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                      | 2021-2022 Undergraduate & Graduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG] 
 
 Seidel School of Education |  
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 Dr. Laurie A. Henry, DeanConway Hall 354F, 410-543-6335
 Dr. Starlin Weaver, Associate DeanConway Hall 354E, 410-543-6268
 Sara Elburn, Professional Development Schools CoordinatorConway Hall 354C2
 410-677-5042
 Paul Gasior, Clinical Practice CoordinatorConway Hall 354C1
 410-543-6277
 Patti Vance, Executive Administrative AssistantConway Hall 354D, 410-543-6308
 Visit the school’s webpage.   School InformationPrograms in the Seidel School of Education date from the University’s beginnings as a school for the professional preparation of teachers. The missions of the school’s departments and centers are derived from the University Mission, which commits the institution to providing students with a foundational integrated curriculum in the humanities, social and natural sciences, and mathematics; and to preparing them to work confidently and effectively in their chosen careers. The primary objectives of the school, therefore, are to provide initial and continuing education that ensures professionally competent teachers and school administrators who will become cooperative, innovative leaders dedicated to community service and excellence. The Seidel School is also committed to collaborating with local school districts and community agencies to serve students, clients and consumers. The Seidel School of Education was endowed by Samuel and Marilyn Seidel in March 1997. A longtime Salisbury businessman and civic leader, Sam Seidel started his career as a teacher and went on to establish the largest privately owned insurance operation in Maryland. Marilyn Seidel, class of ‘54, worked locally in nursing. The Seidels’ three children are also graduates of Salisbury University. In addition to the school endowment, the Seidels have provided numerous scholarships for SU students. All of the school’s programs interface with the community in special and unique ways and rely on community institutions, agencies and settings for the field components. The integration of theory and practice takes place in field sites generously provided by the University’s surrounding community. Requirements to education programs may change due to accreditation demands. Information about program changes may be verified with the education advisors. The education faculty is committed to preparing classroom teachers. The programs are designed with the following goals: 
	Provide for the individualization of instruction of prospective teachers during their professional training.Encourage the emergence of a personal teaching style on the part of each teacher in training.Gather evidence that prospective teachers can bring about desired learning in students before they assume full responsibility for a classroom.Assist prospective teachers in developing as reflective persons who, when confronted with a teaching problem, care fully identify the problem, take steps to accurately and systematically assess the problem, generate alternative solutions to the problem and choose an appropriate resolution on the basis of its desirable implications and consequences.Help prospective teachers develop self-confidence and competence as effective learners and teachers.Emphasize the importance of increasing interaction and collaboration among teachers, new and experienced, in resolving educational problems.Prepare prospective teachers who are responsible agents of educational change. The Master of Arts in Teaching is cooperative with the University of Maryland Eastern Shore. The institutions’ cooperative Master of Arts in Teaching was implemented in summer 1996. Scholarships and awards available in the school include the following: Marchan R. Ball Award in History and Social Science EducationDr. Ernest Leighton Bond Classroom Library Award
 Clinton Bradway Jr. Scholarship
 Thomas and Jeanne P. Bulliet Scholarship
 Carey-Simmons Education Scholarship
 Caruthers Memorial Fund Scholarship
 Audrey Christopher Scholars in Education
 Class of 1943 Scholarship
 Class of 1958 Scholarship
 Delta Kappa Gamma Beta Chapter Award
 Penelope Jarman Memorial Scholarship
 Carolyn Cramer Korn Scholarship
 Charles K. Long Scholarship
 Anne H. Matthews Memorial Award
 David L. and Carol M. Pearl Scholarship
 Pearl Family Inspirational Scholarship
 E. Pauline Riall Achievement Award
 Mary Ann Reinhold-Praley Maryland Teachers Scholarship
 Dr. and Mrs. Robert Scherr Endowment Fund
 Hattie M. Strong Scholarship
 Toth Scholarship for Math Education
 Dr. S. Goldsborough and Catharine A. Tyler Scholarship
 Wood-Miller Scholarship
 Dick ‘50 & Betty Calcott ‘53 Wooten Scholarship
 Worcester County Teachers Association Scholarship
 Information about each scholarships can be found on AcademicWorks. AccreditationAll teacher education and school personnel programs are accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education and are approved by the Maryland State Department of Education. Honorary and Professional OrganizationsEducator’s Rising Collegiate Chapter Kappa Delta Pi (honor society in education)Health and Physical Education Majors’ Club (H!PE)
 Seidel Holmes Scholar Program Student National Education Association Conceptual Framework: Competent, Caring, CommittedAs a professional learning community, our charge is to serve our candidates and our local school partners. This mission is grounded in shared professional dispositions and in a tradition of caring that can be traced to the University’s origins as a normal school founded in 1925. There are four interdependent themes in this tradition that provide the foundation for our current practices and future growth: 
	Informed and reflective pedagogy: We believe in teachers and decision-makers. Through careful preparation and a thorough grounding in research and best practices, we support candidates and collaborative partners who are disposed to question and reflect continuously in pursuit of sound educational judgments.Enhanced student learning: We celebrate human diversity and we are passionately committed to the belief that skilled and caring educators enhance learning and achievement when they recognize, appreciate and build upon the individual strengths and differences of every learner.Scholarship: We are committed to academic excellence, ongoing scholarly inquiry and integrity in our own work, in the efforts of our candidates, and by extension, in the primary mission of student learning in local schools.Collaboration: We believe that the integrated mission of preparing teachers, advancing the knowledge base, supporting teachers’ professional development and improving student achievement in P-12 schools can best be accomplished through carefully coordinated partnerships that include all stakeholders in the greater educational community.  Return to: Schools and Colleges
 
 
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