provides an overview of the U.S. higher education system through the examination of its history, the field of higher education/student affairs, institutional and organizational structures, public policies, and contemporary issues facing higher education systems, institutions and professionals.

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5123. Administration of Student Affairs in Higher Education

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: Open to students enrolled in the Higher Education and Student Affairs master's degree program.

Grading Basis: Graded

Administration of student affairs and services and applications of student development theory in the college community.

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5125. Issues in Student Affairs Administration

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: Open to Students in Professional Higher Education Administration, others with consent.

Grading Basis: Graded

An examination of issues which affect the new student affairs administrator. Topics vary per semester.

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5126. Inclusion and Equity in Higher Education and Student Affairs

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: Open only to Higher Education and Student Affairs M.A. students; instructor consent required.

Grading Basis: Graded

The purpose of this course is to expose students to critically explore issues of inclusion and equity in higher education and student affairs inclusive of the role of social and historical contexts, the roles individuals (agents) who work in colleges and universities (i.e., faculty and administrators) play in achieving or thwarting inclusion and equity, and our personal and collective responsibility in creating inclusive and equitable college environments.

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5130. Teaching College Students through Transition

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

A practical and theoretical course that gives students the opportunity to explore academic literature of student transition while teaching a UNIV freshman year experience course for students transitioning into the University of Connecticut.

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5201. Influences on Adult Learning

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Interaction of person and environment. Culture. Role of environment. Situational barriers. Motivation. Self-regulation. Personality. Gender. Life transitions. Self-directed learning.

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5202. Workplace Learning

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Trends in workplace learning and workforce development. Conceptual models of performance improvement and transfer of training. Focus on individual, work team, and organizational variables related to learning, performance, and transfer of training.

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5203. The Brain, Experience, and Adult Learning

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Four learning systems within the brain. Role of experience in learning. Implications for adult learning and professional development programs.

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5204. Organizational Learning

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Group and collective learning in organizational settings, with an emphasis on adaptive and generative learning processes.

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5205. Professional Development

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Using research on how adults learn best and principles of human resource development to implement effective, job-embedded professional development programs. Using professional development to advance organizational goals. Examination of best practices.

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5206. Development of Programs for Adult and Human Resource Education

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Program development for adult learners; emphasis on collaborative planning, needs assessment, effective learning strategies, transfer of training, evaluation, principles of good practice.

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5207. Methods for Facilitating Adult Learning

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Focuses on principles and practices of adult learning facilitation, including situational and methodological factors that impact how adults learn in conventional and multimedia contexts.

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5300. Management of Sport Services

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Management processes and practices involved in operating sport organizations.

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5302. Program Evaluation for School Improvement

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Program evaluation issues critical to effective school leadership.

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5303. Supervision of Educational Organizations

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Supervision models; teacher selection and induction; teacher evaluation; staff development and organizational change.

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5304. Curriculum Laboratory

1.00 - 3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Open to teachers and administrators seeking practical solutions to curriculum problems in elementary and secondary schools. Reorganization of courses, reorientation of the program of studies, articulation of administrative units, and development of new materials are considered in relation to the local situation. Students make individual studies of their specific problems, and group studies of related problems.

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5308. Psychological Foundations of Education

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Learning and related psychological theories and their implications for curriculum, teaching methods, and other aspects of educational practices.

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5310. Creating and Sustaining a Positive School Climate

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Gives aspiring school administrators practices and processes for establishing and sustaining a positive school climate for the purpose of improving student achievement. The aspiring school administrator will recognize the necessity of developing a clear vision for education and applying it when building a positive school culture.

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5315. Sport in Society

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

The structure and function of sport as an institution, including issues and controversies involving gender, race, and intercollegiate, professional, and children's sports.

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5325. Legal Aspects of Sport

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Tort law principles specific to sport, fitness and recreational activities.

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5343. Gender in Organizational Leadership

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: Instructor consent.

Grading Basis: Graded

This course seeks to challenge collective assumptions regarding the construction of “effective” leadership in education and (other organizational context) and who is considered to be an effective leader and why. Specifically, we take a critical perspective to consider how and in what ways such concepts may be built on gendered and other intersecting social identities.

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5355. Seminar in Change and Innovation in Education

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Innovation has been widely acknowledged as a driving force in all areas of human activity. The need for innovation in business receives much of this attention, but the need for creative solutions to vexing problems has also been noted in human services, such as education, social welfare, etc. Introduces current and future educational leaders to the ways in which creativity and change leadership can help them promote real, lasting change in their work.

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5360. Leadership in Sport Organizations

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Examines multiple perspectives of leadership, from original theories of leadership through to the most contemporary forms of collaborative and team-based leadership. Examines the personal, interpersonal, and team-based skills that are required in leadership roles. Explores the practice of effective leadership, understanding how leadership roles require different skills during times of change or crisis, and in different contexts (intercollegiate, professional, sport for development, etc.).

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5365. Managing Diversity in Sport Organizations

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Managing sport as a social and cultural phenomenon. Using management theories, sociological concepts and critical thinking to investigate such issues as: how sport impacts our ideas about masculinity, femininity, sexual orientation, class inequality, race and ethnicity, dis/ability, achievement, competition, and individualism; how the organization and management of sport is connected with social relations in groups and societies; and how sport extends beyond competitive outcomes and deals with issues of power and power relations in society.

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5370. Ethical Leadership in Sport Organizations

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

A broad understanding of ethics, ethical theory development and the importance and relevance of ethics to the sport management profession. Students will examine ethical frameworks as they relate to the sport industry, the environment, and the individual within a sport organization. Students will work to develop personal and professional codes of ethics and ethical leadership based on sound ethical theory, and apply critical thinking and ethical decision making skills to contemporary ethical and legal issues within the sport context.

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5375. Strategic Human Resource Management in Sport Organizations

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Sport management is the coordination of several factors and the most significant of those factors is human resources. Students will understand that managing human resources requires more knowledge, time, and patience than managing any other resource. Students will examine the technical and legal aspects of human resource management from a strategic sport business perspective. They will learn from faculty and industry professionals on how to direct a sport organization through decisions on staffing patterns and responsibilities, evaluation of and rewards for performance, and establishing a fair and just work environment. Emphasis on how to integrate human resource management into overall strategy in a sport organization.

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5380. Sport Marketing

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Examines the application of marketing principles to collegiate and professional sport, event promotions, and commercial and public organizations.

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5385. Sport Venue and Event Management

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Examines all aspects of the management of sport facilities and events, including development, planning, staffing, operations, and evaluation.

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5401. Principalship and Administration of Educational Organizations

2.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Introduction to concepts and skills fundamental to the principalship and successful administration of educational organizations. Provides pragmatic knowledge which will give students an understanding and appreciation of the complexity of educational organizations.

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5402. Human Development for School Leaders

2.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Introduction to a variety of learning theories that can form the foundation for many practices and decisions as a school leader. Beyond pedagogy and school-aged learner learning theories, the course focuses in depth on adult learning concepts, research, and theory in relation to professional and organizational learning in a school/system context. Exploration of the role of new media applications and Web 2.0 to professional learning and human resource development in education.

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5403. Instructional Leadership - Systems and Structures to Support Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment

2.00 credits

Prerequisites: Department consent.

Grading Basis: Graded

Addresses instructional leadership with particular attention to how principals develop and support teachers' effective instruction and instructional accommodation for students. After forming a working definition of instructional leadership, aspiring leaders will learn about facets of curriculum and instruction that can ameliorate outcomes for students. Then they will learn about leadership activities, including data use and communication strategies, to support improvement at both the classroom and school levels.

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5404. Organizational Leadership - School Culture and Family and Community Engagement

2.00 credits

Prerequisites: Department consent.

Grading Basis: Graded

Essential school leadership aspects of organizational culture and parent and community engagement. Developing a positive and strong culture of achievement lays the foundation for strategic improvement and supports instructional leadership and talent management effort. Proactively engaging parents and members of the community to support a shared vision for the school helps create the conditions for successful teaching and learning outcomes.

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5405. Instructional Leadership - Creating and Sustaining Instructional Improvement

2.00 credits

Prerequisites: Departmental consent; acceptance into UCAPP and completion of prescribed course sequence.

Grading Basis: Graded

This course addresses instructional leadership with particular attention to how principals create and sustain systems for instructional improvement with a strong focus on the relationship between the three elements of the instructional core to increase student learning and performance. In so doing, the course builds the competencies of instructional leaders in using various systems and structures in building educator data literacy, deepening instructional data-driven decision making, and the importance of collaborative teams and ongoing leadership coaching to promote school wide change that positively affects school culture and student achievement. Aspiring leaders are provided structured learning opportunities to reflect on the intersection between instructional and equity-oriented leadership.

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5406. Talent Management: Supervision and Performance Evaluation

2.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Development knowledge and skills needed to evaluate and supervise instruction in schools. Upon completion of this course, students will know and understand the elements of developmental supervision and evaluation. Students will understand the elements of an effective teacher evaluation plan and the support required to implement and maintain it. Focus on understanding the relationship between teacher evaluation, professional learning and school improvement planning at large.

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5407. Contemporary Educational Policy Issues

2.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Introduction to the formation and implementation of education policy. The study of education policy focuses on the processes by which society develops, implements, evaluates, and modifies the rules, both official and unofficial, by which the American education system runs.

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5408. Leadership for Inclusive School Communities

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: Departmental consent; acceptance into UCAPP and completion of the prescribed course sequence.

Grading Basis: Graded

Addresses leadership to support special education students and other special populations in schools. It proposes that effective leadership for all special student populations involves particular knowledge and requires a strong equity orientation.

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5409. Organizational Leadership: Improving Educational Organizations

2.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Essential school leadership aspects of improving schools as educational organizations.

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5410. Talent Management: Professional Learning

2.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Development of the knowledge and skills needed to evaluate and supervise instruction in schools. Upon completion of this course, students will know and understand the elements of developmental supervision and evaluation. In addition, students will understand the elements of an effective teacher evaluation plan and the support required to implement and maintain it. Focus on understanding the relationship between teacher evaluation, professional learning and school improvement planning at large.

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5411. Legal Aspects of Education

2.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Legal issues relevant to school administrators, including mandatory attendance, curriculum, school district obligations, liability issues, student rights, teacher and other employee rights, tenure, collective bargaining, and religion in schools.

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5412. Organizational Leadership: Developing Organizational and Leadership Capacity

2.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Essential school leadership aspects of developing organizational capacity for strategic and sustainable improvement. Students will examine the role the principal plays in ensuring the success and achievement of all students by managing organizational systems and resources for a safe, high-performing learning environment.

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5518. Introduction to Sport Based Youth Development

4.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

This is a service learning course that requires both classroom participation and community involvement.

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6001. Legal Issues in Student and Parent Rights

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Examines the legal issues that arise with respect to student and parent rights, such as search and seizure, student discipline, speech and religion, and homeless children.

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6002. Legal Issues in School Employment

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Examines the legal issues that arise with regards to employment in K-12 education, such as tenure, employment discrimination, due process, and collective bargaining.

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6004. Legal Issues in Educational Technology

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Examines the legal issues that arise with respect to special education in K-12 education, such as intellectual property, social media, cyberbullying, sexting and virtual schools.

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6050. Dissertation Proposal/Prospectus Development I

3.00 credits | May be repeated for a total of 6 credits.

Prerequisites: Instructor and major advisor consent; completion of program or concentration General Examination, or comprehensive literature reviews in area of study.

Grading Basis: Graded

Open to advanced students enrolled in doctoral programs. Systematic development of dissertation proposal components, including introduction, problem statement, conceptual framework and/or review of literature, and research questions. IRB and ethical considerations, and preparations for proposal defense. May include methodology/methods, pilot study, limitations, and related appendices depending on student needs. May be repeated for up to six credits.

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6051. Dissertation Proposal/Prospectus Development II

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Open to students enrolled in doctoral programs. Systematic development of dissertation proposal components, including methodology, methods, procedures, limitations, all related appendices, IRB application, and proposal defense.

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6052. Qualitative Methods of Educational Research II

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: EDCI 6000.

Grading Basis: Graded

Companion to EDCI 6000. Provides the opportunity for students to more closely examine qualitative methodology and methods to ensure that students are able to synthesize an analysis of qualitative data. Specifically, students will generate credible units from narrative and visual data and develop categories from the units through comparing, contrasting, aggregating, and ordering data. Students will present findings in a chronological or thematic case example or case history, in an essay formulated around topics or theses, or in an alternative format appropriate to the analysis.

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6054. Inquiry and Research in Educational Leadership I: Foundations, Design, and Use

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: Open to students in the Ed.D. program in Educational Leadership.

Grading Basis: Graded

Explicates knowledge production through systematic inquiry in education, including processes, questions, and strategies used to conduct meaningful research in schools. Explores the intersection of theory and practice with emphasis placed on the critical analysis and interpretation of the research literature to the practice of school leadership.

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6055. Inquiry and Research in Educational Leadership I: Implementation, Analysis, and Discovery

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: Open to students in the Ed.D. program in Educational Leadership.

Grading Basis: Graded

A continuation of EDCI 6054. Elaborates the strategies and tools used to conduct meaningful research in schools with emphasis in the actual conduct of research in school settings. Explores the link between research findings and the improvement of practice.

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6092. Practicum

1.00 - 9.00 credits | May be repeated for a total of 18 credits.

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

The implementation and application of theory in the student's area of specialization.

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6201. Strategic Applications of Adult Learning

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: EDLR 5201, EDLR 5202, EDLR 5203, and EDLR 5204; open to students in the Adult Learning graduate program.

Grading Basis: Graded

Case study analysis and live case study consultation to develop innovative approaches to adult learning to address the challenges of employee development in corporate, education, public sector, and private sector settings.

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6300. Organizational Theory in Sport

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Exposes students to some critical areas of management and the theories associated with these areas.

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6301. School District Executive Leadership

3.00 credits | May be repeated for a total of 6 credits.

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Seminar and practicum experiences focusing on leadership and policy issues facing school superintendents, central office administrators,and senior state education agency officials.

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6302. School District Policy, Politics, and Governance

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Study of educational policy and school governance; the politics of educational administration; reform; finance; and the processes of district policy formulation, implementation, and analysis. Specific school district policy and governance issues are examined.

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6303. Data-Driven Decision Making for School Improvement and Policy Development

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Provides school leaders with the knowledge necessary to improve instructional programs and improve policy by relying on data-driven strategies and tools. The course meets in seminar/lab format with students working on data-driven problems, analyses and developing action plans as a result. Students work on several case studies and a major project of personal, professional significance.

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6304. Financial and Human Resources Management in Education

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Study of human resources development practices in school systems, with emphases on central office and school unit responsibilities for attracting, selecting, developing, evaluating, and retaining competent faculty and staff. This course also includes the study of concepts in school finance and school business management. Attention is given to national, state, and local issues. Emphasis is also given to school support services including transportation, faculty planning and maintenance, food service, and risk management.

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6310. Organizational Behavior in Sport

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

A discourse on theories related to behavior of individuals and groups in sport and exercise organizations.

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6312. Leadership for Teaching and Learning: The Role of the Leader in School Improvement

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Explores leadership skills required to imrpove instruction and student learning in the school and district. Students develop and apply models to address an instruction/achievement issue in practice.

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6313. Educational Policy and Politics

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Study of educational policy; the politics of educational administration; and the processes of policy formulation, implementation and analysis. Specific educational policy areas are examined.

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6314. Legal Issues in Organizational Management

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: Open to students in the Ed.D. program in Educational Leadership.

Grading Basis: Graded

The legal process and understanding of legal issues in education involving students, teachers, and boards of education.

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6315. Current Research in Sport Management

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Research in the field of sport management. Each week one or more researchers will present their completed work, studies in progress, or proposed research.

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6322. Economics of Education Reform

Also offered as: PP 5337

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Examines a number of prominent education reform strategies, using economics as a lens through which to understand the motivations for and potential impacts of each. Economics enables us to focus on the incentives created by these policies, allowing us to predict their intended and unintended consequences. We will utilize this framework throughout the course as we read about and evaluate the effectiveness of various educational interventions and policy reforms. Topics include (among others): class size reduction, teacher quality and teacher certification, merit pay, school accountability, school choice, school finance reform, early childhood education, and topics in higher education.

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6323. Seminar in the History of K-12 Education Reforms, 1890-present

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Seminar examining the history of K-12 education reforms from the 1890s to the present day.

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6464. Seminar: Leadership and Organizations

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: Instructor consent.

Grading Basis: Graded

Study of organizations and leadership from the perspective of the humanities and the social and behavioral sciences.

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6465. Educational Administration Issues and Research

3.00 credits | May be repeated for a total of 6 credits.

Prerequisites: EPSY 5605, EPSY 5607, and EPSY 6601.

Grading Basis: Graded

Designing educational research studies; current topics in school administration. Ordinarily meets for 10 full days for special research activities.

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6466. Policies for Improvement: Mobilizing School and Community

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Advanced seminar explores perspectives on the policy environment for school improvement. Students identify policy issues, collect data, conduct analyses, and propose actions.

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6467. Social Justice Leadership, Equity and School Change

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Exploration of various tenets, theoretical tensions, and transformative applications of social justice leadership in American education.

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6468. Critical Race Theory In Higher Education

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: Recommended preparation: EDLR 6467.

Grading Basis: Graded

The purpose of this course is to provide students with an in-depth exposure to Critical Race Theory (CRT) as it pertains to higher education. Critical Race Theory is an analytical framework that provides race-based epistemological, methodological, and pedagogical approaches to the study of everyday inequalities in education.

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6469. Decolonizing International and Comparative Higher Education

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: Recommended preparation: EDLR 5201 and 6467.

Grading Basis: Graded

The primary purpose of the course is to provide an overview of the main methods and approaches in international and comparative higher education using decolonizing methods as well as a broad cross-cultural understanding of Global Northern and Southern higher education systems, theories, traditions, structures, and environments.

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6470. Racial Justice and Decoloniality in Higher Education Teaching

Also offered as: AFRA 6470, LLAS 6470

3.00 credits | May be repeated for a total of 3 credits.

Prerequisites: Recommended preparation: EDLR 5201, 6467; GRAD 6000, 6001.

Grading Basis: Graded

Theory and practice of how teaching within a higher education context can work toward racially equitable learning experiences and decoloniality of the classroom.

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6471. The Faculty Career

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Explore aspects of the faculty profession in higher education.

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