| FMU
Center of Excellence
Overview
The purpose
of the Center of Excellence to Prepare Teachers of Children of Poverty
is to increase the achievement of children of poverty by improving
the quality of undergraduate teacher preparation, graduate teacher
preparation, and the professional development of in-service teachers.
To accomplish this purpose, the Center will work toward achieving
five major goals:
Goal
1: Design and implement pre-service teacher education programs
that attract qualified applicants and enable graduates to effectively
teach children of poverty;
Goal
2: Provide high quality professional development programs that
include collaborative research activities and the use of existing
research evidence to improve curriculum, instruction, and assessment
in schools serving large numbers of children of poverty;
Goal
3: Equip teachers with the knowledge and skills needed to work
effectively with parents, health and human service providers, and
other community resources to meet the social, emotional, and physical
needs of children of poverty and to serve as advocates for them
in the school, community, and state;
Goal
4: Develop a master’s degree program which leads to South
Carolina certification as a Teacher of Children of Poverty and is
linked with National
Board Certification; and
Goal
5: Become the premier resource in South Carolina for helping
teachers learn how to provide a high quality education to all children
of poverty.
To achieve these
goals, Francis Marion University has pulled together an impressive
set of partners. First and foremost, Francis Marion University will
work collaboratively with the 18 school districts located in the
Pee Dee Region. Three districts will be termed “partner
districts” in that they will be intimately involved with,
and contribute to, the activities of the Center. The other 15 districts
will be called “participating
districts" in that they will be able to participate in
the outreach activities of the Center. Second, Francis Marion University
will form a partnership with the Pee
Dee Education Center. Established in 1967 and located within
walking distance of the campus, the Board of Directors of the Pee
Dee Education Center includes the Dean of the School of Education
and the 18 district superintendents. Third, Francis Marion University
will collaborate with two existing Centers of Excellence: the Center
of Excellence for the Education and Equity of African-American Students,
housed at Benedict College, and the Center
of Excellence In Accelerating Learning, located at the College
of Charleston. Fourth, in an effort to attract high quality teacher
candidates, Francis Marion University will work with the South
Carolina Center of Educator Recruitment, Retention, and Advancement
(CERRA). Finally, to achieve some degree of national visibility,
Francis Marion University will partner with the National
Center for the Education of Students Placed at Risk (CRESPAR).
The work of
the FMU Center of Excellence has been made possible through a five-year
grant awarded by the South Carolina Commission on Higher Education.
Centers of Excellence in South Carolina are funded through the Education
Improvement Act of 1984 [http://www.che400.state.sc.us].
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